Abstract
The story of how tribes have taken back their reservations, and through sovereign self-rule restored democracy and improved the lives of their people, is surprising, both in the means and the magnitude, and it cuts against preconceptions and stereotypes. Overwhelmingly, the central thrust has been the work of Indian people. People in the agencies, courts, and Congress were not sitting around wondering how they could benefit Indians. The tribes themselves initiated litigation or invited it by assertions of tribal sovereignty and jurisdiction and hunting, fishing, water, land and cultural rights. They themselves brought forth the legislative proposals. They constructed the legal framework in Indian country.
Recommended Citation
Wilkinson, Charles
(2006)
""Peoples Distinct from Others": The Making of Modem Indian Law,"
Utah Law Review: Vol. 2006:
No.
2, Article 4.
Available at:
https://dc.law.utah.edu/ulr/vol2006/iss2/4