The Katie John Litigation: A Continuing Search for Alaska Native Fishing Rights after ANCSA

This essay tells the story of the struggle by upper Ahtna people to protect their way of life and their access to a traditional fishery in modern Alaska. Because of the perseverance of Katie John, Doris Charles, other Ahtna people, and the larger Alaska Native community, their right to fish at a tra...

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Main Author: Anderson, Robert T
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: UW Law Digital Commons 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/faculty-articles/541
http://arizonastatelawjournal.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/01-Anderson-Final.pdf
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spelling ftuwashingtonsl:oai:digitalcommons.law.uw.edu:faculty-articles-1539 2023-05-15T13:07:27+02:00 The Katie John Litigation: A Continuing Search for Alaska Native Fishing Rights after ANCSA Anderson, Robert T 2019-01-01T08:00:00Z https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/faculty-articles/541 http://arizonastatelawjournal.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/01-Anderson-Final.pdf unknown UW Law Digital Commons https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/faculty-articles/541 http://arizonastatelawjournal.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/01-Anderson-Final.pdf Articles Indigenous Indian and Aboriginal Law Natural Resources Law text 2019 ftuwashingtonsl 2022-05-30T16:09:28Z This essay tells the story of the struggle by upper Ahtna people to protect their way of life and their access to a traditional fishery in modern Alaska. Because of the perseverance of Katie John, Doris Charles, other Ahtna people, and the larger Alaska Native community, their right to fish at a traditional fishing site survives. It is a battle that continues to this day––after nearly thirty-five years of litigation in various forums and in successive related cases that illustrate the complex legal and political issues. The rich history, culture, and modern activism of the Ahtna people motivate the litigation to protect an important local fishery, and along with it, the subsistence fishing rights of all rural Alaska Natives. The latest legal chapter is centered on a peculiar case about a moose hunter, a hovercraft, and the jurisdiction of the National Park Service over navigable waters within the boundaries of Park units. This also is a story that will never end, for population pressures, commercial fishing interests, government indifference, and hostility forever have the potential to diminish or undermine longstanding rights. Text ahtna Alaska UW Law Digital Commons (University of Washington) Indian Perseverance ENVELOPE(162.200,162.200,-76.800,-76.800)
institution Open Polar
collection UW Law Digital Commons (University of Washington)
op_collection_id ftuwashingtonsl
language unknown
topic Indigenous
Indian
and Aboriginal Law
Natural Resources Law
spellingShingle Indigenous
Indian
and Aboriginal Law
Natural Resources Law
Anderson, Robert T
The Katie John Litigation: A Continuing Search for Alaska Native Fishing Rights after ANCSA
topic_facet Indigenous
Indian
and Aboriginal Law
Natural Resources Law
description This essay tells the story of the struggle by upper Ahtna people to protect their way of life and their access to a traditional fishery in modern Alaska. Because of the perseverance of Katie John, Doris Charles, other Ahtna people, and the larger Alaska Native community, their right to fish at a traditional fishing site survives. It is a battle that continues to this day––after nearly thirty-five years of litigation in various forums and in successive related cases that illustrate the complex legal and political issues. The rich history, culture, and modern activism of the Ahtna people motivate the litigation to protect an important local fishery, and along with it, the subsistence fishing rights of all rural Alaska Natives. The latest legal chapter is centered on a peculiar case about a moose hunter, a hovercraft, and the jurisdiction of the National Park Service over navigable waters within the boundaries of Park units. This also is a story that will never end, for population pressures, commercial fishing interests, government indifference, and hostility forever have the potential to diminish or undermine longstanding rights.
format Text
author Anderson, Robert T
author_facet Anderson, Robert T
author_sort Anderson, Robert T
title The Katie John Litigation: A Continuing Search for Alaska Native Fishing Rights after ANCSA
title_short The Katie John Litigation: A Continuing Search for Alaska Native Fishing Rights after ANCSA
title_full The Katie John Litigation: A Continuing Search for Alaska Native Fishing Rights after ANCSA
title_fullStr The Katie John Litigation: A Continuing Search for Alaska Native Fishing Rights after ANCSA
title_full_unstemmed The Katie John Litigation: A Continuing Search for Alaska Native Fishing Rights after ANCSA
title_sort katie john litigation: a continuing search for alaska native fishing rights after ancsa
publisher UW Law Digital Commons
publishDate 2019
url https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/faculty-articles/541
http://arizonastatelawjournal.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/01-Anderson-Final.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(162.200,162.200,-76.800,-76.800)
geographic Indian
Perseverance
geographic_facet Indian
Perseverance
genre ahtna
Alaska
genre_facet ahtna
Alaska
op_source Articles
op_relation https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/faculty-articles/541
http://arizonastatelawjournal.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/01-Anderson-Final.pdf
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