Title: American Indian Natural Resource Management: Intergovernmental Agreements
1American Indian Natural Resource Management
Intergovernmental Agreements
- By
- Michael Kotutwa Johnson
- AED 615 Investigation and Studies in Applied
Research
2Personal Background
- B.S. in General Agriculture-Cornell University
- M.P.P in Public Policy-Pepperdine University
- District Conservationist-NRCS
- Research Associate-FNDI
3CHAPTER I
4Introduction
- Public, state and tribal lands in the United
States include a number of natural resources
(e.g. coal, water, timber, wildlife and natural
gas). It has been estimated that American Indians
who reside on Indian trust land control 65 of
natural resources in the United States. Although
most natural resources are most abundant on
public lands those lands are dotted with Indian
trust land (e.g. allotted lands, ceded lands,
surplus lands and fee lands) (J. King, personal
communication, July 22, 2002). As of today, there
is no real clear understanding of how the three
main players (federal, state, and tribal) work
together in managing natural resources in the
United States, especially in areas of joint
jurisdiction.
5Need for Study
Federal Govt.
EPA
Tribal Govt.
State Govt.
6Purpose Statement
- The purpose of this study is to understand the
relationship that exists between federal, state
and tribal governments in the context of natural
resource management that include
intergovernmental agreements between the parties
previously mentioned. A thorough understanding
of this relationship is necessary in order to
preserve our natural resources today and in the
future. However, in order to do this one must
first understand the complex relationship between
all three of the entities involved.
7Objectives of Study
- Attempt to describe the federal, state and tribal
relationship through an examination of relevant
policy. - Establish an analytical approach in gathering
important documents involving natural resource
management practices on federal, state and tribal
land. - 3. Examine past agreements between the
federal, state and tribal natural resource
management entities and then document successes
and failures.
8Limitations
- The theme of this dissertation will only deal
with issues related to American Indian natural
resource management across jurisdictional
boundaries. - 2. The authors personnel bias will affect the
content of the dissertation.
9Assumptions
- 1. Future intergovernmental agreements
between the federal, state and tribal governments
will continue to be achieved in the future. - 2. Federal policy in relationship to American
Indian sovereignty will remain unchanged
including acts by Congress. - 3. Conflicts in the areas of natural resource
management will continue into the future. - 4. Federal Courts will continue to set
American Indian policy.
10Definition of Terms
- Domestic Dependent Nation- Status given to tribes
describing a domestic dependent relationship by
Supreme Court Chief Justice Marshalls ruling in
1831. - Fee Land- Land sold to private citizens,
corporations, etc. - Indian Tribe- A tribe is simply a group of
Indians that is recognized as constituting a
distinct and historically continuous political
entity for at least some governmental purpose. - Intergovernmental Agreement- A agreement between
parties where there is mutual benefit for those
parties. - Plenary Power- Power reserved for Congress in
regards to laying out policy and laws in the
context of Indian governance and negotiations.
11CHAPTER II
12Literature Review
- Intergovernmental agreements between federal,
state and tribal governments have been found to
enhance greater control and opportunities for
economic development initiatives on tribal lands. - Cahill Cornell, 2005
- One example of intergovernmental agreements
between states, federal and tribal governments
can be found in regional water management issues. - Colby Smith, 2005
13Literature Review Cont.
- The Federal Government, Arizona Municipalities
and Southern Arizona Tribes have worked
out an agreement in which all derive benefit
from. The Arizona Water Settlement Act of
2004. -
P.L. 108-451 - Water rights experts agree that innovative
approaches such as intergovernmental agreements
can be employed to settle disputes and to address
issues such as water management disputes. - Colby and Hodgins, 2006
14Significance of Study
- The significance of the study is that all
important documents pertaining to federal, state,
and tribal entities in the field of natural
resource management will be consolidated into one
place. Also, the study will provide a further
look into what has worked and what has not worked
in the tri-management aspect of natural resource
management. Once we have examined these issues,
then perhaps policymakers in the field of natural
resource development may develop sound policy to
further preserve natural resources for the
benefit of all.
15Understanding of Tribal, State and Federal
Natural Resource Intergovernmental Agreements
Tribal
Federal
State
Water, Wildlife, Mineral, Timber
Trilateral Natural Resource Intergovernmental
Agreements
Policy
Recommendations
Creation of Tribal, State and Federal Economic
Opportunities and Control Over Natural Resource
Development and Conservation
Figure 1. Conceptual Framework on Tribal, State
and Federal Natural Resource Management
Relationship
16CHAPTER III
17Methods and Procedures
- A historical research method was used for
this study based on the qualitative subject
matter as discussed in this dissertation (i.e.
intergovernmental agreements). There are four
basic steps used for historical research. They
are as follows - 1. Definition of the Problem.
- 2. A in depth search for the subject matter
being discussed. - 3. A thorough evaluation of the sources
found. - 4. Interpretation of the evidence and
developing conclusions based on that
information. -
Fraenkel Wallen, 2006
18Advantages and Disadvantages
- This topic may only be analyzed from a
historical perspective because it cannot be
studied in any other way. - A threat to validity in most cases is a problem
because of the authors own internal bias.
19An Idea
Proposal to Committee
Search for Documents
Literature Review Writing
Initial Contact with Natural Resource Experts
Interview Experts
Write Draft Version
Submit to Editors
Final Draft Sent to Committee
Presented to Committee
American Indian Natural Resource Management
Intergovernmental Agreements
20Questions or Comments
21References
- Cahill, M., Cornell, S. (2005). Power-Sharing
in intergovernmental resource management
agreements with north American indigenous
nations. Unpublished Manuscript. - Canby Jr., W.C. (2004). American Indian law in a
nutshell (4th ed.). St. Paul West Group
Publishing. - Colby, B. (2004). Tribal water settlements in
Arizona (85th Town Hall Report) Tucson, Arizona
University of Arizona. - Colby, B.G.,Thorson, J.E., Britton, S. (2005).
Negotiating tribal water rights Fulfilling
promises in the arid west. University of Arizona
PressTucson. - Colby, B., Hodgins, B. H. (2006,October).
Innovations for water management and regional
supply reliability in agreements with native
American tribes. Symposium conducted at the Water
Law and Policy conference, Tucson, Arizona.
22References
- Gatewood, D. E. (2003). Regulation wildlife
resources on tribal lands. Unpublished maters
thesis, University of Arizona,Tucson, Arizona. - Getches D.H., Wilkinson C.F., Williams Jr. R.A.
(2005). Cases and materials on federal Indian
law (5th ed.). St. Paul West Group Publishing. - Glennon R. (2002). Water follies Groundwater
pumping and the fate of Americas freshwaters.
Washington, DC Island Press. - Griffin, R.C. (2006). Water resource economics
The analysis of scarcity, policies, and
projects. Cambridge MIT Press Books. - Pevar, S.L. (1992). The rights of Indians and
tribes (2nd ed.). Edwardsville Southern
Illinois University Press.