Contents
Foreword
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Indian Experience and Randall Kennedy’s Mythology
Working on the Front Lines: The Role of Social Work in Response to the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978
The Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 and Its Impact on Tribal Sovereignty and Governance
ICWA and the Commerce Clause
Reparations, Self-Determination, and the Seventh Generation.
A Practitioner’s View from Thirty Years on the Cutting Edge of the Indian Child Welfare Act
Differing Concepts of “Permanency”: The Adoption and Safe Families Act and the Indian Child Welfare Act
The Disconcerting Vicissitudes of State Judicial Power: Determining If Good Cause Exists to Deny Transfer in ICWA Cases
Keeping It in the Family: The Legal and Social Evolution of ICWA in State and Tribal Jurisprudence
Holding Back the Tide: The Existing Indian Family Doctrine and Its Continued Denial of the Right to Culture for Indigenous Children
A Decade of Lessons Learned: Advocacy, Education, and Practice
Where Have All the Children Gone? When Will They Ever Learn?
In Defense of ICWA: The Constitution, Public Policy, and Pragmatism
Contributors