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“We are honored to represent the ACLU in showing how the challenged provisions of the critical federal law protecting Native children are plainly constitutional,” said Kathleen Hartnett, of Cooley LLP. The ACLU’s brief argues the Indian Child Welfare Act is constitutional and urges the Supreme Court to uphold the centuries-long legal precedent upholding tribal sovereignty - including tribes’ right and ability to preserve their unique cultural identities, raise their own children, and govern themselves. Tribes have an inherent right to govern themselves and make decisions on issues that affect their people - including Native children. This is a tragedy as we know that having connection to our cultures, languages, and identities is in the best interest of Native children.”
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If the Indian Child Welfare Act is overturned, tribes will again be stripped of their right to keep their families together. “The explicit goal of these policies was and continues to be, the complete erasure of Indigenous people. “Throughout history, the United States government has enacted countless policies to steal Indigenous children from their homes and to erase their identities,” said Stephanie Amiotte, ACLU of South Dakota legal director and enrolled member of the Oglala Sioux Tribe. If the Supreme Court overturns ICWA, states would once again be allowed to indiscriminately remove Native children from their families and culture while simultaneously depriving tribes of future generations - putting the very existence of tribes in jeopardy. The law aims to prioritize the placement of Native children within their extended families or tribal communities, where their cultural identities will be understood and celebrated. ICWA requires state courts to make active efforts to keep Native families together. Throughout history, federal and state governments have sought to undermine and threaten the existence of tribes via the forced separation and assimilation of Native children. The Indian Child Welfare Act was passed by Congress in 1978 to address the nationwide epidemic of American Indian children being forcibly removed from their homes by child welfare agencies and placed into non-Native homes at disproportionate rates. The Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) - which establishes basic requirements to protect Native American children from continued forced removal from their families, tribes, and tribal culture - is slated to be reviewed by the Supreme Court this fall via Brackeen v. Supreme Court urging the court to uphold the constitutionality of the Indian Child Welfare Act. (Dakota News Now) - The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in 14 states represented by Cooley LLP, filed an amicus brief with the U.S.
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