NABA-AZ CLE

Please RSVP to Jenny Braybrooke at Fennemore Craig.

NATIVE AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION OF ARIZONA EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM

TOPIC: An Insider’s View: “California v. Cabazon Band of Mission Indians” – The Indian Gaming Regulatory Act of 1988 was adopted by Congress in direct response to the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1987 decision in California v. Cabazon Band of Mission Indians. In Cabazon, the Court held that California could not prohibit or regulate tribal gaming activities within that State. Glenn Feldman, a shareholder at Mariscal Weeks, represented the Cabazon Band in that case. His presentation will include both an interesting perspective on the judicial history of Indian gaming as well as taped segments of the Supreme Court argument in the Cabazon case.

SPEAKER: Glenn Feldman, Mariscal Weeks
DATE / TIME: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 2009 AT 12:00 P.M.,
REGISTRATION AT 11:30 A.M. (Lunch will be provided)
LOCATION: FENNEMORE CRAIG, 3003 North Central Avenue, Suite 2600, Phoenix
COST: $10.00 NABA-AZ Members $15.00 Non-NABA-AZ Members

Please make checks payable to NABA-AZ and mail to Fennemore Craig, 3003 N. Central Avenue, #2600, Phoenix, AZ 85012 Attn: Jenny Braybrooke

** MAY QUALIFY FOR UP TO 1 HR CLE CREDIT**

RSVP by MONDAY, February 16, 2009.
You can RSVP by : Mail: Fennemore Craig, Attn: Jenny Braybrooke, 3003 N. Central Avenue, Suite 2600, Phoenix, AZ 85012 Phone: 602-916-5247 Fax: 602-916-5691 E-mail: jbraybro@fclaw.com

REGISTRATION / RSVP:__________I will attend the NABA-AZ CLE Program (enclosed is my check for $10 NABA-AZ Member or $15 Non-NABA-AZ Member)NAME____________________________________

Indian Law Section Mixer

The Indian Law Section Cordially Invites You To
An Attorney Student Mixer

WHO: Judges, Attorneys, Advocates who represent Tribes or work in the field of Indian or Indigenous Law, professors, and law and LLM students.

WHAT: Free food and beverages with opportunities to network.

WHEN: Thursday, January 22 beginning at 5:00 p.m.

WHERE: The Law Offices of Quigley & Whitehill PLC
2730 E. Broadway, Suite 160
Tucson, AZ 85716

RSVP your attendance to:
April Olson at: april.olson@gric.nsn.us; or
Amy Courson at: ACourson@Stricklandlaw.net, or
520.795.8727

You could find a job opportunity, meet your new associate, catch up on legal happenings, or pick up writing competition information that wins you a scholarship! Don’t miss the fun.

Please RSVP by Tuesday, January 20.

Indian Law Clinics Conference

SAVE THE DATE
June 7-9, 2009

Third Annual Indian Law Clinics and Externship Programs: Symposium and Workshop

Sponsors
Southwest Indian Law Clinic UNM School of Law
University of Denver Sturm College of Law

Contributors
The Tribal Law Practice Clinic Washburn University School of Law
Arizona State University Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law

Where: Isleta Casino & Resort, Pueblo of Isleta (located just south of Albuquerque, New Mexico)
Web site: www.isleta-casino.com

For: Professors, Directors, Clinicians and Staff of Indian Law, Poverty Law, Economic Justice and Community Lawyering Clinics and those interested in carefully considering their work with Communities through the provision of legal representation.

Goal: To dedicate time and space for Indian law clinics and other clinicians working with minority populations to work in solidarity on Poverty Law and Community Lawyering issues, to discuss our shared mission and differing perspectives, and to support new ideas

We look forward to your participation in our Exciting Symposium Program.

Watch for more Program details Coming Soon.

Contacts:
Professor Christine Zuni Cruz Professor Aliza OrganickProfessor Barbara Creel Tribal Law Practice Clinic
Southwest Indian Law Clinic Washburn University School of Law

UNM School of Law 785-670-1664
505-277-5265 (P)
aliza.organick@washburn.edu
zunich@law.unm.edu
creel@law.unm.edu

For registration information contact:
Mitzi Vigil
vigil@law.unm.edu
(505) 277-0405

Save the Date: ILP Alumni and Friends Reception

Title: ILP Alumni & Friends Reception
Date: Thursday Apr-02, 2009
Time: 5:30 PM – 7:00 PM
Location: Buffalo Thunder Resort & Casino, Santa Fe, NM

NEW TIME! NEW LOCATION! Please RSVP to Sunny Larson: Sunny.Larson@asu.edu (480) 965-6413

Event Description:The Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law’s Indian Legal Program invites you to a reception, being held in conjunction with the Federal Bar Association’s Indian Law Conference on Thursday, April 2, 2009. The reception will be held at the Hilton Santa Fe Golf Resort and Spa at Buffalo Thunder from 5:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. in the Chapel Room. For more information, please contact Kate Rosier at 480-965-6204. For more info on the Resort, click on this link: http://www.buffalothunderresort.com/index.html

Genomics, Governance and Indigenous Peoples Workshop

Scholars participating in the Genomics, Governance and Indigenous Peoples workshop at the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law at Arizona State University included, seated from left, Nadja Kanellopoulou, Jenny Reardon, Pilar N. Ossorio, Rebecca Tsosie, Brian Wynne, Laura Arbour, and, standing from left, Phillip S. “Sam” Deloria, Brett Lee Shelton, Nanibaa Garrison, Terry Powell, Paul Oldham and Kim TallBear.

Scholars use discussion to explore governance of indigenous genomics

A dozen scholars from across the globe met recently at the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law to discuss the promise and perils of current efforts to transform indigenous people’s governance of genomic research.

“This is a select group capable of drawing on their past experiences to envision the future,” said Rebecca Tsosie, Executive Director of the Indian Legal Program at the College of Law, who is principal investigator of the National Science Foundation grant funding the workshop, “Genomics, Governance, and Indigenous Peoples.”
“Many people are writing about this issue, but you are actually doing things, putting things into practice,” Tsosie told the group as the two-day workshop began on Thursday, Nov. 6.
Tsosie and her two fellow organizers — Kim TallBear, assistant professor of Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy at the University of California, Berkeley, and Jenny Reardon, Assistant Professor of Sociology and Faculty Affiliate in the Center for Biomolecular Science and Engineering at the University of California, Santa Cruz — said they invited participants who were not afraid to seriously engage the issues.
The “no-powerpoint” format of the workshop had participants share written responses to several questions before convening, and then participate in several recorded dialogues that will be used to produce a written document.
TallBear said the format was inspired by work she did on a book, This Stretch of the River, in response to the celebration of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. In that book, several Lakota and Dakota writers taped their discussions of the subject.
“The conversations produced knowledge and experience that was not present in our written work,” TallBear said.
And the work to edit and compile the project meant the learning continued beyond the conversations, she added.
Discussion topics at the genomics workshop included: cultural harm and transforming the legal system; charitable trusts, biobanks and partnership governance of genetic research; and tribal-genetic research agreements, indigenous research, and governance implications.
Participants included experts in human genetics and the social, legal, and ethical aspects of genomics in different national and cultural contexts. They have experience working within existing regimes of governance and see a need for policy innovation and change in relation to genomic research. Some participants are already engaged in experimental efforts to create change. The workshop, first conceived as being focused on the United States and “tribal” governance of genomics, was broadened to include scholar practitioners working in other parts of the world in recognition that strategies for governing genomic research cannot be contained by national borders.
In addition to Tsosie, TallBear and Reardon, participants included:
Laura Arbour, Associate Professor in the Department of Medical Genetics and the Island Medical Program at the University of British Columbia based in Victoria BC;
Philip S. (Sam) Deloria, Director of the American Indian Graduate Center and former director of the American Indian Law Center, Inc., for more than 35 years;
Nanibaa’ Garrison, a Ph.D. Candidate in the Department of Genetics at Stanford University working on the genetics of human pigmentary variation;
Nadja Kanellopoulou, an academic lawyer who specializes in medical law, intellectual property and bioethics based at the Arts & Humanities Research Council Research Centre for Intellectual Property and Technology Law at the University of Edingurgh in Scotland;
Paul Oldham, a social anthropologist and researcher at CESAGen a research center based at Lancaster University in England;
Pilar N. Ossario, Associate Professor of Law and Bioethics at the University of Wisconsin at Madison who also serves on the Director’s Advisory Council for the National Human Genome Research Institute and as an advisor for the 1000 Genomes Project, the Human Microbiome Project, and for NHGRI-related tissue banking activities at Coriell;
Terry Powell, a member of the Alaska Area Institutional Review Board, whose interests include research ethics, health care research, and bioethics;
Brett Lee Shelton, a partner in the law firm Shelton and Ragona, LLC, of Louisville, Colo., and who sits on the Oglala Sioux Tribal Research Review Board in Pine Ridge, S.D.;
Brian Wynne, Associate Director of the Centre for Economic and Social Aspects of Genomics, Professor of Science Studies and Research Director of the Centre for the Study of Environmental Change at Lancaster University in England.

NALSA Golf Tournament

Arizona State University’s
Native American Law Student Association’s
3rd Annual Golf Tournament
Saturday, November 1 at 7:30 a.m.
Foothills Golf Course in Phoenix
(Same location as last year)
The ASU NALSA students would greatly appreciate your participation in or support of this event. Please share this information with anyone you know who might be interested in participating. Thank you in advance for your support.

For more information about the event please contact ASU NALSA President:

Jason M. Croxton
Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law
Candidate for J.D. 2010

IGRA Quilt is a Hit!

A special thank you to Marlene Jones! ASU College of Law and Indian Legal Program alumnus Marlene Jones (JD/MBA ’97) donated a beautiful quilt to the ILP to help raise scholarship funds for students and commemorate the 20 Years of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act. The quilt raised $920. Thanks again Marlene.

Quilt Auction to benefit ILP Scholarships


ASU College of Law and Indian Legal Program alumnus Marlene Jones (JD/MBA ’97) donated a beautiful quilt to the ILP to help raise scholarship funds for students and commemorate the 20 Years of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act. The quilt contains ASU colors and a southwest print to connect with the region and includes a flag print to represent the federal law theme. (See attached photos)
The starting bid is $150 and will be increased in $5.00 increments. You can view the quilt outside of Room 236 now until October 14th. After that date the quilt will be shown at the IGRA conference at Fort McDowell. The bidding will close at 4:00 p.m. on Friday, October 17th. The winner will be announced before the closing remarks of the conference.
If you are not attending the conference but would like to support this fundraiser, you can email Kate Rosier at Kathlene.Rosier@asu.edu with your bid. Please place “QUILT” in the subject line so we do not miss it. Kate will let you know if your bid is the highest. ILP staff will check for emails during the event and update the auction sheet at the event with the email bids. Please share with anyone you think would be interested. Thank you.
Let the bidding begin!