Message from the President

Hello and Happy New Year!

This is the first chance I have had in 2010 to tell you about the exciting work ahead for the Indian Law Resource Center.  Looking forward, the Center's key initiatives will seek to change the legal framework that is causing Indian and Alaska Natives to endure poverty and marginalization throughout the United States.  This framework denies their basic human rights: to equal treatment; to control and manage their lands; to fair and unreasonable law enforcement; and to prosecution of violent crimes committed against them. 

In the next few months we will be working to overturn one of the most discriminatory and unconstitutional legal doctrines affecting Indian and Alaska Native tribes.  Remember the name Timbisha Shoshone, they are a small tribe in Death Valley, California. We are working with tribal leaders there to challenge the federal government's ability to take Native property without compensation or due process of law.  We believe this case is precedent setting in nature.  Please check in with us throughout the year for progress on this important work, http://www.indianlaw.org/.

We will also move forward with our efforts to create a fair framework of law for Native peoples and their lands with our Native Land Law Project.  Through our Safe Women/Strong Nation project, we will continue to provide legal assistance and educational materials to increase tribes' capacity to effectively police their lands, respond to victims, and prosecute violent offenders.

Finally, we will continue our efforts to implement the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and to encourage the Obama Administration to endorse it.  Without the recognition of these rights and changes to unjust federal laws and policies, the struggles Indian and Alaska Native nations deal with on a daily basis will never be fully resolved.  We look forward to another year of working closely with Indian and Alaska Native nations so that they can gain effective control of their homelands and improve their economic and social well-being.

Miigwetch,

Robert T. Coulter