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Tribal sovereignty in the United States / Duro v. Reina / State court / Ex parte Crow Dog / Cherokee Nation / Indian Reorganization Act / Adivasi / Talton v. Mayes / Federal government of the United States / Law / Case law / Sovereignty


FLOREY[removed]:46:27 PM CHOOSING TRIBAL LAW: WHY STATE CHOICE-OF-LAW PRINCIPLES
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Document Date: 2011-11-14 14:11:22


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City

Worcester / /

Company

See Kerr-McGee Corp. / Aetna / Keker & Van Nest LLP / See Smith Plumbing Co. / /

Country

United States / /

Facility

Boalt Hall / Supreme Court / State Court / University of California / /

IndustryTerm

supported tribal judicial systems / all-ornothing solution / pertinent choice-of-law provisions / law cases / state law / federal common law / law doctrine / case law / tribal law jurisdiction / tribal justice systems / tribal law / fact26 specific solutions / /

Organization

Supreme Court / Congress / federal government / A. States’ Authority / University of California / Berkeley School of Law / State Court / /

Person

Laurie Reynolds / Curtis Berkey / Katherine C. Pearson / Robert D. Probasco / Michelle Wilde Anderson / Stacy L. Leeds / Phillip Allen White / Blake A. Watson / Gloria Valencia-Weber / Pat Sekaquaptewa / Philip Frickey / Scott Williams / KATHERINE J. FLOREY / John J. Harte / Robert Laurence / Christine Zuni / WILLIAM C. CANBY / JR. / MARY L. REV / Karen Tumlin / Joseph William Singer / /

Position

General / ostensibly neutral arbiter / Major / Porter / The Jurisdictional Relationship / Singer / /

ProvinceOrState

Kansas / Nebraska / Wisconsin / Minnesota / Alaska / Indiana / Oregon / New Mexico / District of Columbia / Montana / California / Georgia / Arizona / /

PublishedMedium

the American University Law Review / /

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