Phillip M. Kannan has published “Reinstating Treaty-Making with Native American Tribes” in the William and Mary Bill of Rights Journal. An excerpt:
This Article proceeds as follows. The legal history of treaties and treaty-making with Indian tribes and the significance of these treaties to United States law are explored in Part I. The dissatisfaction of the House of Representatives with the practice of Indian policy being established by the President with the advice and consent of *813 the Senate is outlined in Part II. Part III then recounts major legislation that followed the enactment of section 71 and the harm these laws caused Indian tribes. In Part III, I also analyze the mischaracterizations of that law by the Supreme Court and the harm this has caused. Building on this background, Part IV develops the argument that section 71 violates the express provisions of the Constitution and the political theory on which it was based; Part V analyzes applicable Supreme Court precedent and concludes that section 71 violates the principles established by these cases; and Part VI argues that it is inconsistent with a theory developed by Justice Kennedy, namely, the guarantee of political liberty provided to each citizen by the federal structure of the Constitution. Part VII then explores the constitutional consequences that would follow from upholding section 71. I conclude with some suggestions of how section 71 could be repealed or overturned.