Statutory Divestiture of Tribal Sovereignty
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2017
Abstract
The Supreme Court’s non-decision in Dollar General v. Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians is evidence not only of disagreement on tribal civil jurisdiction but perhaps also uncertainty in how to analyze divestiture of tribal sovereignty. Most scholars (including myself) have described the Court’s behavior in tribal sovereign authority cases as one of judicial supremacy, in that the Court merely makes policy choices based on its own ideological views of tribal power. That is a mistake. Persuaded by the federal government’s argument in Dollar General, I now argue that the proper analysis rests with federal statutes. Indian law practitioners can and should reconsider the Court’s prior decisions in this vein, as the best ones already do, and analyze tribal sovereign powers in the paradigm of statutory divestiture rather than judicial supremacy.
Recommended Citation
Fletcher, Matthew. "Statutory Divestiture of Tribal Sovereignty." Federal Lawyer 64 (2017): 38-47. (Work published when author not on Michigan Law faculty.)
Comments
Work published when author not on Michigan Law faculty.