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Religion, Law, and the Land: Native Americans and the Judicial Interpretation of Sacred Land: Contributions in Legal Studies

Autor Brian E. Brown
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 noi 1999 – vârsta până la 17 ani
Examining a series of court decisions made during the 1980s regarding the legal claims of several Native American tribes who attempted to protect ancestrally revered lands from development schemes by the federal government, this book looks at important questions raised about the religious status of land. The tribes used the First Amendment right of free exercise of religion as the basis of their claim, since governmental action threatened to alter the land which served as the primordial sacred reality without which their derivative religious practices would be meaningless. Brown argues that a constricted notion of religion on the part of the courts, combined with a pervasive cultural predisposition towards land as private property, marred the Constitutional analysis of the courts to deprive the Native American plaintiffs of religious liberty.Brown looks at four cases, which raised the issue at the federal district and appellate court levels, centered on lands in Tennessee, Utah, South Dakota, and Arizona; then it considers a fifth case regarding land in northwestern California, which ultimately went to the U.S. Supreme Court. In all cases, the author identifies serious deficiencies in the judicial evaluations. The lower courts applied a conception of religion as a set of beliefs and practices that are discrete and essentially separate from land, thus distorting and devaluing the fundamental basis of the tribal claims. It was this reductive fixation of land as property, implicit in the rulings of the first four cases, that became explicitly sanctioned and codified in the Supreme Court's decision in Lyng v. Northwest Indian Cemetery Protective Association of 1988. In reaching such a position, the Supreme Court injudiciously engaged in a policy determination to protect government land holdings, and did so through a shocking repudiation of its own long established jurisprudential procedure in cases concerning the free exercise of religion.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780313309724
ISBN-10: 0313309728
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Praeger
Seria Contributions in Legal Studies

Locul publicării:New York, United States

Notă biografică

BRIAN EDWARD BROWN is Chairman and Associate Professor of Religious Studies at Iona College in New Rochelle, New York./e He teaches classes in the Buddhist, Chinese, and Native American traditionsligious cosmologyd the Constitutional law of church-state relations.

Cuprins

IntroductionSequoyah v. Tennessee Valley Authority: The Tellico Dam and the Submersion of Cherokee Sacred HomelandBadoni v. Higginson: Navajo Religion, National Monuments and the Colorado RiverWilson v. Block: Skiing the Slopes of a Sacred MountainFrank Fools Crow, et al. v. Tony Gullet, et al.: State Tourism on Sacred LandLyng v. Northwest Indian Cemetery Protective Association: The Supreme Court and the Triumph of Property Over ReligionEpilogue