indigenous
Alt Description: Image displays the NNALSA 50th Anniversary logo, publicizing that L&C Law hosted the competition and the Indian Law ...

Winners Announced in 21st National NALSA Writing Competition

Two papers explored sovereignty in association with the COVID-19 pandemic; a third paper explored solutions to Tulsa’s post-McGirtwhite-collar crime.

education, law
Summer classes are a great way to explore new practice areas or tackle required courses. And practicing attorneys are always welcome!

2022 Summer Law Classes Showcase Diverse Content

Globally accessible and in-person options through the summer.
Indian Law, summer courses

Study Indian Law Remotely This Summer

Indian law experts lead two intensive remote summer courses examining Federal Indian Law in the context of their impact on traditional subsistence hunting and fishing of Alaska Natives, and crime, punishment and ultimately, justice for Native Americans.
indigenous, multicultural, staff

Dr. Carma Corcoran named Native Hope Fellow

Dr. Corcoran’s fellowship will focus on bringing hope and healing to tribal communities impacted by incarceration.
ABA, alum, alumni news, award, awards, professor
Román D. Hernández

Alum and Professor Receive ABA Award for Commitment to Diversity in the Law

Román D. Hernández ’00, and adjunct professor Barbara Creel received the Spirit of Excellence award from the ABA Commission on Racial and Ethnic Diversity in the Profession.

Take a Summer Course at Lewis & Clark Law - From your Home

Lewis & Clark Law School is offering summer courses via distance learning for 2021!

Study Indian Law Remotely This Summer at Lewis & Clark Law School

The Indian Law Program at Lewis & Clark Law School will be offering summer courses via remote learning for the first time during Summer 2021.
carma corcoran, collaboration, conference, Indian Law, indigenous

Lewis & Clark Law School Co-Hosts International Peacemaking Colloquium

Lewis & Clark Law School co-hosted with the National American Indian Court Judges Association (NAICJA) the international 2020 Peacemaking Colloquium which highlighted Tribal/Indigenious/State dispute resolutions with participants from the United States, Ireland, Columbia, England, and Scotland.
carma corcoran, Indian Law

Carma Corcoran Selected for Fellowship to Advance Democratic Values

Carma Corcoran, Lewis & Clark Law School’s Indian Law Summer Program Coordinator, has received a two-year fellowship by the Kettering Foundation’s Deliberative Democracy Institute (DDI). The fellowship is aimed at improving civil society by fostering a learning exchange between people from diverse nations.
Corin La Point-Aitchison '17

Corin Aitchison ’17 receives National Native American Bar Association bar prep scholarship

The National Native American Bar Association (NNABA) Foundation selected third-year Lewis & Clark law student Corin La Point-Aitchison as a recipient of its 2017 Bar Review Scholarship.
Theresa Dicks, a Quinault Allottee, and Nelson D. Terry at Federal Court, Seattle, 1973

Quinault Allottees annually provide the Nelson D. Terry Scholarship to Native American law students

This scholarship is awarded annually and is funded by the Quinault Indian Allottees Association. The scholarship is available to all incoming students, however, preference is given first to  Quinault Allottees, then to Native American regional and national applicants with a connection to their culture and heritage.
Indian Law
Cheryl Demmert Fairbanks, Esq.

Visiting Indian Law Professor Cheryl Demmert Fairbanks

Lewis & Clark Law School is pleased to announce that it will host Professor Cheryl Demmert Fairbanks as the third Walter R. Echo-Hawk Distinguished Visiting Professor in the spring of 2017.

Fluent english speakers needed!

Volunteer to be paired with (an) international student(s) and meet with them bi-weekly to help improve their english while bonding with people from all over the world!

Professor Pommersheim Has a Web Component for His Forthcoming Book

Professor Pommersheim has joined the digital age!

Since 2008, Se-ah-dom Edmo has coordinated Lewis & Clark's Indigenous Ways of Knowing program.

IWOK Coordinator works to protect Tribal citizens, strengthen sovereignty

Se-ah-dom Edmo works with Tribal leaders to address critical issues and strengthen sovereignty.
blog, Indian Law

Indian Law professor’s blog cited in WSJ’s “Blog Watch”

Indian Law professor and blog author of Native America, Discovered and Conquered Robert Miller was noted by The Wall Street Journal’s Blog Watch in the category of Native Americans.
blog

Yupik Eskimo makes U.S. Olympic team

Alaskan and Yupik Eskimo Callan Chythlook-Sifsof was named to the U.S. Olympic team. In 2006, Chythlook-Sifsof earned a berth on the U.S. Snowboard Team and took third place in her first World Cup snowboardcross competition in Japan. She won the U.S. National Championship title that same year and took a fourth-place in World Cup Finals in Quebec. Read the full story.
blog

American Indian artifacts stolen off of private land

In September 2009, Wesley Hodges and James Roberts were discovered illegally digging on private property in Burke County, Georgia. When state Department of Natural Resources Ranger Jeff Billips found the pair, they had already dug up piles of artifacts and human bone fragments. Hodges and Roberts appeared before State Court Judge Jerry M. Daniel last Wednesday where they entered guilty pleas for excavating without written permission, criminal trespass, and littering...
blog

Mashantucket Pequot Tribe restructuring debt

The Mashantucket Pequot Tribe in Connecticut operates the Foxwoods Casino and Resort. It has been attempting to restructure more than $2 billion worth of debt since last summer. It is reported that it has reached an agreement to continue these negotiations with its senior lenders. According to a New York public relations firm, the Tribe and “a majority of its senior lenders” have reached “an agreement in principle” to extend a forbearance agreement through A...
blog

Klamath Tribes agree with basin restoration plan

The news reports that the Klamath Tribes in Oregon are the first to approve a $1 billion agreement for restoring Klamath River salmon and bringing peace to the long-standing water battles in the basin. The Tribes announced that their citizens voted to approve the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement, which is part of a broader settlement designed to remove aging hydroelectric dams that block salmon. The overall settlement is expected to be signed by the dozens of...
blog

New Mexico tribe building utility scale solar plant

Indian Country Today reports that the 3,000 citizens of the Jemez Pueblo in New Mexico are on the verge of building the nation’s first utility-scale solar plant on tribal land. “We don’t have any revenue coming in except for a little convenience store,” said James Roger Madalena, a former tribal governor who now represents the pueblo in the state Legislature. “It’s very critical that we become innovative, creative, that we come up with something that wil...
blog

American Indian Rosetta stone?

The news reports that a rare 400-year-old slate tablet was discovered this past summer at Jamestown, Virginia, the first permanent English settlement in America. With the help of enhanced imagery and an expert in Elizabethan script, archaeologists are beginning to unravel the meaning of the mysterious text and images etched into this tablet. Various enhancements of the images and writing have helped researchers identify a 16th-century writing style and to discern ne...
blog

Did American Indians domesticate dogs?

As a young archaeologist, Jeff Blick helped make an astounding discovery in Virginia – the skeletons of 112 dogs buried by American Indians nearly 1,000 years ago. He is still studying the bones, and he hopes the latest tests will guide scientists to study the ancient transformation of wolf to dog. After 13 or so years of spent digging ended in the ’80s, Blick’s work continues in his archaeology lab at Georgia College and State University. Blick and his st...
blog

Pequots to generate own power

The Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation in Connecticut could become a “green” island unto itself in a few years. That is the ultimate goal of a cogeneration approach the Tribe will embrace with a $34 million project it expects to start testing this spring. Initially, it is expected to provide nearly 60% of the tribe’s electricity needs and at the same time heat and cool Foxwoods Resort Casino. Two 10,300-horsepower jet engines will propel the system, which w...
blog

Minnesota study says Indian art can benefit state economically

A University of Minnesota study suggests that, if assisted, Native American artists could become a major economic asset to the state. Demographer Ann Markusen and writer Marcie Rendon, an enrolled citizen at the White Earth Band, interviewed dozens of native artists. Working alone means these artists often have to do everything from booking shows and publicity and finding educational opportunities in their field. All this while actually doing their creative work...
blog

S.D. Tribe signing deal to turn garbage into fuel

The Crow Creek Sioux tribal council last week unanimously approved signing a memorandum of understanding with EcoTech Fuels. The company is supposed to be in South Dakota this week to meet with tribal officials to choose a site for a $39 million fuel production plant that would turn municipal waste into Torqazine, a fuel or fuel additive recognized by the Environmental Protection Agency that produces greater octane than ethanol and burns a bit cleaner. The plant...
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