The Interrelationship between Alaska State Law and the Social Systems of Modern Eskimo Villages in Alaska: History, Present and Future Considerations

Yup'ik and Inupiat villages in Alaska (the territory and the state) experienced a process of legal socialization that was strongly influenced by serious constraints in the allocation of resources. These constraints resulted in legal socialization into what was in essence a second legal state sy...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Conn, Stephen
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Justice Center, University of Alaska Anchorage 1985
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11122/9660
Description
Summary:Yup'ik and Inupiat villages in Alaska (the territory and the state) experienced a process of legal socialization that was strongly influenced by serious constraints in the allocation of resources. These constraints resulted in legal socialization into what was in essence a second legal state system and provided an opportunity for cultural autonomy by Eskimo villages, even though this de facto situation did not recognize these groups as sovereign tribes. The actual implementation of a single full-blown legal system in village Alaska in the mid-1970s has resulted in a loss of control and serious efforts by Alaska villages to reinstitute village law ways as tribal legal process. Eskimo Villages in Alaska - Communities of Resilience and Change / Who are the Eskimos? / The Early Period / Western Legal Socialization: Early Agents of Change / Late Territorial and Early State Period / Critical Factors in the Oil Boom and Land Claims Era and Their Bearing Upon the Relationship Between Social Structure and Law / The Process of Legal Change During the Claims Settlement Decade / The Local Option Law and its Rationale / Juvenile Matters / Tribal Governments - The Next Step? / Bibliography