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Indian Child Welfare Act

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Indian Child Welfare Act Is it Constitutional? Questions from a confused layman Background - 1700 s federal government formed took Indian relations away from ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Indian Child Welfare Act


1
Indian Child Welfare Act
  • Is it Constitutional?
  • Questions from a confused layman

2
Background - 1700s
  • federal government formed took Indian relations
    away from colonies/states treaties and Indian
    policy became exclusively federal.
  • Constitution Article I, 8, cl. 3 Indian
    Commerce Clause. Article II, 2, cl. 2 Treaty
    clause. Seen as justification and authority to
    single out tribal Indians living on or near
    reservations for special treatment.

3
Background - 1800s
  • Assimilation period
  • 1830 Indian Removal Act - reduction of land base
  • 1887 Dawes Act - reduced land base for
    citizenship
  • Citizenship and assimilation accelerated by
    boarding school education - removal of children
    from the Indian family

4
Background - 1800s continued
  • Boarding school education had broad support at
    the time.
  • Assimilation required suppression of Indian
    culture
  • Considered compassionate program.
  • Operated to 1930s until the passage of the IRA.

5
Background 1900s
  • 1934 - Assimilation policy abandoned.
  • IRA passed - preserve Indian culture, limited
    self-government and economic development.
  • 1954 to 1966 - termination and relocation period.
    Tribal Indians relocate to off reservation urban
    areas.
  • 50 to 60 of Indians live outside reservations.
  • Tribes began to see population out-flows and more
    intermarriage with non-Indians. Tribes fear
    loosing cultural cohesiveness.

6
Background 1900s continued
  • 1970s American Indian Policy Review Commission
    identified tribal concerns over the removal of
    Indian children by non-Indian child welfare
    practices.
  • Tribes complained removals were generally
    unwarranted, culturally incentive and
    inappropriate and racially discriminatory,

7
Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978Codified as
Title 25 Chapter 21 1901-1963
  • Intended purpose
  • End Indian child custody removals that are
    unwarranted,
  • to protect the Indian child as a resource for
    Indian communities..
  • Protect the integrity of the Native American
    family
  • Protect the unity of Indian Nations
  • Preservation of the Native American heritage
  • End Americanized, culturally insensitive child
    care standards
  • Reject non-Indian values like rugged
    individualism in favor of community based family
    structures

8
ICWA objectives
  • Grant tribal courts jurisdiction over Indian
    child custody proceedings
  • BIA formulates guidelines for procedures
  • Defines class status

9
ICWA definitions
  • Indian child unmarried person under age 18 who
    is a member of a tribe or eligible for
    membership and the biological child of a tribal
    member. (Sec. 1903(4))
  • Child custody proceedings voluntary and
    involuntary termination of parental rights,
    adoption placement, status decisions, and divorce
    custody proceedings

10
ICWA requirements
  • Tribes determine their membership requirements
    burden on tribes to invoke ICWA and provide
    sufficient evidence that a child custody
    proceeding exists and that proceeding involves an
    Indian child
  • Court defers proceedings to tribal courts.
    Federal Indian policy determined that tribal
    courts better situated and appropriate to
    determine the best interests of Indian children.
  • Jurisdiction on res. exclusive / Off res.
    concurrent

11
ICWA requirements
  • Tribal courts can decline transfers
  • State courts can retain jurisdiction for off
    reservation domiciled Indian children under some
    circumstances
  • State courts burdened with myriad of notification
    requirements to tribes
  • State agencies required to show active efforts
    to keep Indian families intact prior to outside
    placement of an Indian child

12
ICWA requirements
  • ICWA requires state courts to employ expert
    witness before placement or termination of
    parental rights
  • State courts required to follow ICWA adoptive
    placement preferences1. Indian childs extended
    family2. Indian childs tribal members3. Other
    Indian families

13
ICWA requirements
  • State court placement preferences for foster care
    or preadoptive placement
  • 1. Indian childs extended family
  • 2. Indian run foster home licensed or approved by
    Indian childs tribe
  • 3. Non-Indian foster home approved by the tribe
  • 4. Institution for children approved by the tribe
    or operated by an Indian organization

14
ICWA complaints
  • Failure to comply with requirements can vacate a
    proceeding (adoption, placement, custody,
    malpractice suits)
  • Burden on state social services to comply
  • Burden on non-tribal courts to enforce compliance
  • Racial classification or political association?
  • Provisions of the 14th Amendment for equal
    protection under the law a Constitutional
    breech?

15
Is the ICWA is unconstitutional?
  • Does this special legal status and treatment of
    Indian children violate the 14th Amendment which
    requires equal protection of the law?
  • Does the ICWA violate the requirements of
    prohibitions against racial discrimination?

16
The special treatment begins
  • Federal common law created the Trust Doctrine
    and guardian-ward doctrine. (Cherokee Cases)
  • Congress empowered Indian Office to create Indian
    preference employment under 1934 IRA.

17
The Supreme Court said No!
  • Morton v Mancari 1974, decided the IRAs Indian
    preference for tribal members is a political -
    not an impermissible racial classification.
  • The Court affirmed power of Congress to legislate
    Indian policy through the Commerce Clause and the
    Treaty Clause of the Constitution.

18
The USSC says No!
  • Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits discrimination
    by race, color, religion, sex, or national
    origin.
  • Special treatment of Indians allowed when policy
    is rationally tied to fulfillment of the Indian
    trust obligation.
  • Could the ICWA present an opportunity challenge
    to Morton v Mancari?

19
Questions
  • Does ICWA require a race classification that
    cant be deemed political?
  • ICWA defines Indian Child- unmarried under 18
    years of age racial?- member of an Indian
    tribe perhaps?- eligible for membership in a
    tribe - ?- biological child of a tribal member -
    ?

20
Questions
  • Eligible or Enrollable category? - what
    constitutes the most widely used criteria for
    tribal membership?-blood quantum or ancestry!
  • Biological child category?- blood quantum or
    ancestry!

21
My Questions
  • Do group rights supersede individual rights?
  • Can a US citizen be saddled with legal
    obligations to a government body starting in the
    womb?
  • Should federal government trust obligations to
    Indians tribes trump parental rights?
  • Can children be classified as a community
    resource?
  • Whose interests are protected community or
    child?
  • Is finding a child enrollable or eligible for
    ICWA child custody proceedings racial
    discrimination?

22
My Questions
  • Is racial and legal quality served when we
  • define Indian children as a community resource?
  • remain legally obligated to preserve Indian
    Nations?
  • are legally liable to protect a groups culture?
  • say individual rights are inappropriate for some?
  • codify policies in conflict with core
    Constitutional principals like personal
    sovereignty and individual rights rather than
    group or community based rights?

23
End
  • Thanks for your attention
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