Resources

Current Events: The Indian Child Welfare Act and Tribal Sovereignty

In late June, when the Supreme Court typically releases the major decisions of its most recent term, the Court will settle the matter of an adoption dispute that has the potential to completely transform the tribal sovereignty of the 574 Indian nations recognized by the U.S. federal government.

The principle of tribal sovereignty is defined as the right of Indian nations to self-governments as established in the U.S. Constitution. Nevertheless, the United States has had a long, violent, and deeply troubling relationship with Native Americans. During the past half century, some efforts at the federal level have sought to remediate the ongoing harms of U.S. federal policy toward Indian nations and their citizens. The Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA), passed by Congress in 1978, offers one key example. ICWA affirms the principle of tribal sovereignty and generally entrusts the decisions of child welfare for members of federally-recognized tribes to members of the tribe. In cases of foster-care placements and adoption, ICWA prioritizes the importance of upholding the cultural heritage of Native American children and affords family members, members of the child’s tribal nation, and members of other tribal nations preference over other interested parties.

Although ICWA has existed for over four decades, it continually caused controversy; since 2010, only the Affordable Care Act has been subjected to more legal challenges in federal courts. One filing, Brackeen v. Haaland, challenges the foundations of Indian child welfare policy, arguing that ICWA gives Indians a racial advantage over other parties interested in adoption. In Brackeen, a prospective white adoptive family believes that they offer a superior home environment to the alternatives offered by a young Native boy’s extended family, and they have fought to adopt the child that they have now fostered for several years. Tribal authorities have challenged the Brackeen family’s legal arguments and have argued throughout that ICWA entitles the boy’s family (and, by extension, his tribal nation) to custody. Further, they argue that the priorities given to Native Americans in ICWA extend to federally recognized tribal nations—not to people who identify racially as Indian.

The outcome of Brackeen v. Haaland carries implications that extend far beyond a single custody decision. Tribal nations and people who support the idea of tribal sovereignty worry that an unfavorable decision will undermine the entire principle of tribal sovereignty and threaten the ability of tribes to define their own criteria for citizenship, the self-determination of tribal boundaries, and the administration of tribal programs. On the other side, business interests (which have provided pro-bono legal services for the Brackeens throughout their custody case), private adoption agencies, and some religious groups believe that their interests will be served if the Court overturns Brackeen. Following oral arguments in November 2022, the outcome of the case remains uncertain.

This week’s Current Events resources examine the the Indian Child Welfare Act, tribal sovereignty and a Supreme Court case that may fundamentally change both ICWA and tribal sovereignty. The resources shared provide information and context to the details of the Brackeen case, as well as how the history of U.S. relations with tribal nations.

 

Essential Questions, Vocabulary & Extend the Resources:

  • What is tribal sovereignty?
  • Where did the principle of tribal sovereignty originate, and why is it so vital to Indian tribes?
  • What circumstances and events in the historical relationship between Indian tribes and the U.S. government contributed to the passage of the Indian Child Welfare Act?
  • Which key parties claim standing in Brackeen v. Haaland, and what is the basis for each individual’s/group’s claims?
  • Why is the classification of Indians by race vs. nation so central to whether Brackeen v. Haaland may overturn the Indian Child Welfare Act?
  • In your opinion, how should the Supreme Court appropriately balance the needs of the child, the interests of the prospective adoptive family, and the principle set forth in ICWA that gives custodial priority to families and Indian tribes in child welfare cases?

Click here for a hardcopy of the Essential Questions and Indian Child Welfare Act Vocabulary

Click here for a hardcopy of Extension Activities CLP suggests implementing with this content

 

Videos:

 

Podcasts:

How an Adoption Case Could Unravel Tribal Sovereignty, Dissent, The Intercept, February 1, 2023

Tribal Sovereignty, Indigenous Voices, August 19, 2022

Solomon’s Sword, This Land, August 23, 2021

The Indian Child Welfare Act and the 14th Amendment, We the People, National Constitution Center, November 22, 2022

 

Background Resources:

Commerce Clause (Article 1, Section 8, Clause 3), United States Constitution

Indian tribe jurisdiction over Indian child custody proceedings, 25 U.S. Code 1911

S. 1214- Indian Child Welfare Act, United States Congress

Indian Child Welfare Act: An Introduction, Oregon Judicial System

An Issue of Sovereignty, National Association of State Legislatures

Tribal Governance, National Congress of American Indians

Brackeen v. Haaland, Oyez

Haaland v. Brackeen, Ballotpedia

 

Recent Articles:

The Supreme Court and the Indian Child Welfare Act: What’s at Stake in the Brackeen Case, Teen Vogue, March 8, 2023

Is the Indian Child Welfare Act Unconstitutional?, Congressional Research Service, August 12, 2019

Understanding the Battle over the Indian Child Welfare Act, Politifact, November 1, 2021

The Supreme Court Could Save Tribal Sovereignty—Or Demolish It, The New Republic, October 6, 2021

How an Ojibwe grandmother’s adoption fight in Minnesota ended up in the U.S. Supreme Court, Sahan Journal, October 20, 2022

How a white evangelical family could dismantle adoption protections for Native children, Vox, February 20, 2020

Advocates say ICWA’s legal fate transcends child welfare, Cherokee Phoenix, October 28, 2022

 

Recent Editorials:

Take Their Children, Then Their Land: Private interests intend to destroy 44 years of Native American child welfare policy, The [F]law, May 10, 2022

‘A Crucial Part in Colonization Is Taking Our Children’: CounterSpin interview with Jen Deerinwater on Indian Child Welfare Act, FAIR.org, December 13, 2022

The Supreme Court’s Other Racial Preference Case, Wall Street Journal, November 8, 2022

Haaland v. Brackeen: The Most Important Case You Haven’t Heard About, Calexico Chronicle, December 21, 2022

 

Lesson Plans:

Using TROTs for Teaching: Connecting the Indian Child Welfare Act to Boarding Schools, The Society Pages

Tribal Sovereignty: An Inherent Right, Oregon Department of Education

Native American Law and the Supreme Court, Oregon Department of Education

Federal Indian Policy, The Confederated Tribes of Grande Ronde

Resources for Younger Students:

Understanding Tribal Sovereignty, Oregon Department of Education

Sovereignty—The Foundations of a Nation, The Confederated Tribes of Grande Ronde