| |







 |
| |
|
| |
|
| |
Web Editor |
| |
Vernellia R. Randall
Professor of Law
The University of Dayton |
| |
|
| |
|
| |




 |
| |
|
ADOPTION OF NATIVE AMERICAN AND FIRST
NATIONS CHILDREN: ARE THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
RECOGNIZING THE BEST INTERESTS OF THE CHILDREN? Keri B.
Lazarus,
14 Ariz. J. Int'l & Comp. L. 255
Arizona Journal of International and Comparative Law Winter,
1997
CONSIDERING A NATIVE AMERICAN CHILD'S NEED
FOR PERMANENT PLACEMENT UNDER THE INDIAN CHILD WELFARE ACT:
IN RE S.E.G., A.L.W., & V.M.G., 521 N.W.2D 357 (MINN.
1994) Joseph G. Twomey, 18 Hamline L. Rev. 281
Hamline Law Review Winter, 1994
PIGS IN HEAVEN: A PARABLE OF NATIVE
AMERICAN ADOPTION UNDER THE INDIAN CHILD WELFARE ACT
Christine Metteer, 28 Ariz. St. L.J. 589
Arizona State Law Journal Summer, 1996
WHO SHOULD PROTECT THE NATIVE AMERICAN
CHILD: A PHILOSOPHICAL DEBATE BETWEEN THE RIGHTS OF THE
INDIVIDUAL VERSES THE RIGHTS OF THE INDIAN TRIBE Michelle
Zehnder,
22 Wm. Mitchell L. Rev. 903 William
Mitchell Law Review 1996
|
|
A MATTER OF TRUST: FEDERAL ENVIRONMENTAL
RESPONSIBILITIES TO NATIVE AMERICANS UNDER CUSTOMARY
INTERNATIONAL LAW Karyn I. Wendelowski,
20 Am. Indian L. Rev. 423 American
Indian Law Review 1995-96
THE LEGAL FRAMEWORK SURROUNDING MAORI
CLAIMS TO WATER RESOURCES IN NEW ZEALAND: IN CONTRAST TO THE
AMERICAN INDIAN EXPERIENCE Benjamin A. Kahn,
35 Stan. J. Int'l L. 49 Stanford
Journal of International Law Winter 1999
|
|
BUSH JUSTICE: THE INTERSECTION OF ALASKA
NATIVES AND THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM IN RURAL ALASKA
Rachel King, 77 Or. L. Rev. 1 Oregon Law
Review Spring 1998
FOLLOWING THE LEAD OF THE INDIAN CHILD
WELFARE ACT: EXPANDING TRIBAL COURT JURISDICTION OVER NATIVE
AMERICAN JUVENILE DELINQUENTS Stacie S. Polashuk,
69 S. Cal. L. Rev. 1191 Southern
California Law Review March, 1996
LAW ENFORCEMENT OVERSIGHT IN THE AMERICAN
INDIAN COMMUNITY Eileen M. Luna, 4 Geo. Pub. Pol'y Rev. 149
Georgetown Public Policy Review Spring, 1999
SENTENCING AND CULTURAL DIFFERENCES:
BANISHMENT OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN ROBBERS Stephanie J. Kim,
29 J. Marshall L. Rev. 239 John
Marshall Law Review Fall 1995
THE FEDERAL JUVENILE DELINQUENCY ACT: A
DISPARATE IMPACT ON NATIVE AMERICAN JUVENILES Amy J.
Standefer, 34 Minn. L. Rev. 473
Minnesota Law Review
|
|
"SCANDALOUS" OR
"DISPARAGING"? IT SHOULD MAKE A DIFFERENCE IN
OPPOSITION AND CANCELLATIONS ACTIONS: VIEWS ON THE LANHAM
ACT'S SECTION 2(A) PROHIBITIONS USING THE EXAMPLE OF NATIVE
AMERICAN SYMBOLISM IN ATHLETICS Ethan G. Zlotchew, 22 Colum.-VLA J.L. & Arts 217
Columbia-VLA Journal of Law and the Arts Winter, 1998
A CASE OF FIRST IMPRESSION: AMERICAN
INDIANS SEEK CANCELLATION OF THE TRADEMARKED TERM
"REDSKINS" George Likourezos,
78 J. Pat. & Trademark Off. Soc'y 275
Journal of the Patent and Trademark Office Society April,
1996
A KANTIAN ARGUMENT FOR NATIVE AMERICAN
CULTURAL SURVIVAL David C. Bricker, 76 U. Det. Mercy L. Rev. 789
University of Detroit Mercy Law Review Spring 1999
ANTHROPOLOGY AND RESTLESS SPIRITS: THE
NATIVE AMERICAN GRAVES PROTECTION AND REPATRIATION ACT, AND
THE UNRESOLVED ISSUES OF PREHISTORIC HUMAN REMAINS Robert W.
Lannan, 22 Harv. Envtl. L. Rev. 369
Harvard Environmental Law Review 1998
CRITICAL EXCAVATIONS: LAW, NARRATIVE, AND
THE DEBATE ON NATIVE AMERICAN AND HAWAIIAN "CULTURAL
PROPERTY" REPATRIATION Isaac Moriwake,
20 U. Haw. L. Rev. 261 University
of Hawaii Law Review Fall, 1998
DEVILS TOWER AT THE CROSSROADS: THE
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE AND THE PRESERVATION OF NATIVE
AMERICAN CULTURAL RESOURCES IN THE 21ST CENTURY Raymond
Cross Elizabeth Brenneman,
18 Pub. Land & Resources L. Rev. 5
Public Land & Resources Law Review 1997
GALILEOS OR GRAVE ROBBERS? SCIENCE, THE
NATIVE AMERICAN GRAVES PROTECTION AND REPATRIATION ACT, AND
THE FIRST AMENDMENT Michelle Hibbert,
23 Am. Indian L. Rev. 425 American
Indian Law Review 1998/1999
GROUP RIGHTS TO CULTURAL SURVIVAL:
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS IN NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURAL
SYMBOLS Terence Dougherty, 29 Colum. Hum. Rts. L. Rev. 355
Columbia Human Rights Law Review Spring 1998
GROUP RIGHTS TO CULTURAL SURVIVAL:
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS IN NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURAL
SYMBOLS Terence Dougherty, 29 Colum. Hum. Rts. L. Rev. 355
Columbia Human Rights Law Review Spring 1998
IN DEFENSE OF THE BIA AND THE NPS: FEDERAL
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT, NATIVE AMERICAN CONSULTATION, AND SOME
ISSUES IN THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE NATIVE AMERICAN GRAVES
PROTECTION AND REPATRIATION ACT IN THE SOUTHEASTERN UNITED
STATES J. Anthony Paredes,
10 St. Thomas L. Rev. 35 St. Thomas
Law Review Fall, 1997
JUSTIFYING REPATRIATION OF NATIVE AMERICAN
CULTURAL PROPERTY Sarah Harding,
72 Ind. L.J. 723 Indiana Law Journal Summer,
1997
KEEPERS OF THE SACRED TRADITION OF PIPE
MAKERS Adam Fortunate Eagle,
10 St. Thomas L. Rev. 55 St. Thomas
Law Review Fall, 1997
KENNEWICK MAN: THE MEANING OF
"CULTURAL AFFILIATION" AND "MAJOR SCIENTIFIC
BENEFIT" IN THE NATIVE AMERICAN GRAVES PROTECTION AND
REPATRIATION ACT Douglas W. Ackerman,
33 Tulsa L.J. 359 Tulsa Law Journal Fall,
1997
NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURAL PROTECTION ISSUES
IN GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS Michael J. Davidson,
28 Pub. Cont. L.J. 189 Public Contract
Law Journal Winter, 1999
NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURAL PROPERTY LAW
Human Rights Legislation Hon. Sherry Hutt,
34-JAN Ariz. Att'y 18 Arizona Attorney
January, 1998
NATIVE AMERICAN GRAVES PROTECTION AND
REPATRIATION ACT COMPLIANCE DEADLINE Major Ayres,
1995-OCT Army Law. 24 Army Lawyer October,
1995
NATIVE AMERICAN LIFE STORIES AND
"AUTHORSHIP": LEGAL AND ETHICAL ISSUES Lenora
Ledwon, 9 St. Thomas L. Rev. 69
Saint Thomas Law Review Fall 1996
NATIVE AMERICAN MASCOTS, SCHOOLS, AND THE
TITLE VI HOSTILE ENVIRONMENT ANALYSIS Daniel J. Trainor,
1995 U. Ill. L. Rev. 971 University
of Illinois Law Review 1995
SACRED STANDARDS: HONORING THE
ESTABLISHMENT CLAUSE IN PROTECTING NATIVE AMERICAN SACRED
SITES Anastasia P. Winslow,
38 Ariz. L. Rev. 1291 Arizona Law Review
Winter, 1996
THE CULTURAL HERITAGE OF AMERICAN INDIAN
TRIBES AND THE PRESERVATION OF BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY Dean B.
Suagee, 31 Ariz. St. L.J. 483 Arizona
State Law Journal Summer, 1999
THE CULTURAL HERITAGE OF AMERICAN INDIAN
TRIBES AND THE PRESERVATION OF BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY Dean B.
Suagee, 31 Ariz. St. L.J. 483 Arizona
State Law Journal Summer, 1999
THE NATIVE AMERICAN GRAVES PROTECTION AND
REPATRIATION ACT: UNRESOLVED ISSUES BETWEEN MATERIAL CULTURE
AND LEGAL DEFINITIONS Robert H. Mclaughlin,
3 U. Chi. L. Sch. Roundtable 767
University of Chicago Law School Roundtable 1996
TOWARD A GROUP RIGHTS THEORY FOR REMEDYING
HARM TO THE SUBSISTENCE CULTURE OF ALASKA NATIVES William M.
Bryner, 12 Alaska L. Rev. 293 Alaska Law
Review December 1995
|
|
PRIVATE DOLLARS ON THE RESERVATION: WILL
RECENT NATIVE AMERICAN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AMOUNT TO
CULTURAL ASSIMILATION? Karin Mika ,
25 N.M. L. Rev. 23 New Mexico Law Review
Winter, 1995
|
|
AMERICAN INDIAN EDUCATION: THE TERROR OF
HISTORY AND THE NATION'S DEBT TO THE INDIAN PEOPLES Raymond
Cross,
21 U. Ark. Little Rock L. Rev. 941
University of Arkansas at Little Rock Law Review Summer,
1999
|
|
LICENSE TO DISCRIMINATE: THE APPLICATION
OF SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY TO EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION CLAIMS
BROUGHT BY NON-NATIVE AMERICAN EMPLOYEES OF TRIBALLY OWNED
BUSINESSES Scott D. Danahy,
25 Fla. St. U. L. Rev. 679
Florida State University Law Review Spring, 1998
RETIREMENT PLANS FOR NATIVE AMERICAN
TRIBES Nancy G. Williams Lisa Prieto Womack SC14 ALI-ABA
523, September 11, 1997
|
|
ASSERTING A TRADITIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL
ETHIC: RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATION
INVOLVING NATIVE AMERICAN TRIBES Allison M. Dussias,
33 New Eng. L. Rev. 653 New England
Law Review Spring, 1999
ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE AND NATIVE
AMERICANS: THE MESCALERO APACHE AND MONITORED RETRIEVABLE
STORAGE Dr. Kristin Shrader-Frechette,
36 Nat. Resources J. 703 Natural
Resources Journal Fall, 1996
STATE MINIMUM ENVIRONMENTAL STANDARDS ON
THE NATIVE AMERICAN RESERVATION Jeffrey W. Walbridge,
68 S. Cal. L. Rev. 1075 Southern
California Law Review May 1995
THE NORTH AMERICAN AGREEMENT ON
ENVIRONMENTAL COOPERATION AND NATIVE AMERICAN TRIBES: HOW
CAN TRIBAL INTERESTS BEST BE PROTECTED? Richard Ansson,
66 UMKC L. Rev. 837 UMKC Law Review
Summer 1998
|
|
AMERICAN INDIAN AND ALASKA NATIVE POLICY
Lieutenant Colonel Grant,
1999-JUL Army Law. 44 Army Lawyer July, 1999
THE DEMISE OF THE ONGWEHOWEH AND THE RISE
OF THE NATIVE AMERICANS: REDRESSING THE GENOCIDAL ACT OF
FORCING AMERICAN CITIZENSHIP UPON INDIGENOUS PEOPLES Robert
B. Porter, 15 Harv. BlackLetter L.J. 107
Harvard BlackLetter Law Journal Spring, 1999
IN THEIR NATIVE LANDS: THE LEGAL STATUS OF
AMERICAN INDIAN CHILDREN IN NORTH DAKOTA B.J. JONES,
75 N.D. L. Rev. 241 North Dakota Law
Review 1999
SWORD WIELDING AND SHIELD BEARING: AN
IDEALISTIC ASSESSMENT OF THE FEDERAL TRUST DOCTRINE IN
AMERICAN INDIAN LAW Ray Torgerson,
2 Tex. F. on C.L. & C.R. 165
Texas Forum on Civil Liberties & Civil Rights Summer
1996
|
|
GETTING A PIECE OF THE ACTION: SHOULD THE
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT BE ABLE TO TAX NATIVE AMERICAN GAMBLING
REVENUE? Stephanie Dean, 32 Colum. J.L. & Soc. Probs. 157
Columbia Journal of Law and Social Problems Winter, 1999
THE LAW AND ECONOMICS OF NATIVE AMERICAN
CASINOS Paul H. Brietzke; Teresa L. Kline,
78 Neb. L. Rev. 263 Nebraska Law Review
1999
THE ANADARKO DILEMMA: CAN
"OFFSHORE" BANKING JOIN GAMBLING IN THE NATIVE
AMERICAN ARSENAL OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT? Bradford E.
Chatigny , 32 Colum. J.L. & Soc. Probs. 99
Columbia Journal of Law and Social Problems Fall, 1998
WESTERN TELCON v. CALIFORNIA STATE
LOTTERY; WILL NATIVE AMERICANS LOSE AGAIN? Guy Levy,
19 Thomas Jefferson L. Rev. 361
Thomas Jefferson Law Review Summer 1997
VIRTUE OR VICE? HOW IGRA SHAPES THE
POLITICS OF NATIVE AMERICAN GAMING, SOVEREIGNTY, AND
IDENTITY Kathryn R.L. Rand Steven A. Light,
4 Va. J. Soc. Pol'y & L. 381
Virginia Journal of Social Policy and the Law Winter 1997
PEOPLE OF THE WHITE BUFFALO GAMBLING IS
THE MODERN VERSION OF THE MYTH OF SURVIVAL FOR MANY NATIVE
AMERICANS Hon. Pierre L. Van Rysselberghe,
56-DEC Or. St. B. Bull. 41 Oregon
State Bar Bulletin December, 1995
LET THE GAMES BEGIN: PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO
INDIAN GAMING REGULATION ACT LIMITING NATIVE AMERICAN
TRIBES' SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY Krista L. Twesme, 17 Hamline J. Pub. L. & Pol'y 187
Hamline Journal of Public Law and Policy Fall, 1995
THE RETURN OF THE WHITE BUFFALO: TAXATION
ISSUES FACING AMERICAN INDIAN TRIBES CONDUCTING GAMBLING
ENTERPRISES ON TRIBAL LANDS Jose J. Monsivais,
20 Am. Indian L. Rev. 399 American
Indian Law Review 1995-96
LEGALIZED GAMBLING ACTIVITIES AS
SUBSIDIZED BY TAXPAYERS John Warren Kindt,
48 Ark. L. Rev. 889 Arkansas Law Review
1995
THE GAMING INDUSTRY ON AMERICAN INDIAN
LANDS: FINANCING AND DEVELOPMENT ISSUES Mark A. Jarboe
872 PLI/Corp 161, Practising Law Institute PLI Order No. B4-7077
December, 1994
AMERICAN INDIAN GAMING ENTERPRISES AND
TRIBAL MEMBERSHIP: RACE, EXCLUSIVITY, AND A PERILOUS FUTURE
Mark Neath, 2 U. Chi. L. Sch. Roundtable 689
University of Chicago Law School Roundtable 1995
|
|
SQUAW DRUDGES, FARM WIVES, AND THE DANN
SISTERS' LAST STAND: AMERICAN INDIAN WOMEN'S RESISTANCE TO
DOMESTICATION AND THE DENIAL OF THEIR PROPERTY RIGHTS
Allison M. Dussias, 77 N.C. L. Rev. 637
North Carolina Law Review January, 1999
A COMPARATIVE SURVEY OF THE HISTORIC
CIVIL, COMMON, AND AMERICAN INDIAN TRIBAL LAW RESPONSES TO
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE Virginia H. Murray,
23 Okla. City U. L. Rev. 433
Oklahoma City University Law Review Spring-Summer 1998
COMMUNITY PROPERTY RULES OR AMERICAN
INDIAN TRIBAL LAW -- WHICH PREVAILS? Gary C. Randall Katti
Telstad, 31 Idaho L. Rev. 1071 Idaho Law
Review 1995
|
|
|
NATIVE AMERICANS AND THE VACCINE ACT:
EXCLUDING THOSE WE FOUND HERE James D. Leach,
46 Am. U. L. Rev. 1935 American
University Law Review August 1997
PROVIDING FOR THE HEALTH CARE NEEDS OF
NATIVE AMERICANS: POLICY, PROGRAMS, PROCEDURES, AND
PRACTICES Rose L. Pfefferbaum, Betty Pfefferbaum, Everett R.
Rhoades, Rennard J. Strickland,
21 Am. Indian L. Rev. 211 American
Indian Law Review 1997
|
|
AMERICAN INDIAN LAW --- TRIBAL LANDS ---
AN INDIAN TRIBE THAT HOLDS TITLE TO LAND BY TRANSFER UNDER
THE ALASKA NATIVE CLAIMS SETTLEMENT ACT MAY NOT IMPOSE
BUSINESS TAX WHEN ITS LAND IS NOT INDIAN COUNTRY WITHIN THE
STATUTORY DEFINITION. ALASKA V. NATIVE VILLAGE OF VENETIE
TRIBAL GOVERNMENT, 118 ... Stacy Belisle, 76 U. Det. Mercy L. Rev. 903
University of Detroit Mercy Law Review Spring 1999
THE AMERICAN INDIAN AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES
MANAGEMENT ACT: DOES THE WINTERS WATER BUCKET HAVE A HOLE IN
IT? Darla J. Mondou,
Drake J. Agric. L. 381 Drake
Journal of Agricultural Law Winter, 1998
RED TAPE: HOW AMERICAN LAWS ENSNARE NATIVE
AMERICAN LANDS, RESOURCES, AND PEOPLE Matthew Atkinson,
23 Okla. City U. L. Rev. 379
Oklahoma City University Law Review Spring-Summer 1998
THE EFFECT OF THE INDIAN GAMING REGULATORY
ACT ON CALIFORNIA NATIVE AMERICAN'S INDEPENDENCE Gregory
Elvine-Kreis,
35 San Diego L. Rev. 179 San Diego
Law Review Winter 1998
BABBITT v. YOUPEE: ALLOTMENT AND THE
CONTINUING LOSS OF NATIVE AMERICAN PROPERTY AND RIGHTS TO
DEVISE, 19 U. Haw. L. Rev. 265
University of Hawaii Law Review Spring, 1997
THE MAKAH'S DECISION TO REINSTATE WHALING:
WHEN CONSERVATIONISTS CLASH WITH NATIVE AMERICANS OVER AN
ANCIENT HUNTING TRADITION Alma Soongi Beck, 11 J. Envtl. L. & Litig. 359
Journal of Environmental Law and Litigation 1996
THE BROKEN PROMISE LAND: AN ESSAY ON
NATIVE AMERICAN TRIBAL SOVEREIGNTY OVER RESERVATION
RESOURCES John S. Harbison, 14 Stan. Envtl. L.J. 347
Stanford Environmental Law Journal May, 1995
AMERICAN INDIAN RESERVED WATER RIGHTS: THE
FEDERAL OBLIGATION TO PROTECT TRIBAL WATER RESOURCES AND
TRIBAL AUTONOMY Sylvia F. Liu, 25 Envtl. L. 425
Environmental Law Spring, 1995
|
|
REASSERTING LANGUAGE RIGHTS OF NATIVE
AMERICAN STUDENTS IN THE FACE OF PROPOSITION 227 AND OTHER
LANGUAGE-BASED REFERENDA Scott Ellis Ferrin, J.D., Ed.D.,
28 J.L. & Educ. 1 Journal of Law and
Education January, 1999
WAGING WAR WITH WORDS: NATIVE AMERICANS'
CONTINUING STRUGGLE AGAINST THE SUPPRESSION OF THEIR
LANGUAGES Allison M. Dussias,
60 Ohio St. L.J. 901 Ohio State Law
Journal 1999
|
|
IDEALIZATION AND POWER: LEGALITY AND
TRADITION IN NATIVE AMERICAN LAW Laura Nader Jay Ou,
23 Okla. City U. L. Rev. 13
Oklahoma City University Law Review Spring-Summer 1998
NATIVE AMERICAN RIGHTS Anthony Michael
Sabino, 45-APR Fed. Law. 20 Federal Lawyer
March/April, 1998
THE GENOCIDAL PREMISE IN NATIVE AMERICAN
LAW AND POLICY: EXORCISING ABORIGINAL GHOSTS Rennard
Strickland,
1 J. Gender Race & Just. 325
Journal of Gender, Race and Justice Spring 1998
THE INDIAN CLAIMS COMMISSION: DID THE
AMERICAN INDIANS REALLY HAVE THEIR DAY IN COURT? Richard J.
Ansson, Jr.,
23 Am. Indian L. Rev. 207 American
Indian Law Review 1998
THE TREND OF SUPREME COURT DECISIONS IN
INDIAN CASES Louis F. Claiborne ,
22 Am. Indian L. Rev. 585 American
Indian Law Review 1998
AMERICAN INDIAN LAW MEETS THE INTERNAL
REVENUE CODE: WARBUS V. COMMISSIONER Erik M. Jensen,
74 N.D. L. Rev. 691 North Dakota Law
Review 1998
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE AMERICAN
INDIAN NATIONS LONE WOLF, PRINCIPAL CHIEF OF THE KIOWAS, ET
AL. S. James Anaya, 7-WTR Kan. J.L. & Pub. Pol'y 117
Kansas Journal of Law and Public Policy Winter, 1997
WOLF WARRIORS AND TURTLE KINGS: NATIVE
AMERICAN LAW BEFORE THE BLUE COATS Rennard Strickland,
72 Wash. L. Rev. 1043 Washington Law
Review October, 1997
BROKEN PROMISES: THE FAILURE OF THE 1920'S
NATIVE AMERICAN IRRIGATION AND ASSIMILATION POLICIES Larry
A. DiMatteo Michael J. Meagher,
19 U. Haw. L. Rev. 1 University of
Hawaii Law Review Spring, 1997
REVISITING THE "COURTS OF THE
CONQUEROR": AMERICAN INDIAN CLAIMS AGAINST THE UNITED
STATES Steven Paul McSloy,
44 Am. U. L. Rev. 537 American
University Law Review December, 1994
|
|
A BLACK AND WHITE ISSUE: THE INVISIBILITY
OF AMERICAN INDIANS IN RACIAL POLICY DISCOURSE Steve
Russell, 4 Geo. Pub. Pol'y Rev. 129
Georgetown Public Policy Review Spring, 1999
|
|
THE LEGALITY OF THE RELIGIOUS USE OF
PEYOTE BY THE NATIVE AMERICAN CHURCH: A COMMENTARY ON THE
FREE EXERCISE, EQUAL PROTECTION, AND ESTABLISHMENT ISSUES
RAISED BY THE PEYOTE WAY CHURCH OF GOD CASE John Thomas
Bannon, Jr.,
22 Am. Indian L. Rev. 475 American
Indian Law Review 1998
GHOST DANCE AND HOLY GHOST: THE ECHOES OF
NINETEENTH-CENTURY CHRISTIANIZATION POLICY IN
TWENTIETH-CENTURY NATIVE AMERICAN FREE EXERCISE CASES
Allison M. Dussias, 49 Stan. L. Rev. 773
Stanford Law Review April, 1997
EFFECTS OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN RELIGIOUS
FREEDOM ACT AMENDMENTS ON CRIMINAL LAW: WILL PEYOTISM EAT
AWAY AT THE CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES ACT? Autumn Gray,
22 Am. J. Crim. L. 769 American
Journal of Criminal Law Spring, 1995
NATIVE AMERICAN NATURAL RESOURCES Steve
McKinney, 9-SPG Nat. Resources & Env't 63
Natural Resources and Environment Spring, 1995
A PROPOSAL FOR THE EQUAL PROTECTION OF
NON-INDIANS PRACTICING NATIVE AMERICAN RELIGIONS: CAN THE
RELIGIOUS FREEDOM RESTORATION ACT FINALLY REMOVE THE
EXISTING DEFERENCE WITHOUT A DIFFERENCE? Francis X.
Santangelo,
69 St. John's L. Rev. 255 Saint
John's Law Review Winter-Spring 1995
ACCESS TO EAGLES AND EAGLE PARTS:
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION V. NATIVE AMERICAN FREE EXERCISE OF
RELIGION Antonia M. De Meo,
22 Hastings Const. L.Q. 771 Hastings
Constitutional Law Quarterly Spring 1995
SAVING NATIVE AMERICAN RELIGIOUS SITES:
THE HASKELL MEDICINE WHEEL Scott Dalton,
4-WTR Kan. J.L. & Pub. Pol'y 61
Kansas Journal of Law and Public Policy Winter, 1995
|
|
Article REDISCOVERING AMERICA: RECOGNIZING
THE SOVEREIGNTY OF NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN NATIONS Larry
Sager, 76 U. Det. Mercy L. Rev. 745
University of Detroit Mercy Law Review Spring 1999
Casenote AMERICAN INDIAN LAW--SOVEREIGN
IMMUNITY--INDIAN TRIBES ENJOY SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY FROM SUITS
ON CONTRACTS, WHETHER THOSE CONTRACTS INVOLVE GOVERNMENTAL
OR COMMERCIAL ACTIVITIES AND WHETHER THEY WERE MADE ON OR
OFF A RESERVATION. KIOWA TRIBE V. MANUFACTURING
TECHNOLOGIES, INC., 118 S. CT. 1700 ... Ryan T. Koczara,
76 U. Det. Mercy L. Rev. 927
University of Detroit Mercy Law Review Spring 1999
THE CHEROKEE NATION OF INDIANS, ET AL., V.
GEORGIA Appeal from the Supreme Court of the United States
to the Supreme Court of the American Indian Nations,
8-WTR Kan. J.L. & Pub. Pol'y 159
Kansas Journal of Law and Public Policy Winter 1999
Book Review THE UNITED STATES SUPREME
COURT AND AMERICAN INDIAN TRIBAL SOVEREIGNTY Richard J.
Ansson, Jr.,
23 Am. Indian L. Rev. 465 American
Indian Law Review 1998/1999
Special Features: Papers From the American
Indian Law Review's 25th Anniversary Symposium SOVEREIGNTY
AND ITS RELEVANCE TO NATIVE AMERICANS IN THE TWENTY-FIRST
CENTURY Hurst Hannum,
23 Am. Indian L. Rev. 487 American
Indian Law Review 1998/1999
Article AMERICA'S FIRST NATIONS: THE
ORIGINS, HISTORY AND FUTURE OF AMERICAN INDIAN SOVEREIGNTY
John Fredericks III, 7 J.L. & Pol'y 347
Journal of Law and Policy 1999
News & Department AMERICAN INDIAN
SOVEREIGNTY AND THE U.S. SUPREME COURT; THE MASKING OF
JUSTICE By David E. Wilkins, University of Texas Press 1997,
310 Pages Michael J. Wynne, 36-OCT Hous. Law. 50
Houston Lawyer September/October, 1998
|
|
INDIAN COMMON LAW: THE ROLE OF CUSTOM IN
AMERICAN INDIAN TRIBAL COURTS (PART II OF II) Robert D.
Cooter, Wolfgang Fikentscher,
46 Am. J. Comp. L. 509 American
Journal of Comparative Law Summer 1998
INDIAN COMMON LAW: THE ROLE OF CUSTOM IN
AMERICAN INDIAN TRIBAL COURTS (Part I of II) Robert D.
Cooter Wolfgang Fikentscher,
46 Am. J. Comp. L. 287 American
Journal of Comparative Law Spring 1998
AMERICAN INDIAN LAW--TRIBAL COURT CIVIL
JURISDICTION--NINTH CIRCUIT HOLDS THAT BLACKFEET TRIBAL
COURT LACKS SUBJECT MATTER JURISDICTION OVER TORT SUIT
ARISING ON RESERVATION BETWEEN MEMBER AND NONMEMBER.--WILSON
v. MARCHINGTON, 127 F.3D 805 (9TH CIR. 1997)., 111 Harv. L. Rev. 1620
Harvard Law Review April, 1998
THE TRIBAL EXHAUSTION DOCTRINE: "JUST
STAY ON THE GOOD ROADS, AND YOU'VE GOT NOTHING TO WORRY
ABOUT" Phillip Allen White,
22 Am. Indian L. Rev. 65 American
Indian Law Review 1997
THE NATIVE AMERICAN TRIBE AS A CLIENT: AN
ETHICAL ANALYSIS Tracy N. Zlock,
10 Geo. J. Legal Ethics 159
Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics Fall, 1996
SPIRITUALITY, CULTURE AND TRADITION: AN
INTRODUCTION TO THE ROLE OF TRIBAL COURTS AND COUNCILS IN
RECLAIMING NATIVE AMERICAN HERITAGE AND SOVEREIGNTY Mark J.
Wolff, 7 St. Thomas L. Rev. 761 St.
Thomas Law Review Summer, 1995
|
|
E. NATIVE AMERICAN TREATIES State
Sovereignty--Compatibility with Indian Treaty Rights.,
113 Harv. L. Rev. 389 Harvard Law Review
November, 1999
THE WORLD IS THEIR OYSTER? INTERPRETING
THE SCOPE OF NATIVE AMERICAN OFF-RESERVATION SHELLFISH
RIGHTS IN WASHINGTON STATE Jason W. Anderson,
23 Seattle U. L. Rev. 145 Seattle
University Law Review Summer 1999
RECONCILING SECTION 7 OF THE ENDANGERED
SPECIES ACT WITH NATIVE AMERICAN RESERVED WATER RIGHTS Brian
A. Schmidt, 18 Stan. Envtl. L.J. 109
Stanford Environmental Law Journal January, 1999
NOT IN MY BACKYARD PASH V. HPC: THE CLASH
BETWEEN NATIVE HAWAIIAN GATHERING RIGHTS AND WESTERN
CONCEPTS OF PROPERTY IN HAWAII Samuel J. Panarella, 28 Envtl. L. 467
Environmental Law Summer 1998
THE CONVERGENCE OF CROSS-BOUNDARY
ENFORCEMENT THEORIES IN AMERICAN INDIAN LAW: AN ATTEMPT TO
RECONCILE FULL FAITH AND CREDIT, COMITY AND ASYMMETRY By
Robert Laurence, 18 QLR 115 QLR Spring 1998
THE HUNT FOR GRAY WHALES: THE DILEMMA OF
NATIVE AMERICAN TREATY RIGHTS AND THE INTERNATIONAL
MORATORIUM ON WHALING Lawrence Watters Connie Dugger,
22 Colum. J. Envtl. L. 319 Columbia
Journal of Environmental Law 1997
WHEN LOSING IS WINNING: AMERICAN INDIAN
TRIBAL SOVEREIGNTY VERSUS STATE SOVEREIGNTY AFTER SEMINOLE
TRIBE v. FLORIDA - 116 S.CT. 1114 (1996) Allison Fabyanske
Eklund, 20 Hamline L. Rev. 125 Hamline
Law Review Fall, 1996
SOVEREIGNTY AS A BAR TO ENFORCEMENT OF
EXECUTIVE ORDER NO. 11,246 IN FEDERAL CONTRACTS WITH NATIVE
AMERICAN TRIBES Vicki J. Limas,
26 N.M. L. Rev. 257 New Mexico Law
Review Spring, 1996
ADMINISTRATIVE LAW: THE NAVAJO NATION
DEFEATS NON-INDIAN COMPANY AND SCORES ONE FOR NATIVE
AMERICAN LEGAL SELF-DETERMINATION [ PITTSBURG & MIDWAY
MINING CO. V. WATCHMAN, 52 F.3D 1531 (10TH CIR. 1995)]
Jennifer A. Wood, 35 Washburn L.J. 376
Washburn Law Journal Spring 1996
NATIVE AMERICAN SOVEREIGNTY AND TREATY
RIGHTS: ARE THEY HISTORICAL ILLUSIONS? Robert A. Fairbanks,
20 Am. Indian L. Rev. 141 American
Indian Law Review 1995-
COMING FULL CIRCLE: AMERICAN INDIAN TREATY
LITIGATION FROM AN INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS PERSPECTIVE
Angela R. Hoeft, 14 Law & Ineq. 203
Law and Inequality: A Journal of Theory & Practice
December, 1995
NATIVE AMERICAN TREATY RIGHTS TO SCARCE
NATURAL RESOURCES Dana Johnson,
43 UCLA L. Rev. 547 UCLA Law Review
December 1995
AMERICAN INDIAN TREATIES AND MODERN
INTERNATIONAL LAW Siegfried Wiessner,
7 St. Thomas L. Rev. 567 St. Thomas
Law Review Summer, 1995
WHAT'S PAST IS PROLOGUE: THE STATUS AND
CONTEMPORARY RELEVANCE OF AMERICAN INDIAN TREATIES Kirke
Kickingbird,
7 St. Thomas L. Rev. 603 St. Thomas
Law Review Summer, 1995
NATIVE AMERICAN SOVEREIGNTY TAKES A BACK
SEAT TO THE "PIG IN THE PARLOR:" THE REDEFINING OF
TRIBAL SOVEREIGNTY IN TRADITIONAL PROPERTY LAW TERMS C.E.
Willoughby, 19 S. Ill. U. L.J. 593
Southern Illinois University Law Journal Spring, 1995
APPLICATION OF FEDERAL LABOR AND
EMPLOYMENT STATUTES TO NATIVE AMERICAN TRIBES: RESPECTING
SOVEREIGNTY AND ACHIEVING CONSISTENCY Vicki J. Limas,
26 Ariz. St. L.J. 681 Arizona State Law
Journal Fall, 1994
|
|
LONE WOLF V. HITCHCOCK In the Supreme
Court of the American Indian Nations, 8-WTR Kan. J.L. & Pub. Pol'y 174
Kansas Journal of Law and Public Policy Winter 1999
NATIVE AMERICANS AND CIVIC IDENTITY IN
ALTA CALIFORNIA Susan Scafidi, 75 N.D.L. Rev. 423
North Dakota Law Review 1999
THE STRANGER WHO RESIDES WITH YOU: IRONIES
OF ASIAN-AMERICAN AND AMERICAN INDIAN LEGAL HISTORY Joseph
William Singer, 40 B.C. L. Rev. 171
Boston College Law Review December, 1998
"BECAUSE THE BIBLE TELLS ME SO":
MANIFEST DESTINY AND AMERICAN INDIANS Steven Paul Mcsloy,
9 St. Thomas L. Rev. 37 Saint
Thomas Law Review Fall 1996
|
| |
|