Fall 2009 Course Schedule

Federal Law on Indian Tribes (LAW-641-001)
Rosser

Meets: 10:30 AM - 11:50 AM (TTH) - Room 351

Enrolled: 10 / Limit: 14

Administrator Access


Notices

There are no notices at this time.

Description

Analyzes and challenges assumptions underlying the major themes in Indian law: that Indian tribes are not juridical entities in international law because their sovereignty is dependent on the United States government; that Indian tribal people have a ward-guardian relationship with the government arising from this dependent status; and that Indian tribal property is justifiably treated differently from other property. In addition to sources of federal law dealing with Indians, the class will examine tribal court opinions and the developing international law regarding rights of indigenous peoples.

Textbooks and Other Materials

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David Getches, Charles Wilkinson, and Robert A. Williams, Federal Indian Law: Cases and Materials (5th ed. 2004).

First Class Readings

For the first class please read: p1-37 (skim 1-30, read closely 31-37) Introduction to tribes and different perspectives on Indian law. For the second class, read: p39-71 Historical influences on Indian law and Johnson v. McIntosh.

Syllabus

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