Good afternoon and Janet bad now professor of public policy and political science at the University of Michigan and the ET and Goldenberg and our Director for the Michigan Washington program on behalf of Dean Michael Barr, who was watching here today. And the faculty and students of the Ford School is a great pleasure to welcome all of you to this special Policy Talks at the Ford School event with re-ask Kanji and chairman bryant Newland. I'll be talking with 3Hz and Chairman Newland about issues of tribal sovereignty and recent legal challenges to that sovereignty, both in Michigan and nationally. Before we dive into discussion, let me very briefly introduce our guests. Rehash Carnegie is a founding member of conjugated Canson affirm that represents Native American tribes in field spanning treaty rights, Sovereignty Protection, taxation and regulation, land claims for land use, reservation boundaries, gaming and economic development and environmental protection. A graduate of Harvard College and Yale Law School, Reais shirt served as a law clerk to the late honorable Betty Fletcher of United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit and Justice David Souter of the United States Supreme Court. He is a principal advisor to the Tribal Supreme Court Project and represents tribes at all levels of the federal court system. Brian Newland is the president of the bank notes Indian community. And I really recognized Indian tribe Michigan's Eastern Upper Peninsula. Prior to his election in 2017, Chairman Newland served as the Chief Judge of the baby bells Indian community tribal court from 2009 to two thousand two thousand twelve, Chairman Newland served as an appointee of President Barack Obama. Obama, and the Department of the Interior, where he was the senior policy advisor to the Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs. He also served as the Michigan native boat coordinator for President Obama's 2008 campaign and worked with Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential campaign to help develop its Indian affairs policy proposals. Chairman Newland is an alumnus of the Michigan State University College Los indigenous law program, as well as the James Madison College at Michigan State University. And then finally, it was a couple of quick notes about our format. We're going to have some time at the end of the event today for audience questions. So think about what you might want to ask. Now. We've received something advanced, but you can also submit your questions via the live chat on YouTube. Or you can tweet your questions to match tag policy talks. Oh, wow. Re-ask and Chairman, New Land. And thank you for being here today. They'd make which Thanks, Jenna. Mistakes rather this yeah. So, Chairman Yellen, I'd like to invite you to start us out and just give us a sense of the big picture frame tracks fit into the political structure of the United States. Well, that's a great question. You know, people are, people who are students of government are very used to our constitutional republic with a federal government, state governments as the two forms of sovereigns, and then local units of government. Actually, there's a third sovereign in our system, which is tribal governments. And we are both reference than the US Constitution, but also extra constitutional meaning we exist outside of the constitutional framework in the United States. So the commerce clause of the US Constitution references that Congress has the power to regulate trade among the states, with foreign nations, and also with the Indian tribes. And then Article, Article six of the Constitution references the treaty power of the United States. And the United States has entered into and ratified a number hundreds of treaties with tribal nations over the years. In US, treaties are agreements that your students are probably familiar with as negotiated between sovereign governments. And those treaties form the backbone of the relationship between tribes in the United States. But where, where reference in the Constitution, but we're outside of the constitution, firmly recognize this sovereign governments by the United States Supreme Court and going back 200 years. And the other part is that, you know, we're kind of a sui generis were very unique. We, we, where local governments, oftentimes, we also act with the powers that many state governments have and then exercise diplomatic relations both here in Michigan with our fellow tribes across border and Canada and then with each other. And so we get to do lots of cool stuff in that framework. We asked, did you wanna add anything to that? That's all very well said. I'll just add that the supreme court decisions that Chairman, Neil and reference are are are very interesting in terms of the rule, thinking about the rule of law in this country. There was a trilogy of opinions by the great Chief Justice, John Marshall back in the 18 twenties and 18 thirties, which really established the sort of the extra constitutional framework for tribal Power. And what, what Chief Justice Marshall said was that tribes are domestic dependent sovereigns. He called them. And the important point about those decisions were that they establish tribes as sovereigns, subject to the Plenary Power, the Federal Government, but separate and apart from the states. And those holdings which arose in the eastern part of the United States where Georgia and Alabama were trying to crush the Cherokees and the creeks and other tribes. And on the eastern seaboard. Been fundamental to the survival of tribes to this day. Because while, you know, in this country we often honor the rule of law and the breach. And that has certainly been true with respect to a tribal Power is tribal treaty rights. The fundamental notion that tribes have this residual sovereignty that immunize them from state power and state authority has been essential to the ability of tribes to survive. Because otherwise, undoubtedly, state governments who have always been very jealous tribal prerogatives would have acted to, to snuff out those tribal powers. So you've just raise the states, as we've been thinking a lot about where the tribes fit sorted within the constitutional framework. It does sort of seem like they're rivals in a sense to the states. And so what are some of the points of comparison and contrast between the tribes and the state and local units of government. Rails can probably give you the pinpoint citation for, for this quote. But the Supreme Court in a case from the 18 hundreds, recognize that competition between tribes and states. And said, states are often the deadliest enemies of the tribes where they're found. And that's often the case actually during this pandemic, we see that playing out across the country. The highest profile case in South Dakota, where the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe has put up health checkpoints on the highways around the reservation. And the Governor, Christie now has been fighting with the tribe to try to get them to take it down. And we've seen tribes and states kind of battling for, battling over who has jurisdiction to make decisions in Indian country. And but the flip side of that coin is that it can also lead to some very unique cooperative relationships as well between tribes and states and local governments to serve everybody's collective interests. Do. I would love to hear a little bit more about some of those cooperative opportunities. Sure. I mean, the biggest one that comes to mind here in Michigan is the cooperative management of the Great Lakes fishery in that occurs, that's actually a consent decree that was entered by a federal court coming out of tribal treaty rights litigation where the federal government and the tribes here in Michigan, including my tribe, had to sue the state of Michigan to stop interfering with our treaty rate to fish. But what that led to is a joint effort to manage the fishery resources in the Great Lakes. And then in 2007, a separate agreement to manage fish and wildlife hunting in the ceded territory is I'll break out my handy Michigan map for you. My screen is reversed. So I mean, we're talking, you know, the the northern third of the Lower Peninsula and the eastern half of the upper peninsula. And that's really been useful. I mean, it's, it's also comes with a lot of friction. But even more recently here with my tribe. Using our power is related to public health. We have actually worked with the state government and local governments and other tribes to coordinate covert testing across the eastern upper peninsula, which up until this month actually made it, I think, contributed to the relative low rates of coded in this part of the state compared with others. So maybe if you want to extend any of that. I'm curious about when mary IS disagreement, how it's resolved. But while there's plenty of disagreement and funny and mechanisms of a resolution, I'm I'm just thinking that it might be helpful to take one step back for a second and talk. I realized that in talking about federal policy, they might be helpful to situate us in terms of where we are with respect to the federal government and then the high that back in the state relations. We have gone through your various eras of federal policy in this country with respect to tribes. And so when we talk about the stasis, Chairman Nuan says, yo haven't been viewed as the deadliest one of the tribes. That's often been true. It's also been true that there have been periods of time when the federal government has been, you know, sort of hell-bent on, on tribal and elation. And we've gone through some real vicissitudes in federal policy. But we started off with the Chief Justice Marshall framework of tribes as sovereigns, which led to this era of treaty making. As the Chairman talked about hundreds of treaties entered into from the time of really before the founding until 18711871 Congress. And it's really the House of Representatives being jealous of status prerogatives In this regard, put an end to treaty-making. Treating me came to an end. More, even more damaging though for tribal interests was that in the 190s, began what was known as the allotment era, where the United States at that point, very hungry for tribal land. Because large reservations have been set aside, decided to break those reservations up. And it's called the Latin Europe, last for about 50 years, where many Treaty promised reservations were subject to be parceled out on an individual basis to, to to tribal members, usually four-year acres of land. And lo and behold, a lot of land was leftover afterwards, which was sold off to, to non-Indian settlers. And that's why we see in lots of parts of the country have reservations with a fair amount of non-Indian land holding on those reservations. In, out West, you still have large reservation areas with these in holdings. In states like Michigan. By and large, you have very small land bases now for tribes. Largely the result of that, that policy. In the New Deal era, the allotment policy was put to an end. Recognition of just how devastating it had been for tribes. And there was the short period, a little renaissance of tribal rights. During the New Deal era, union Reorganization Act was passed. An effort to infuse tribal governments with some authority. It didn't last very long. 19 fifties, a cable on the termination era where the federal government actually set up to explicitly terminate tribes. And the whole goal was to assimilate tribes into the body politic gills of America feel and its muscles, the post-World War Two. And then it was Richard Nixon in 1970 who ushered in the modern era with his proclamation of Indian self-determination and a recognition that tries or not go away. And that it was important federal policy to infuse tribes with a measure of autonomy again, over their, their own, their own fortunes are own fate. And ever since that time, federal policy has been largely oriented towards respecting tribal sovereignty into building up, helping tribes rebuild their governmental institutions. So that brings us to the modern era where you have tribal governments that have been strengthened immeasurably over the last 50 years. Yeah, partly with federal help, partly as a result of economic revitalization. Gaming has played a significant role in that, but other forms of economic strengthening as well, which leads to today where you have leaders like Chairman Neil and many tribes, tribal governments across the country who are doing an incredible amount of I'm governmental activity, robust activity across a wide spectrum, everything from health to education to economic development, environmental protection. So when we talk about tribes as sovereigns, it's a real sovereignty. At this point. Governments really acting as governments. And what we've seen with respect to the states is that at first there was outright hostility to this revitalization and tribal governance. There was this jealousy, sort of a sense of, it's a zero-sum game. Either we, the state, get to regulate attacks within Indian lands, or it's the tribes doing that. And then so the more tribal power and less state power within the last, it's really last 20 years or so. There's been a greater enlightenment on the part of states and a recognition not all states by any means. A chair vanilla mentioned South Dakota as sort of a, you know, the archetypal example of, of a renegade state. But a growing recognition that working together with tribes can really help to enhance overall governmental capability and governmental infrastructure. So like the joint covert testing, for example, a perfect example of tribes and states working, working together on, on, on issues. In terms of your question about resolution of disputes. The other model, the the old-style models litigation. There are a lot of what we do has been litigation that's tribe versus, versus states and sort of some of that zero-sum. But there is a growing compacting African efforts of tribes and states to work out these issues. The fisheries issues that the Chairman talked about being a key example, but they span everything from taxation to, to gaming to environmental protection. A whole gamut of issues where tribes and states now work closely together. So I have actually many things, so many interesting things but to questions. So as you were talking about these different periods that characterize these relationships. Do you have a theory for what caused the change from one period to another? It in particular, I, I'm very curious about this flip. Actually that seems to flip multiple times between, on the one hand, you know, trying to disintegrate the tribes and then flipping and saying now what we need is increased sovereignty and empowerment. Where did that come from? I can, I can put it, maybe in blunt terms than Rhea has. Put it up to paraphrase Bill Clinton, it's the land stupid of eight. It's really just about land ownership and control over lands. Because if you think about it, tribes had, prior to the founding, prior to colonial powers reaching this continent, tribes owned every square inch of this continent. And vast resources here in North America. And there are vast resources that are found on what's left of Indian country and in wealth that has been derived from mining or developing Indian lands. In a lot of times that's, that's what's driven. And as we talk about economic development in the story of America, the, this, the core of our legal system is intended to protect your personal liberty and your personal, the property. And with Indian country, the seesaws back and forth. If we've got a two century, century and a half experiment with, there's always this, this effort, let's privatized land holdings in Indian country and make tribes just have an economy just like us. And that's been, that was tried with allotment, was tried in the termination era. And there's always, you know, every few years there's rumblings of let's go back to that. And it failed miserably both times that was tried. And when I say that it failed, Indian people and Indian people were worse off. And then the net effect, if you look at a lot or at termination and places like from a nominee tribe of Wisconsin. What happened was Indian lands and valuable Indian lands were made accessible to non-Indians for exploitation or development. So it's a story about who got the land. Yeah, it's such a great question and I think Joe Chairman Dillard's answer is, is a very large part of it. And I think there's, there's a story that sums it up. Well, in my mind, which is, you know, we just had a case in the Supreme Court about the Indian territory in, in Oklahoma, where tribes and the roots of east to this large the area of what is now modern-day Oklahoma, with the thought that, you know, will, that the tribes have millions of hits the land there, the rebuild their homes. This is not land we will ever need, right? It was sort of the thought. And, and so a lot of tribes and up and up the homo and the o saves tribe that cheat the LSH had been moved around the West because the style at pressures, the ASH came Oklahoma and the chief of the LSH intentionally picked out the worst possible farming. E, picked out just land that was desolate and said, we're picking this land because now the white men won't bother us anymore. And then, lo and behold, a number of decades later, oil's discomfort. In that land, right? And then it came you another crush of settlement. So a lot of the impetus for breaking the treaty promises in the treaty system had to do with economic pressures. But it's also really easy. I've spent a lot of time reading historical reports from Indian agents and others over time. And there are just so many conflicting impulses, even from people who are well-intentioned. And there was a very large strand of American thought that the, the phrase, It sort of summed it up was, we're going to kill the Indian, save the man. That the only way that he needs were going to survive in this country was through assimilation. And you'll just sort of spent sense of American strength and manifest destiny, manifested itself that way with respect to, to the tribes. And, but you know, I think it's a real story of human endurance and survival and how the tribes did not go away. And they as much as, as strong as that assimilationist force was, there was this enduring underlying strength and a commitment to culture and history in one's ancestors that allow the tribes to suffer through just incredible hardship. But to claim to their identity that your strength in a lot of ways is what led to the modern era where I think the government, the federal government, realized at a certain point, these people aren't gone away and we need a more enlightened policy to deal with that. And one last anecdote, I'll tell that because you're human, individual humans have a lot to do with history. Richard Nixon, when he proclaimed that self-determination pulse has a lot of time, you know how to read Richard Nixon, anything so enlightened about Indians. And the story is he played football at Whittier College in California. In his coach was a Native American, and he was very close to his coach and he learned a lot about the, the history and RWA tribes and it's sort of stuck. And so sometimes little accidents like that can also play a big role in it. Just the PS, I'm Raza story about the sage reservation. There is a great book that came out the last few years called killers of the flower moon. That, that details the history of those age reservation and the oil boom they're in, in a lot of imaginations around trying to gain title over those lands. And there was a spate of murders on the reservation. And I think at the time the pandemic started, Martin Scorsese and Leonardo DiCaprio, we're involved in turning it book into a movie. So for those of you watching, and that's, that's a great book to read. It's a fascinating story. Yes, I second that recommendation wholeheartedly. And so again, just to follow-up, so remember, I know nothing. I mean, you know. So should I be thinking about the tribes as being constitutional equals two states in terms of sovereignty. And if that's the case, how can there are ban all of this fluctuation? Whoa. I'm out of practice on the law a little bit. Since I've been doing this job a few years and realize contact about how the law develop. The, the question about constitute sovereignty. I would say yes and no. I mean, tribes are on it, were outside the constitutional framework. But the relationship between tribes and the federal government is very similar to the federalism structure because states have their agreements with one another to create the federal government. And that was the Constitution. Tribes have our agreement about our relationship with the United States through the treaties that we've signed. And in those treaties, very widely, oftentimes the earlier the treaty that the more advantageous it was to the tribe that signed on to it. So tribes have tribes, I have sovereign powers now that that has been eroded over time by Congress and the Supreme Court by essentially might makes right claiming powers that depending on who you ask, may or may not have existed in re-ask can talk about that actually, in the case. He just litigated and one at the Supreme Court about whether might makes right. And in Indian law. We're at a really interesting juncture in the court, in the supreme court with respect to tribal rights. Because I think the, you know, the answer to your question is as a matter of sort of original principles. First principles, tribes were meant to be on the same plane as estates. And I think that was Chief Justice Marshall's vision that tribes would have territorial sovereignty. They would control the peoples within their boarders regardless of whether they were citizens of the tribe are not just, you know, it's just like the state of Michigan might. But really what happened over time, it was more of the court than Congress or the executive branch. Said over time, no tribes can't possibly have the same measure of authority over non-Indians, even within their reservation boundaries that a state government that's just inconsistent with our sort of sense of, of, of, of governmental structure. And so the court in, in basically common-law decision-making over time has really eroded tribal power with respect to non-Indians in reservation boundaries. And what we end up with is a really complicated set of rules and principles that govern the measure of tribal authority within reservation boundaries. So tribes, for example, cannot exercise criminal authority over non-Indians within their boundaries by virtue of court decision, except with respect to violence against women issues by virtue of more recent convert, you know, by virtue the Violence Against Women Act where Congress said, no, they need to at least have that authority. Core tribes can tax their own members, can tax non-members only in certain limited situation. We developed a really sort of idiosyncratic Byzantine set of, set of Walden's, what's been milliamps and with the Supreme Court lately is this is really just the last ten years or so, and especially accelerated now with the addition of justice Gorsuch to the bench. That the court a slam the brakes on on its own authority to divest tribes of parents and has been returning more of this original notion that Congress has plenary power with respect to tribes. And tribal power is going to be restricted. We need to see Congress saying that and saying it very explicitly. And otherwise, we the quarter not going to be in the business of of restricting powers and the Oklahoma case, the very recent one was the most forceful exposition in that set of principles today yet. And it was by Justice course it, you said very clearly that we are going to enforce the rule of law and not the rule of the strong. We're not going to worry about consequences of reinvesting tries with power and authority. That's for the political branches. And we're going to adhere to this greater understanding of tribal territorial authority over people within, within their borders. And that's the picture. I'm sorry, Jen was saying. I was going to add that. That's an instance where you would think ideologically, the conservatives might not be inclined to be allies of tribes. But this notion of originalism and textualism, you look at the treaties themselves as foundational law. And the law about treaties generally is pretty cut and dry as far as the Constitution goes, has, has made for instances where you can get Justice Gorsuch to author this forceful opinion defending treaties with Indian tribes and tribal rights. And it's signed onto by Justice Sotomayor. And Indian law and Indian policy really scrambles ideological lines, is that, you know, and that's, that's what makes it fun to to do this kind of work. One of the things, yeah, absolutely. Yeah. I was going to ask you. You sort of answered it is, should we be thinking about the treaties as being a quasi constitution, as is defining the relationship between the tribes and the federal government. And that it's the courts that fill in the gaps in the treaty as much as they fill in and interpret the copy of the Constitution in relation to federal and state relations. So should we be thinking about that as an equivalence? I would say that's a rough analogy. I'll explain why here. You have to remember that these treaties were negotiated. There is an asymmetry in power between the federal government and the tribes negotiating these things. And they're written in English, right? So oftentimes there was a translator on, on-site who is negotiating with a hand-picked delegate, handpick from the United States delegation of Indians to sign a treaty on behalf of people they may not have even had power to represent. And so it's negotiated in a foreign language, it's written down in a foreign language, and it's carried off to the United States Senate to be ratified. I had the opportunity when I was working in Washington DC to go to the National Archives and look at the 1836 Treaty of Washington, which my tribe signed. There was a party to really facilitated Michigan statehood a year later. And so I was in the archives room and they showed me the document that was negotiated by the Treaty Council. And then document that wasn't a go or ratified by the Senate. And you could see the changes. They pointed him out. So what was agreed to in the in the negotiations isn't what the united states ratified. And that happened a lot. And I'd ask the archivists, they said so what does the process what was the process for transporting these documents? And they said, well, we went back in those times. If the United States negotiated a treaty with France, there was a special box that it was put in and it was bound duct and sealed so you could tell if it had been opened and and there were security measures in place so that, you know, when it was ratified, that that was the document that was negotiated. And they said, well, what they do at the idiot treaties, they rolled it up and tied a string around it. And actually in the case of California, where they negotiated now a number of treaties with tribes. They were never even brought to the senate to be ratified. They were discovered later in a basement. And so you've got all these treaties that, that seeded the land that made up California that were never ratified by the US Senate. So from a legal standpoint, tribes, tribes are really good at. We accept that the laws, the law just quit changing the rules on us and we can make it work. And, and most tribes will say, will live by the treaties. Will, will, will honor our obligations if you honor your. So from that standpoint, yes, we would. Tribes would say, think of them as foundational law, but you have to remember the contexts in which they were negotiated. It wasn't the same context that the Constitution was debated by co-equal states. Okay, thank you for that. I, so we have some amazing questions from the audience, but before we get to those, I have one thing that I want to get ask you about and I guess in particular, Sharon Newland, I'd want to start with you based upon your experience in Washington. So as president elect, IDH1 is making his cabinet nominations isn't happening right now. His intentions known. We've heard so much discussion. The possibility of ham nominating Congresswoman adapt Holland, who's currently representing New Mexico's first district. So if she's nominated and confirmed, she would be the first Native American Secretary of the Interior. Could you talk about what that appointment would mean to the tribal communities? I think the symbolism speaks for itself. Not only the first Native cabinet secretary, but a native woman as a cabinet secretary and not just any Cabinet Secretary, the department that are overseas, Bureau of Indian Affairs and Indian education, but other land agencies that Directly impact tribes. It would be, it would be this symbolism itself is important, but it would actually be a big shift in the departments operations because Indian Affairs makes up anywhere between 1 fifth of the Department of the Interior's budget and 1 seventh approximately of its workforce. And like I said, it includes Bureau of Indian Affairs, Bureau of Indian Education, and other programs related to tribes. And it's never had Native American overseeing the entire department. And it was actually only under President Obama that we really saw natives elevated to the leadership. The department itself as Solicitor of the Department of the Interior in the deputy secretary. So to have somebody who understands what life is like on the ground in a tribal community where the land is held in trust by the Department of the Interior and Bureau of Reclamation helps deliver your water and your reservation butts up against national park. And what does that mean to have somebody who intuitively understands how the policy decisions land on the ground. It's hard to overstate the value of that to, to, you know, we always say representation matters and I think that would be just, that perspective would be huge. This is fascinating, fascinating to me. It give us maybe a little bit more detail about take us inside because you've been there and make a prediction. What would you expect to be, the change in the extent that tribal communities are involved in shaping federal policy. And what federal policies might bother. You see differently. The Secretary of Interior, whether, whether choose native American or, or whether she's not. It is not going to be the Secretary of Indian Affairs that that person's going to have a big job in wide responsibilities. But the biggest part is, is again just that awareness and oftentimes in Indian country just having people remember us is, is important. And I'll give you another example why people are used to. You look at a map and you say, OK, there's the state of Michigan on the map. The state of Michigan's powers are confined to the boundaries I see on that map. Well, a lot of times tribes have governmental powers that extend beyond the reservation. For example, managing our treaty fishery. And another times, our reservations are only a small part of what we used to have. So a lot of our sacred sites in ceremonial sites are located far from the reservation. And so bureau of land management, for example, doesn't always think, well, i'm a 100 by this, this area where we're gonna do a permit for a mine is a 100 miles from the reservation. We don't have to worry about tribes having somebody who knows, hey, just because we're not on the rare as we gotta take a look here and make sure we're reaching out in thinking about the impact. That's, that's huge and and frankly that would that would Prevent a lot of conflict and maybe limit work opportunities for attorneys practice. But I think it's going to be important for for tribal relations because dealing with those on the front end is way easier than dealing with him on the back and just being aware of it is half the battle. Yeah. We as if you had something to add that we have an audience question and I think builds upon this a little bit. But before I get to that, it was there anything that you would think about in this possible I meant, I think that alsos it up beautifully and just the the poetic symbolism. And when you think of the fact that the Department at the Department of Interior grew out of the Department of War. And for many years you'll remain the Department of War with respect to to the tribes. So this would be just a really striking development in so many different ways. Yeah. Well, so here's one question from somebody who's watching right now. Who's interested about this relationship between cultural sovereignty and political sovereignty? So how, how can cultural sovereignty, that is protection of traditional intellectual property, repatriation, language, etc. Reinforce and through their political sovereignty. Knew ahead, turn outward 3f. Well, I'll say a few things, but I think that the chairman's gonna have more to say at all. Given away our our courts work. There is a certain instinctive approach to and reaction to litigation arguments. And part of that is, is sort of some archetypal motions of, here's what tribes are and, and here's what's an embodied in tribal status and the cultural issues are as sort of a significant part of that understanding. And the more robust the sovereignty that tribes exercise be culturally, economically, politically, the more likely the courts are to recognize and vindicate the political sovereignty. And our Oklahoma case, I thought it was a really striking example that, you know, before we did that case, I'd ever spent any time in Oklahoma. And when the court granted this case about the reservation boundary, if we went down there, and I was so struck by the exercise of authority by the, the tribes there across the spectrum, including culturally, it became clear that while the state Oklahoma wanted to make that case about the city of Tulsa, which was within the reservation boundaries. What we wanted to do is make the case. But the entire rest of the 19 million acres, which is largely rural Oklahoma, very poor and very resource strapped and trans Oklahoma State resources because Obama is a low tax, low government kind of state. And meanwhile you had the travel Darwin's down only to creep. But the other, the other five tribes, they're exercising a remarkable amount of robust authority. And part of that was culturally in terms of language revitalization, in terms of protection of. Sacred sites, burial sites. When you drive around the creek Reservation, you still have the the traditional burial grounds there were the graves are raised off the ground and, and are open and it's a very striking sort of, sort of image and being able to tell that story. But how the tribes had maintained all those cultural protections and an ax over time was an important part of saying, yes, the reservation is still a year. Yes, it still exists. And yes, the tribe should be able to maintain political sovereignty in this, in this area. And I would just edit grasses is spot on and on all of that in terms of, you know, they reinforce one another, right? Because the more of your, your governmental sovereign powers you, you exercise, the more ability you have to protect the, your culture and those things that are important to, you know, the, the, our, our American legal system, as I mentioned earlier, is really designed to protect individual liberties and individual property. And, and it's not very, it's, it's poorly suited actually to protect a lot of the cultural issues in religious issues that are important to tribes, which is why you see companies that can trademark words from our own indigenous languages. And it's why you can see companies that can trademark Indian likenesses or even words like Redskins. And there's, there's all kinds of IP litigation about who can Urban Outfitters ONE, the word Navajo. And in C you sudden things like T-shirt. So in, in our American legal system would say, well, you're the first to put it in the commercial use, so that's your property. And so we're not, you know, it's poorly suited to deal with a lot of these things. If we have a, a ceremonial site that is located on a 200 acre farm, somewhere else. Our legal system would say, the farmer, that's his property can salad, he can make it a tourist society can raise it. And in plant corn there, you have no rights to them. But that's a diminishment of our religious practices. So I think the whole purpose of tribal sovereignty, the whole purpose of our existence is to continue to exist as tribal people, and that includes our cultural way of life. So protecting our political and legal sovereignty, protects our ability to maintain our way of life and what's important to us. It's very interesting. So I have another question from an audience member and has a two parter. I'm just going to ask the first part of it first and then I'll ask the second part. And it's really a continuation of what you were just talking about except bringing you. And Michigan. So learn the most pressing legal issues are indigenous peoples in Michigan right now. It's, it's hard. I can't speak on behalf of the other tribes and their people. What I would say just generally, water related in treaty related issues with the Great Lakes. Whether it's treaty fishing or protecting the quality of the Great Lakes from climate change, oil pipelines or other degradation. And on top of that, Indian Child Welfare is always an important issue because we don't have a large land base. Our tribes of Michigan don't have large land-based. So a lot of times, our kids in our families live off the reservation or even in the in southeast Michigan. And if they end up in foster care or in the adoption process, they knew Child Welfare Act means that we still have a role to play as tribes and into keeping those kids as part of our are people as part of our tribe. And in Michigan, the Michigan tribes are probably as sophisticated about Indian Child Welfare as anyone in any tribes in the country. And that's one of the places where the tribes in the state of had a very good relationship in the last 15 or 20 years. But those those issues, Great Lakes issues generally in Indian Child Welfare, I would say. I want to I'm going to take you back to great lengths in a minute. But because we had another audience question about child welfare, This might be a good moment to drop that in and realize, I'm shocked, sorry if I affect you. You might want to pick up on this one. But so the audience member asked, the Indian Child Welfare Act has now been in place for almost 40 years. What has and has not changed in that time related to child welfare. And how should the lobby improved in the future? And maybe you could tell me, and others like me might not be familiar with it. Just what is the Indian Child Welfare Act? Chairman New Zealand or we as either one. I actually think what has and hasn't changed in that time. I think the Indian Child Welfare Act has changed things for the better. Because you saw, if you read about Indian Child Welfare and adoptive placement, you had from the 19 forties forward until it was enactment. Just a very consistent across the country effort to Indian kids in foster care, foster care taken from their families, adopt them out. The phrase adopted out is just everybody in Indian country knows what that means because somebody's kid was adopted by a non-Indian family and they're out of the tribe, they're in another part of the country. So that ended child welfare for the most part as effectively put a stop to that. Here in Michigan, we've actually, we've done the belt and suspenders because we have a state law called the Michigan Indian family preservation. But generally what it does is it says, if you have an Indian child in the state foster care system, that child's tribe will have an opportunity to exercise jurisdiction over the case. And if they don't, here's then the standards that state courts will use. And this is subject to a very big lawsuit that's going on right now. But, you know, foster care in the people who study are involved with child welfare. Refer to the Indian Child Welfare Act as the gold standard for child placement for, for kids in foster care. But the end of the day, what is it? What is meant is keeping Indian tribes intact, because that was a backdoor way to break up tribal communities. In many tribal communities, there are whole generations of kids missing because they were placed in foster care and then adopted by people outside the tribe. So how should the law be improved? I think the law should be improved by following you. It's a good law. We asked, did you wanna add anything to that side? And then we go back to the Great Lakes with my students. In state GV this semester, we were just talking about the Great Lakes Compact. And and it just occurred to me, as you were speaking German Newland, that Native Americans are not in any sense a part of the Great Lakes Compact. That is, they're not signatories to it. Why is that? How should we think about that? And surely, surely you want that the tribes must be involved in the design of it and the implementation of it or not. Why, why weren't we have that's a that's a great question. I'd like somebody that I don't know. But we should be. And we have vested legal interests as well as just general interest, a sovereign government over the fate of the Great Lakes, just like the other states, provinces, and countries that are part of that. And I, I think that will, that's something that is changing pretty dramatically in terms of the recognition of the tribal role on these issues and the fact that tribes should, should have a voice. Yeah, I think one thing we really see change in the legal landscape in the last decade or two is this understanding that the tribes treaty rights, our sort of environmental soared in some ways that a treaty right to take fish, for example, is meaningless unless there are fish to take. And so tribes have become increasingly assertive in advancing treaty rights arguments to ensure protection of the habitat and the environment. And the courts have become increasingly receptive to those arguments as have other governments. And a very recent example is with respect to the battle over the Enbridge Slide five pipeline, the pipeline that crossed the straits, the Mac and on which is yellow huge flashpoint issue here in Michigan. And Governor, what we're in her order of a couple of weeks ago now, where she issued an essentially a shutdown notice for the pipeline. One of the things she invoked in that order was the tribes treat efficient rates that the Chairman mentioned that the rights of the 1836 treaty, which would be rendered utterly meaningless where in the pipeline to, to leak or a rupture in the straits. And that's, you know, that's, that's an example of the type of argument that tribes are advancing ever more vigorously and that the courts and the state and local governments are, are grown to appreciate. And that sort of principle carries over at two water rights as well to all manner of environmental habitat protection, resource allocation issues? Yeah, I would imagine so. And should we be thinking you were talking about habitat protection? Should we be thinking that in general, tribal involvement is going to be in a kind of pro environment or green direction, or are there times when the tribal interests are going to clash with environmental protection interests? I think both data. So there is a there is a coal terminal that was proposed that in Puget Sound a few years ago to basically bring by rail Aldous call that from Montana and Wyoming, put it onto these ships and bring them over to China. And the tribes in the Puget Sound area. Very similar to here in Michigan. We're saying this is going to jeopardize a treaty fishing rights. And you had tribes in Montana in particular who had a call on the reservation and wanted to a buyer at a market price. And they were pushing for the construction of this coal terminal. And so yeah, tribes on both sides of this issues. And there are a number of tribes that are engaged in mining and oil and gas development. At who? These interests clash all the time. And I think just generally, odds are tribes are happy to do the environmental regulation ourselves. So you may often see tribes that are opposing efforts to place state or federal environmental regulations on the tribes without our consent. And that's not necessarily because we're opposed to environmental regulation. It's because we're the sovereign government. We want to have the authority to do that herself, right? Yeah. And, and I and the other message implicit in your response just now is that as we have been learning in this post-election period, not to overgeneralize about the political preferences of any particular subgroup of our great American population. We definitely shouldn't make generalizations about trial. Just as well. That it's going to be very tribe specific. And that's important. So here's this second part of that two parter from an audience member. How can non-indigenous folks be best allies? Are the indigenous people's rights. I guess the term you see in a lot of activist movements is pass the mike. And that's really to make sure that as tribes, we can be leaders on the issues that we care about. And I think to use the example that Reais mentioned a little bit about line five. That's been the work to bring awareness to the line five issues has been the work of a lot of people across the state, in the environmental community, in civil rights communities, small business owners and just people here on the ground in northern Michigan. And one of the things that has just been amazing to me to be a part of is as tribes as we got better about asserting our interests in it, in the pipeline issue. There was an effort to co-opt us and say, okay, we're going to exploit the tribes interests here for our own gain or we're going to speak for them. It was truly like, hey, tribes you're at, we want you at the table with us because what you have to say is important. And, and we made our own case for ourselves. And I think that speaks for itself in the governor's decision. The best way to be an ally is to, to, to listen and be humble and not presume that you can speak on behalf of others. I've really seen that. And then as chairman knew, it says in the intersection between environmental movement and drive. And when I first started working Michigan 20 years ago was much more in the way the environmental groups, either speaking to the tribes, were trying to co-opt the triads for their own purposes. Not really engaged in your full-scale listening in and allow the tribes to speak with their own voice. And there's just been a wonderful change in that over the last couple of decades. It could be that, for example, moves like a consideration and possible appointment of someone like Congresswoman Holland, is just acknowledgement of how important it is to incorporate Native American voices in decision-making and just make sure everybody's at the table. And so they, you know, you can speak for yourselves. And I appreciate that very much. I I'm looking through these good questions and trying to find something that is very, as you said, North Korea's about the justice Barrett there what re-assess couscous. Yeah. All right. So here and here I'll just lay this question out. Does the shaft from Justice Ginsburg to Justice Barron suggested the coalition of Justice says that had been issuing favorable rulings are tribes. I mean, the last few years no longer commands the majority of the court. While it's an actual question that of course is one that's very much thought our mind's eye of a natural born optimist. So I'm going to be very optimistic about Justice Baer, Until unless an anthology gives us reason to think otherwise, your issues really DO cross across political and ideological lines as we've been discussing. And that's certainly been true at the Court of Justice Baer. It is a textualists in the main adjusted score city of she really honors the language of treaties and statutes with, without regard to these concerns about consequences will be in good shape. If she's fair weather textualists in, and she's truly more concern about the interests of a non-Indian cell. It'll be a rough ride. And there's, there's really no way to know as she doesn't have a sort of written track record on Indian issues, but she does have and about commitment to textualism and the rule of law. So we'll be hopeful. And the last thing I'll say, and this is Justice Ginsburg. For all that she was a wonderful justice in a euro and in a lot of areas of the law was not a wonderful justice with respect to idiom I record was very mixed in part because she wasn't a strong textualists. And she did have, in some ways, a surprising concern for the rights and interests of non-Indians, especially on a reservation boundaries. So these issues are tribal power over non-Indians, a word they were hard issues for. So, yeah, we'll, we'll have to see, but there is, there is cause for, for optimism. But I think we'll close out of there. I just want to thank you both for your time today and your insight and for engaging in such an important conversation. And thank you the audience. Your questions were outstanding and very interesting and, and spurred a lot for us to think about. So I invite you all to please stay tuned to our web site and the social mirror. More information about upcoming virtual events at the Ford School. Thank you, everyone. Thank adeno.