Pathway to Permanency: Enact a State Statute Formally Recognizing Indian Custodianship as an Approved Path to Ending a Child in Need of Aid Case

Alaska has a disproportionate number of Alaska Native youth in foster care, and an overburdened and understaffed state child welfare agency. This Article argues that Alaska should enact a state statute to provide clear guidance to state child welfare practitioners and state courts that Alaska’s stat...

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Main Author: Lewis, Courtney
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Duke University School of Law 2019
Subjects:
Law
Online Access:https://scholarship.law.duke.edu/alr/vol36/iss1/3
https://scholarship.law.duke.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1557&context=alr
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spelling ftdukeunivlaw:oai:scholarship.law.duke.edu:alr-1557 2023-05-15T13:08:49+02:00 Pathway to Permanency: Enact a State Statute Formally Recognizing Indian Custodianship as an Approved Path to Ending a Child in Need of Aid Case Lewis, Courtney 2019-05-28T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarship.law.duke.edu/alr/vol36/iss1/3 https://scholarship.law.duke.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1557&context=alr unknown Duke University School of Law https://scholarship.law.duke.edu/alr/vol36/iss1/3 https://scholarship.law.duke.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1557&context=alr Alaska Law Review Law text 2019 ftdukeunivlaw 2023-01-23T21:19:17Z Alaska has a disproportionate number of Alaska Native youth in foster care, and an overburdened and understaffed state child welfare agency. This Article argues that Alaska should enact a state statute to provide clear guidance to state child welfare practitioners and state courts that Alaska’s state government recognizes an Indian custodianship created through Tribal law or custom as a pathway for Indian children to exit the overburdened state foster care system. Alaska’s state government has progressed from initially refusing to recognize Tribal family law to recognizing a Tribal adoption as a pathway for an Indian child to exit the state foster care system. Extending the explicit recognition to Indian custodianships is the next logical step and has the added benefit of reducing the burden on the distressed state child welfare system. A state statute is the best mechanism for achieving this extension because a review of the history of Alaska’s executive branch and Tribal recognition shows the problems of determining state-Tribal relations through the executive branch of government alone, and the legislature, vested with the duty to create law, is the appropriate branch to provide legal guidance. Text Alaska law review Alaska Duke Law School Scholarship Repository Indian
institution Open Polar
collection Duke Law School Scholarship Repository
op_collection_id ftdukeunivlaw
language unknown
topic Law
spellingShingle Law
Lewis, Courtney
Pathway to Permanency: Enact a State Statute Formally Recognizing Indian Custodianship as an Approved Path to Ending a Child in Need of Aid Case
topic_facet Law
description Alaska has a disproportionate number of Alaska Native youth in foster care, and an overburdened and understaffed state child welfare agency. This Article argues that Alaska should enact a state statute to provide clear guidance to state child welfare practitioners and state courts that Alaska’s state government recognizes an Indian custodianship created through Tribal law or custom as a pathway for Indian children to exit the overburdened state foster care system. Alaska’s state government has progressed from initially refusing to recognize Tribal family law to recognizing a Tribal adoption as a pathway for an Indian child to exit the state foster care system. Extending the explicit recognition to Indian custodianships is the next logical step and has the added benefit of reducing the burden on the distressed state child welfare system. A state statute is the best mechanism for achieving this extension because a review of the history of Alaska’s executive branch and Tribal recognition shows the problems of determining state-Tribal relations through the executive branch of government alone, and the legislature, vested with the duty to create law, is the appropriate branch to provide legal guidance.
format Text
author Lewis, Courtney
author_facet Lewis, Courtney
author_sort Lewis, Courtney
title Pathway to Permanency: Enact a State Statute Formally Recognizing Indian Custodianship as an Approved Path to Ending a Child in Need of Aid Case
title_short Pathway to Permanency: Enact a State Statute Formally Recognizing Indian Custodianship as an Approved Path to Ending a Child in Need of Aid Case
title_full Pathway to Permanency: Enact a State Statute Formally Recognizing Indian Custodianship as an Approved Path to Ending a Child in Need of Aid Case
title_fullStr Pathway to Permanency: Enact a State Statute Formally Recognizing Indian Custodianship as an Approved Path to Ending a Child in Need of Aid Case
title_full_unstemmed Pathway to Permanency: Enact a State Statute Formally Recognizing Indian Custodianship as an Approved Path to Ending a Child in Need of Aid Case
title_sort pathway to permanency: enact a state statute formally recognizing indian custodianship as an approved path to ending a child in need of aid case
publisher Duke University School of Law
publishDate 2019
url https://scholarship.law.duke.edu/alr/vol36/iss1/3
https://scholarship.law.duke.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1557&context=alr
geographic Indian
geographic_facet Indian
genre Alaska law review
Alaska
genre_facet Alaska law review
Alaska
op_source Alaska Law Review
op_relation https://scholarship.law.duke.edu/alr/vol36/iss1/3
https://scholarship.law.duke.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1557&context=alr
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