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In win for tribal rights, Supreme Court upholds Native adoption law

The U.S. Supreme Court upheld a landmark Native American rights law Thursday in a ruling that surprised tribes – quite pleasantly.

The 7-2 decision in Haaland v. Brackeen dismissed an array of challenges to the Indian Child Welfare Act, a 1978 law regulating foster and adoption proceedings for Native children. The law has been challenged many times, and it’s likely to be challenged again.

Why We Wrote This

Thursday’s Supreme Court ruling upholds a Native adoption law that tribes see as critical to their cultural survival after decades of children being stripped from their families. Dissenting justices say it puts tribal welfare over the best interests of the child.

But the ruling today preserves a law that tribes view as critical to the best interests of Native children, and critical to preserving the long-term political and cultural viability of Native people as a whole.

“They punted on one or two key issues … but it’s a very strong endorsement of the law,” says Kevin Washburn, a law professor and a former assistant secretary of Indian Affairs. The law will continue to “help ensure that Native children remain connected to their tribe and have the opportunity to learn tribal culture.”

Over 130 pages of opinions saw the conservative majority engage in emotional debates on child welfare, historical debates on the centuries of harms inflicted on Native Americans, and legal debates on foundational issues like states’ rights and tribal sovereignty.

“The issues are complicated,” wrote Justice Amy Coney Barrett. “But the bottom line is that we reject all of petitioners’ challenges to the statute.”

The U.S. Supreme Court upheld a landmark Native American rights law Thursday in a ruling that surprised tribes – quite pleasantly.

The 7-2 decision in Haaland v. Brackeen dismissed, in part on the merits and in part on procedural grounds, an array of challenges to the Indian Child Welfare Act, a 1978 law regulating foster and adoption proceedings for Native children in state courts. The law has been challenged many times, and it’s likely to be challenged again in the near future.

But the ruling today preserves, for now, a law that tribes view as critical to the best interests of Native children, and critical to preserving the long-term political and cultural viability of Native people as a whole.

Why We Wrote This

Thursday’s Supreme Court ruling upholds a Native adoption law that tribes see as critical to their cultural survival after decades of children being stripped from their families. Dissenting justices say it puts tribal welfare over the best interests of the child.

“They punted on one or two key issues … but it’s a very strong endorsement of the law,” says Kevin Washburn, a professor at the University of Iowa College of Law and a former assistant secretary of Indian Affairs.

The law “will remain intact and undisturbed,” he adds, and will continue to “help ensure that Native children remain connected to their tribe and have the opportunity to learn tribal culture.”

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