Should
the law be praised or cursed
for what it has done to the
American Indian?
Using
American legal history, politics
and jurisprudence, this study
considers the degree to which
American courts have maintained
their autonomy and withstood
political pressure, when the
sovereignty and property rights
of Native American tribes were
at issue.
In
1879, a chief of the Ponca
tribe, when released from military
custody by an order of a U.S.
district court, pronounced
the use of law “a better
way” to redress Indian
grievances. This study explores
the development of legal doctrine
affecting Native American tribes
by courts and commissions in
the United States beginning
with seminal court cases of
the early 19th century and
continuing through to the 1980’s.
Whether the law ever was a
better way for Native Americans
is a question of fundamental
importance not only with regard
to the rights - or even the
survival - of American Indian
tribes but also with respect
to the claim of the American
legal system to be equally
fair and just to all groups
in society regardless of their
economic and political power. |