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Federal Law and Indian Policy Overview - Indian Affairs In the late 1960s and early 1970s, federal Indian policy began to support the concept of Indian self-determination Various laws and presidential policies strengthened support for tribal governments and reaffirmed federal acknowledgment of tribal sovereignty
Algebra of Federal Indian Law: The Hard Trail of Decolonizing and . . . Professor Robert Williams examines the historical origins of modern Indian law jurisprudence He argues that the white man's European-derived legal discourse relies on historically derived myths to legitimize the colonization and subordination of Indian tribes
EXCEPTIONALISM AND ASSIMILATIONISM IN FEDERAL INDIAN LAW Not every rule in federal Indian law differs from the rules outside federal Indian law, but there are prominent and important differences with the rest of U S public law
ARTICLES - Harvard Law Review In this Article, I argue for a more inclusive paradigm that reaches beyond the black white binary, and I highlight the centrality of federal Indian law and this Nation’s tragic history with colonialism to public law
THE SPECTER OF INDIAN REMOVAL: THE PERSISTENCE OF STATE SUPREMACY . . . This Article reveals that the continued use of state supremacy arguments defies constitutional law and federal Indian affairs policy, produces an inaccurate history of Native nations and federal Indian law, and perpetuates the racism and violence that characterized the Removal Era
A SHORT HISTORY OF INDIAN LAW IN THE SUPREME COURT The Trilogy, primarily authored by Chief Justice John Mar-shall, established federal primacy in Indian affairs, excluded state law from Indian country, and recognized tribal governance authority
A History of Federal Indian Policy - Oxford Academic This chapter provides a five-hundred-year historical review of the relationship between Indian nations and the non-Indians who settled here The federal government’s Indian policies have fluctuated wildly over the years, and each change in policy spurred changes in the law