Walk-In Rate: $400.00 (day of conference by cash, check, or credit card)
Click here for more info and to register! http://conferences.asucollegeoflaw.com/tribaleconomies/
Keynote Speakers:
Feb 27 – Kevin K. Washburn, Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs, DOI
Feb 28 – Diane Enos, President, Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community
PLEASE JOIN US!
Thursday, February 27th
Turquoise Ballroom – Memorial Union
Arizona State University – Tempe
Friday, February 28th
Great Hall/Armstrong Hall/College of Law
Arizona State University – Tempe
The extreme poverty found on most reservations today threatens their very existence as the permanent homelands of Indian families and tribal governments. As a consequence, improving economic conditions on reservations is one of the most important issues facing tribal governments and communities today.
Sustaining the Reservation: Creating Tribal Economies will continue the conversation and explore viable solutions how tribal governments and tribal citizens can create sustainable economies that will help them preserve their reservations as permanent homelands for their families, governments, and cultures.
This conference brings together cutting-edge scholars, tribal leaders, and officials, economic development planners, attorneys, and others to explore this important topic.
Who should attend? Tribal leaders and employees, attorneys, economic development planners, investors, and anyone who cares about the future of tribal communities.
Regular Rate: $325.00 ends February 25, 5 p.m.
Walk-In Rate: $400.00
May quality for up to 10 General CLE Credits for State Bar of Arizona, California and New Mexico MCLE Bar Association.
Click here for more info and to register! http://conferences.asucollegeoflaw.com/tribaleconomies/
For Immediate Release
For more information contact:
Julie Gunderson, 480-727-5458, julie.gunderson@asu.edu
Changes in Indian law, reservations to be examined at College of Law’s annual William C. Canby Jr. Lecture
Reid Peyton Chambers, a former Associate Solicitor for Indian Affairs with the U.S Department of Interior and founding partner in a law firm dedicated to representing Indian tribes nationwide, will deliver the Seventh Annual William C. Canby Jr. Lecture on Friday, Jan. 31, at the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law. Chambers, who has dedicated his career to teaching Indian law and representing Indian tribes, will give a talk titled, “Reflections on the Changes in Indian Law and Indian Reservations from 1969 to the Present.”
“It’s a personal story for me,” Chambers said. “I’ll be giving my assessment of the changes I’ve seen on reservations and in Indian law since I first began my career in the late 1960s.”
Chambers said one of those significant changes began when Indian leaders on reservations began pushing for tribal sovereignty.
“Before the 1960s the federal government was paternalistic when it came to how they controlled Indian reservations,” Chambers said. “Tribal leaders wanted to get rid of that kind of control and establish their own governments.”
Chambers said that beginning in the late 1960s, the federal government for virtually the first time ever became willing to listen to the demands of Indian leaders, and policies from both Lyndon B. Johnson’s Administration and Richard M. Nixon’s Administration led to tribal governments reasserting sovereignty over their reservations. Chambers said it then became the goal of lawyers representing tribes to affirm in court that tribes did have a right to govern their reservations, as well as to protect tribes’ other treaty rights such as to water and to hunt and fish.
The lecture, presented by the Indian Legal Program (ILP) at the College of Law at Arizona State University, is scheduled to begin at 4:30 p.m. in the Great Hall of Armstrong Hall on the Tempe campus. It is free and open to the public, and will be followed by a reception in the Steptoe & Johnson Rotunda.
The lecture honors Judge William C. Canby Jr. of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, a founding faculty member of the College of Law. Judge Canby taught the first classes in Indian law there and was instrumental in creating the ILP.
Chambers, served as Associate Solicitor of Indian Affairs of the U.S. Department of the Interior from 1973 to 1976. He was the Department’s chief legal officer responsible for Indian and Alaska Native matters. Chambers then joined the late Marvin J. Sonosky, a longtime attorney for Indian tribes, and Harry R. Sachse to found the law firm that is now Sonosky, Chambers, Sachse, Endreson & Perry, LLP. The firm specializes in Indian law.
Robert Clinton, Foundation Professor of Law at the College of Law, who invited Chambers to speak at the College of Law said Chambers experience in the field over the last four decades makes him the ideal candidate to speak to the changes that have taken place.
“He has the broadest and widest perspective of anyone in the country, on how Indian law has developed,” Clinton said.
Chambers has taught a seminar on federal Indian law at Georgetown University Law Center and at Yale Law School. He also co-authored the 1982-revised edition of Felix S. Cohen’s landmark treatise on federal Indian law and has published numerous articles.
Chambers taught law for three years as a professor at the University of California at Los Angeles and worked extensively with the Native American Rights Fund and California Indian Legal Services.
For more info or to RSVP to attend in person: please visit http://conferences.asucollegeoflaw.com/canby2014/
If you cannot attend a live webcast of this event will be available at law.asu.edu/CanbyLecture2014.
Please join us as we celebrate the
25th Anniversary of the Indian Legal Program
“Celebrating the Past – Looking toward the Future”
Since the 1988 creation of the Indian Legal Program at Arizona State University’s Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law, more than 300 students representing more than 95 tribes throughout the country have earned law degrees and gone on to serve their communities, governments and to work in the private sector. The Hon. William C. Canby Jr., a judge on the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, was the first of many distinguished ILP faculty members that today includes seven professors and numerous faculty associates. For more than 25 years, the ILP has facilitated an unrivaled awareness and understanding of federal Indian law through curriculum, student engagement, public education programs and symposiums.
Planned events include:
Reception and Dinner – Friday, November 22, 2013
Old Main – ASU Tempe
5:30pm Reception
6:30pm Dinner
($50.00 per person)
Family Day of Fun and BBQ – Saturday, November 23, 2013
Papago Park Baseball Fields picnic area
SW Corner of Curry Rd. and College Ave – Tempe, AZ
12:00pm-6pm
(no charge for this event)
Please join us! Special Conference Alumni Rate available. Conference Information and Registration at: http://conferences.asucollegeoflaw.com/tribalenergy/
UNITED STATES V. SANDOVAL
ONE CENTURY LATER: FEDERAL AUTHORITY IN INDIAN COUNTRY, INDIAN IDENTITY AND STATUS, AND THE RIGHTS OF DEFENDANTS IN TRIBAL COURT ISLETA RESORT CASINO
PUEBLO OF ISLETA RESERVATION
October 18-20, 2013
INDIAN PUEBLO CULTURAL CENTER ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO
Sandoval Symposium Flyer2
Registration Form-Sandoval Symp
Get your annually required Navajo Nation Bar Association CLE credits here! 8 NNBA credit hours, including 2 Navajo Ethics credit hours.