Navajo Nation Law CLE Conference will be held on Friday, October 20, 2017 at the Beus Center for Law and Society located at Downtown ASU Phoenix campus.
Register at: law.asu.edu/navajolaw2017
Questions? Contact us at ILP@asu.edu or 480-965-2922
Navajo Nation Law CLE Conference will be held on Friday, October 20, 2017 at the Beus Center for Law and Society located at Downtown ASU Phoenix campus.
Register at: law.asu.edu/navajolaw2017
Questions? Contact us at ILP@asu.edu or 480-965-2922
Cultures Under Water: Climate Impacts on Tribal Cultural Heritage Conference will be held Wednesday, December 6 – Friday, December 8, 2017 at the Memorial Union, Ventana Ballroom on ASU Tempe campus.
Registration at: law.asu.edu/climateimpacts
Download PDF flyer.
Questions? Contact Jennifer Williams at jennifer.h.williams@asu.edu or 480-727-0420.
Free and open to the public. Food will be reserved to those who RSVP to ILP@asu.edu.
We hope you will join us!
Click the following link to download Opinion of the Case: Welsh Opinion – Final
Need CLE Credit? See our upcoming CLE Conferences.
In Tribal Business Journal, Professor Robert J. Miller says “While economic development in Indian Country is a frequent topic, 99 percent of the discussion concerns government owned and operated businesses. But tribal leaders, Indians, and reservation communities need to focus on the potential of private sector economies.
These businesses have the potential to revitalize and sustain tribal communities for that Seventh Generation, the great, great, great, great, great grandchildren that tribal cultures always consider when making major decisions. We need to put that same kind of forward-thinking analysis into planning and creating sustainable economies in Indian Country.”
Read full article: Economic Development for the Seventh Generation
Judge Claudette White, Tribal Justice Movie Screening & Reception will be held on Friday, September 15 at 1:30 p.m. in the W.P. Carey Armstrong Great Hall at the Beus Center for Law and Society.
Judge White has served as Chief Judge for the Quechan Tribal Court since 2005. She also rides circuit, serving in tribal courts throughout Southern Arizona and California, including the Fort McDowell Indian Community, Ak-Chin Indian Community, Salt River Pima Maricopa Indian Community and Tonto Apache Tribal Courts. She is President of the Arizona Indian Judges Association, and is a member of the Arizona Tribal, State and Federal Court Forum and the newly formed California Tribal Court/State Court Forum. She works closely with families, state court judges, probation officers and social workers to ensure the best outcomes for families and children. Judge White received her juris doctorate and a Certificate in Indian Law from the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law at Arizona State University in 2005.
This event is free and open to the public. RSVP to ilp@asu.edu. We hope you will join us.
Click the following link to view film clip: Tribal Justice