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Broken Landscape: Indians, Indian Tribes, and the Constitution Book

Broken Landscape: Indians, Indian Tribes, and the Constitution
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  • Broken Landscape: Indians, Indian Tribes, and the Constitution
  • Written by author Frank Pommersheim
  • Published by Oxford University Press, USA, August 2009
  • Broken Landscape is a sweeping chronicle of Indian tribal sovereignty under the United States Constitution and the way that legal analysis and practice have interpreted and misinterpreted tribal sovereignty since the nation's founding. The Constitu
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Acknowledgements:
Part I: The Early Encounter
1. Introduction: A New Challenge to Old Assumptions
2: Early Contact: From Colonial Encounters to the Articles of Confederation
3: Second Opportunity: The Structure and ARchitecture of the Constitution
4: The Marshall Trilogy: Foundational But Not Fully Constitutional?
5: Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock: The Birth of Plenary Power, Incorportation, and an Extraconstitutional Regime
Part II: Individual Indians and the Constitution
6: Elk v. Wilkins: Exclusion, Inclusion and the Ambiguities of Citizenship
7: Indian Citizens and the First Amendment: The Illusion of Religious Freedom?
Part III: The Modern Encounter
8: Indian Law Jurisprudence in the Modern Era: A Common Law Approach Without Constitutional Principle
9: International Law Perspective: A New Model of Indigenous Nation Sovereignty?
10: Conclusion: Imagination, Translation, and Constitutional Convergence Index
Acknowledgements
Part I: The Early Encounter
Introduction: A New Challenge to Old Assumptions
2. Early Contact: From Colonial Encounters to the Articles of Confederation
3. Second Opportunity: The Structure and ARchitecture of the Constitution
4. The Marshall Trilogy: Foundational But Not Fully Constitutional?
5. Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock: The Birth of Plenary Power, Incorportation, and an Extraconstitutional Regime
Part II: Individual Indians and the Constitution
6. Elk v. Wilkins: Exclusion, Inclusion and the Ambiguities of Citizenship
7. Indian Citizens and the First Amendment: The Illusion of Religious Freedom?
Part III: The Modern Encounter
8. Indian Law Jurisprudence in the Modern Era: A Common Law Approach Without Constitutional Principle
9. International Law Perspective: A New Model of Indigenous Nation Sovereignty?
10. Conclusion: Imagination, Translation, and Constitutional Convergence
Index


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