The Necessity of the Indian Child Welfare Act HERE
Morongo tribe heading to 5th Circuit Court of Appeals to defend Indian Child Welfare Act
Cherokee Nation to be present at rehearing of Brackeen case
Congress today has substantial and sweeping powers over
Native nations and Native people, including the authority to abolish
tribes and tribal reservations, and to expand or restrict tribal
authority. These powers come from a series of Supreme Court decisions in
the late 1800s and early 1900s that were based on racist views about
American Indians—that Congress needed virtually unlimited authority over
American Indian affairs because Natives were not equipped to govern
themselves. The Court reasoned that Natives’ “weakness and helplessness”
gave the federal government “broad domain” over them; later cases
pointed to Natives’ “condition of tutelage or dependency.” Those
decisions gave Congress more power when it comes to Native affairs than
it has when it comes to taxing or spending or regulating interstate
commerce.
But
over time, these cases have come to produce different results. These
same decisions have empowered Congress, in recent years, to protect
Native families from various new and old forms of discrimination,
imperialism, and white supremacy. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Fifth Circuit is poised to decide whether that will remain so. It will
hear the case later today.
Oral Argument
Oral Argument
More articles:
Morongo tribe heading to 5th Circuit Court of Appeals to defend Indian Child Welfare Act
Cherokee Nation to be present at rehearing of Brackeen case
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