Title

Federal Indian Law And Environmental Policy: A Social Continuity Of Violence

Abstract

Tribal environmental policy is generally dictated by the federal government as a matter of fiduciary responsibility. This relationship exists despite sacred treaties negotiated in reciprocal, government-to-government relationships that explicitly placed reserved tribal land bases exclusively in tribal control. Fiduciary responsibility or the trust relationship, in the case of reserved tribal lands, is the legacy of the doctrine of discovery, a race-based European jurisprudential tool used to dispossess Indian people of their vast land holdings in North America. This tool has been institutionalized into federal Indian law and policy instead of the treaty arrangements in such a way that legal scholars have yet to unearth the inherent violence in current federal Indian environmental policy. We argue that this violence was constituted by removing the government-to-government relationship (regarding reservation land), resulting in a disruption of traditional American Indian values that had previously maintained sustainable land management practices. Thus, contemporary federal Indian environmental policy bears the burden of restoring two important broken relationships: the government-to-government relationship between tribes and the federal government, and the relationship of tribes to nature that had previously been protected by treaties. The first step in this process, and the subject of this Article, is to recognize the violence inherent in today's federal Indian policy.

Publication Date

9-1-2003

Publication Title

Journal of Environmental Law and Litigation

Volume

18

Issue

2

Number of Pages

223-250

Document Type

Article

Personal Identifier

scopus

Socpus ID

2142640524 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/2142640524

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