Citizen Justice by M. Margaret McKeown
Author:M. Margaret McKeown [McKeown, M. Margaret]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: BIO020000 BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Lawyers & Judges, BIO032000 BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Social Activists, JNF037020 JUVENILE NONFICTION / Science & Nature / Environmental Conservation & Protection
Publisher: Potomac Books
Dissenting for CultureâDouglasâs Indian Tribal Cases
Douglas was an ally of Native Americans. In an early dissent involving treaty rights to Indian land title, he complained about the Indiansâ claims being lost âin the fine web of legal nicetiesâ when a tribeâs grievances should have been âsettled by this court in simple justice to a downtrodden people.â59 Douglasâs clerks summed up his perspective: âThe Justice cared deeply for the underdogâ and âthe person at the bottom of the heap.â60
In broad terms Douglas endorsed the conservation of culture, just as he urged the conservation of the environment. Often illustrating the value of ancient cultures by drawing on his experience growing up near the ancestral home of the Yakama (Yakima) tribe in Washington, nonetheless he admitted, âWe who were raised in Yakima did not know the Indians well.â61 So it is curious that Douglas parlayed this limited experience into claims of expertise, insisting in one of his dissents, âI do know, coming as I do from Indian country in Washington.â62 Tellingly, when he asked his friend Chief Jim of the Yakamas to find a reed pot for him, the chief brought one that was unfinished. âWe kept the pot unfinished,â he said, âbecause the work of the Yakimas is unfinishedâand so is the work of the Court on Indian matters.â63
When Douglas joined the Supreme Court, Indian law was not an organized body of law and, unlike today, was not a discipline taught in law schools. Douglasâs first Indian law opinion for the majority, United States v. Santa Fe Pacific Railroad, came in 1941, just two years into his tenure.64 It turned out to be âone of the most important cases ever to reach the Supreme Court in the history of our Federal Indian law,â observed Felix S. Cohen, who represented the Hualapai (Walapai) tribe in the appeal and authored the key treatise in Indian law.65 The case is often cited for the principle that Congress could not extinguish aboriginal title without making a statement of clear intent, but more important, Douglas broke new ground by accrediting cultural history as a legal fact. Noting that the Hualapai tribe had been occupying the lands in northwest Arizona âfrom time immemorial,â Douglas confirmed that a tribeâs ancestral home determined the validity of its contemporary occupancy.66 In so doing, âthe case legitimized the very notion that indigenous histories are relevant to proving [a tribeâs] land claims.â67 One historian even observed that âethnohistory . . . was conceived during the Hualapai caseâ by initiating legal inquiry into Indian history.68
During Douglasâs tenure, fifty-two Indian cases came before the court. Of those, Douglas wrote majority, dissenting, or concurring opinions in fourteen cases. Of particular significance is that he dissented in the majority of cases where the result disfavored Indian claims.69 But what does a champion of the environment do when conservation goals collide with tribal rights? Although Douglas considered Indians ânoble ecologist[s]â whose aims aligned with conservationist goals, he did not rubber-stamp their petitions.70
Fishing rights cases made for especially stark
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