NATIVE AMERICAN RIGHTS FUND WELCOMES NEWLY ESTABLISHED NATIONAL TRIBAL JUSTICE RESOURCE CENTER
BOULDER, CO – The Native American Rights Fund (NARF) is pleased
to welcome the National Tribal Justice Resource Center (NTJRC)
to Boulder, Colorado. The Resource Center is currently setting
up its offices at NARF's National Indian Law Library, 1522 Broadway.
The National Tribal Justice Resource Center, a project of the
National American Indian Court Judges Association (NAICJA), has
been established with start-up funding from the U.S. Department
of Justice's Bureau of Justice Assistance. The purpose of the
Resource Center is to make available a wide range of resources
to tribal judges and court personnel, as well as tribal justice
systems. Some initial services to be provided include:
- creating a clearinghouse of existing written tribal judicial
resources
- providing a free searchable database of tribal justice system
opinions
- developing and expanding internet resources available to
tribal courts
- establishing a toll-free "Helpline" offering technical assistance
- establishing a mentor system for tribal justice systems
- assessing tribal justice technical assistance needs
Jill Shibles (Penobscot), Executive Director of the Resource Center,
is the former Chief Judge of the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Court
in Connecticut, Appellate Justice for the Passamaquoddy Appellate
Court of Maine and the Mashantucket Pequot Court of Appeals, and
First Vice-President of NAICJA. She will be joined by Tina M. Farrenkopf,
Esq. (Passamaquoddy) who will assume the duties of Associate Director
on November 1, 2000. Farrenkopf most recently was the Clerk of Courts
with the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Court, and is currently the
Co-Chair of the United South and Eastern Tribe's Inc.'s Tribal Justice
Committee. The Resource Center is presently conducting a national
search for its third staff position of Office Manager
(www.naicja.org/jobs.htm).
"The National Tribal Justice Resource Center has the potential
to provide very real and practical benefits to every Native American
and Alaska Native tribal justice system in the United States," says
Jill Shibles. "It will allow us to assist tribes, to strengthen
their methods of government and improve the climate within tribal
lands for economic prosperity by offering tools to enhance tribal
justice systems."
John Echohawk, Executive Director of the Native American Rights
Fund is pleased with the collaboration. "NARF is very honored to
be a partner on a project of this caliber. A national resource center
that can provide reference and technical assistance to Indian tribal
court systems is long overdue. We look forward to having the National
Indian Law Library provide access to its unparalleled collection
of tribal opinions, tribal codes and tribal constitutions."
The Native American Rights Fund has collaborated with NAICJA, the
Resource Center's parent organization, on previous projects. Most
recently, NARF and NAICJA worked with the National Congress of American
Indians to develop a Model Tribal Notice Law (MTNL). If adopted
by Indian Tribes, the MTNL would provide for giving adequate and
timely notice to Tribes of cases in a Tribe's court to which the
Tribe is not a party, but which raise issues of tribal sovereignty
or tribal jurisdiction. The three groups are also developing a similar
Model State Notice Law.
For further information on the National Tribal Justice Resource
Center, please visit www.tribalresourcecenter.org
or www.naicja.org.