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Articles : Arizona Gila River Indian Community - Gila River Economic Development Department Phoenix Business & Land Development


  • Arizona Indian Tribe to Franchise Juice Bar Concept, Nation's Restaurant News, p.76 (March 17, 1997).

  • Development Center Aids Indian-owned Businesses, Fedgazette, p.6 (July 1992).

  • Doing Business on the Pueblos, New Mexico Business Journal, p.20 (April 1998).

  • Indian Tribes ask Wall Street for Financial partnership, Hispanic Times Magazine, p.40 (March-April 1990).

  • Intergovernmental compacts in Native American law: models for expanded usage, 112 Harvard Law Review 922 (1999)

  • Tribal businesses and the uncertain reach of tribal sovereign immunity: a statutory solution, 67 Washington Law Review, 113 (January 1992).

  • Abrams, Garry. Carnivorous card room seeks constitutional meal of tribal gaming laws. The Los Angeles Daily Journal, Feb. 13, 2001 v114 i30 p1 col1 (5 col in).

  • Adam, Daniel J. Tribal telecom: telecommunications regulation in Indian country. 27 Journal of Legislation, 153 (Wntr 2001)

  • Ahola, Amber J. Call it the revenge of the Pequots," or how American Indian tribes can sue states under the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act without violating the eleventh amendment, 27 University of San Francisco Law Review, 907 (Summer 1993).

  • Alexander, Robert William. The collision of tribal natural resource development and state taxation: an economic analysis, 27 New Mexico Law Review, 387 (1996).

  • Anderson, Ivy. Protecting the salmon: an implied right of habitat protection in the Stevent Treaties, and its impact on the Colombia River Basis. 24 Vermont Law Review 143 (Fall 1999)

  • Anderson, Jeffrey. Going for Broke. (California Law Business) The Los Angeles Daily Journal, Feb. 28 2000 v113 i39 ps12 col1 (50 col in).

  • Anderson, Terry L. and Lueck, Dean. Land tenure and agricultural productivity on Indian reservations, 35 Journal of Law and Economics, 427 (October 1992).

  • Anderson, Terry L. and McChesney, Fred S. Raid or trade? An economic model of Indian-white relations, 37 Journal of Law and Economics, 39 (April 1994).

  • Aprill, Ellen P. Tribal bonds: Indian sovereignty and the tax legislative process, 46 Administrative Law Review, 333 (Summer 1994).

  • Austin, W.J.R. Self-government and fiscal relations: fundamental changes in the relationship. (Canada) (Proceedings of a Policy Conference on Aboriginal Tax, Treaties, and Self-Government, part 1) 48 Canadian Law Journal 1232 (August 2000)

  • Berardi, Gigi. Natural resource policy, unforgiving geographies, and persistent poverty in Alaska native villages. 38 Natural Resources Journal 85 (Wntr 1998)

  • Biddle, S. G. Labor and employment issues for tribal employees, 34 Arizona Attorney, 16 (January 1998).

  • Bodney, D. J. Taxing times in Indian country, 34 Arizona Attorney, 22 (January 1998).

  • Bordewich, Fergus. How to Succeed in Business: Follow the Choctaw's Lead, Smithsonian, p.70 (March 1996).

  • Boyce, Katherine Randolph. Expanded federal contracting opportunities for Indian enterprises: a summary of five initiatives launched during the 101st Congress, 38, Federal Bar News & Journal 80 (1991).

  • Boyce, Katherine R. Incentive payment program expands federal subcontracting opportunities for Indian country. Fed. Law. 38 2001 WL 388656 p.38

  • Bravo, Karen E. Balancing indigenous rights to land and the demands of economic development: lessons from the United States and Australia. 30 Columbia Journal of Law and Social Problems 529

  • Brietzke, Paul H.& Kline, Teresa L. The law and economies of Native American casinos. 78 Nebraska Law Review 263 (Spring 1999)

  • BryldoIf, Libby. Increasingly, Reservations Put Remote Land to Profitable Uses, San Diego Business Journal, p.11 (December 3, 1990).

  • Caher, John. Court limits governor's authority to allow casinos on reservations; compact with Indian tribes are invalid without legislature's consent, New York Law Journal v225 i70 p1 col3 (35 col in). (April 12, 2001)

  • Chatigny, Bradford E. The Anadarko dilemma: can "offshore" banking join gambling in the Native American arsenal of economic development? (Anadarko, Oklahoma) 32 Columbia Journal of Law and Social Problems (Fall 1998)

  • Dean, Stephanie. Getting a piece of the action: should the federal government be able to tax Native American gambling revenue? 32 Columbia Journal of Law and Social Problems 157 (Wntr 1999)

  • Ellerbach, Susan. Indian Law Expands as Tribes Explore Business Development, Tulsa World, (February 12, 1989)

  • Folster, Karen L. Just cheap butts, or an equal protection violation? New York's failure to tax reservation sales to non-Indians. 62 Albany Law Review 697 (Wntr 1998)

  • Gaupp, Anna-Emily C. The Indian Tribal Economic Development and Contracts encouragement Act of 2000: Smoke signals of a new era in federal Indian policy? Conneticut Law Review, v33 i2 p667-690 (Wntr 2001)

  • Lappen, Alyssa. Free Enterprise, Navajo Style, Forbes, p.10 (July 11, 1988).

  • Chambers, Reid Peyton and Echohawk, John E. Implementing the Winters [Winters v. United States, 28 S. CT. 20 (1908)] doctrine of Indian reserved water rights: producing Indian water and economic development without injuring non-Indian water users? 27 Gonzaga Law Review, 447 (1991/1992).

  • Claiborne, William. Tribe's Big Step: From Casinos to Conglomerates, Washington Post, p.1 (August 14, 1998).

  • Clifford, John S. Application of Article 9 to secured transactions in Indian country, 28 Uniform Commercial Code Law Journal, 297 (Winter 1996).

  • Collins, Nancy B. and Hall, Andrea. Nuclear waste in Indian country: a paradoxical trade, 12 Law & Inequity  267 (June 1994).

  • Cook, Ellen D. Federal tax law as a catalyst for economic development: incentives for empowerment zones, enterprise communities, and Indian reservations, 46 Oil, Gas & Energy Quarterly 1133 (December 1997).

  • Cornell, Stephen. Sovereignty, prosperity and policy in Indian country today, 5 Community Reinvestment, 5 (1997).

  • Cornell, Stephen and Kalt, Joseph P. Where does economic development really come from: constitutional rule among the contemporary Sioux and Apache, 33 Economic Inquiry 402 (July 1995).

  • Cornell, Stephen and Gil-Swedberg, Marta Cecilia. Sociohistorical factors in institutional efficacy: economic development in three American Indian cases, 43 Economic Development and Cultural Change 239 (January 1995).

  • Cornell, Stephen and Kalt, Joseph P. Sovereignty and nation-building: the development challenge in Indian Country today, 22 American Indian Culture and Research Journal 187 (1998).

  • Cross, Raymond. De-federalizing American Indian commerce: toward a new political economy for Indian country, 16 Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy 445 (Spring 1993)

  • Danahy, Scott D. License to discriminate: the application of sovereign immunity to employment discrimination claims brought by non-Native American employees of tribally owned businesses, 25 Florida State University Law Review 679 (Spring 1998).

  • Day, Janet. Native American-owned company Breaks New Ground with Natural Gas, Journal of Cornmerce and Commercial, p.11B (May 10, 1994).

  • Dillingham, Terese. Playing reindeer games: Native Alaskans and the federal trust doctrine. 26 Boston College Environmental Affairs Law Review 649 (Spring 1999)

  • Epstein, Jonathan. An Indian-owned Bank Targets Tribal Credit Needs, American Banker, p.6 (July 24, 1997).

  • Erlich, Richard. Sovereignty and the tribal economy, 6 American Indian Journal 21 (1980).

  • Fink, Jerry. Indian Tribes Meeting Success Head On, Tulsa World, p.1 (June 29, 1997).

  • Fogleman, Amelia A. Sovereign immunity of Indian tribes: a proposal for statutory waiver for tribal businesses, 79 Virginia Law Review 1345 (September 1993).

  • Folster, Karen L. Just cheap butts, or an equal protection violation? New York's failure to tax reservation sales to non-Indians, 62 Albany Law Review 697 (Winter 1998).

  • Gabe, Todd, et.al.. Local Economic Impacts of Tribal Casinos: the Minnesota Case, Journal of Travel Research, p. 81 (Winter 1996).

  • Goldberg-Ambrose, Carole. Pursuing tribal economic development at the bingo palace. 29 Arizona State Law Journal 97

  • Handler, Adam M. Empowerment zones and other business incentives may provide only limited benefits. (Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1993, 79 Journal of Taxation 274 (November 1993).

  • Heath, Oberloh. Calvello v. Yankton Sioux Tribe [584 N.W.2d 108 (S.D. 1998)]: shoring up tribal soverign immunity against the flood of commercial transactions involving tribally owned businesses. 44 S.D. Law Review 746

  • Henson, Eric and Luxman, Nathan. Adopting Commercial Codes: overcoming lending barriers on reservations. Communities and Banking No. 24 (Winter 1999)

  • Hill, James D. and Arnett, Howard G. Understanding Indian tribal timber sales, 9 Natural Resources & Environment 38 (Winter 1995).

  • Hook, M. J. and Banks, B. D. The Indian Mineral Development Act of 1982, 7 Natural Resources & Environment 11 (Spring 1993).

  • Hunter, Howard O. Federalism and state taxation of multi-state enterprises, 32 Emory Law Journal 90 (1983).

  • Hutt, S. Native American cultural property law, 34 Arizona Attorney, p. 18 (January 1998).

  • Irvine, Patrick. Tribal sovereign immunity and economic development, Arizona Attorney p.17 (July 1993).

  • Jabrig, Shannon. Business on the Reservation, Montana Business Quarterly, 15 (Autumn 1997).

  • Jackson, Susan. Can the Pequots Stay on a Roll, Business Week, 38 (July 21, 1997).

  • Jahrig, Shannon. Crossing the Cultural Divide: Organizational Support for Indians in Business, Montana Business Quarterly, 34 (Summer 1996).

  • Jarboe, Mark A. Fundamental legal principles affecting business transactions in Indian country, 17 Hamline Law Review 417 (Spring 1994).

  • Jarboe, Mark A, Financing and securing Indian economic development projects. 1999 Mineral Law Series: Rocky Mountain Mineral Law Foundation CH14(34) (May)

  • Johnson, Carrie. Tribe gambles on D.C. judge to invalidate casino law; Indians seek to have 1988 gaming act declared unconstitutional. Legal Times, March 22, 1999 v21 i43 p1 col1 (50 col in).

  • Johnson, Dirk, Manna in the form of jobs comes to the reservation, The New York Times, (February 21, 1999)

  • Jones, Fred. Increasing gambling opens door to disaster. (Tribal Gaming) (California) Los Angeles Daily Journal, Feb. 25 2000 v113 i38 p6 col4 (5 col in).

  • Jordan, David B. Rolling the dice on the cyber-reservation: the confluence of Internet gaming and federal Indian law. 24 Am. Indian Law Review 455

  • Kawatra, Gagan Kumar. Indian Supreme Court holds payment of tax is not a business expenditure, 15 Tax Notes International 515 (August 1997).

  • Kemp, Helen M. Fallen timber: a proposal for the National Labor Relations Board to assert jurisdiction over Indian-owned and controlled businesses on tribal reservation, 17 Western New England Law Review 1 (1995).

  • Kendall, Sandy. Go Where the People Are: When Minnesota's Anderson Fabrics Faced a Staffing Crunch, it Teamed up With a Local Chippewa Tribe Whose Members Needed Jobs in Order to Build a Plant on the Reservation, 12, No.6 CIO 24 (1998).

  • King, Jennifer L. Increasing telephone penetration rates and promotion economic development on tribal lands: a proposal to solve the tribal and state jurisdictional problems. 53 Federal Communications Law Journal 137 (Dec 2000)

  • Kirkwood, M. V. Federal and state regulation of tribal utilities, 7 Natural Resources & Environment 27 (Spring 1993).

  • Koury, Kathy. Big Business, Not Betting, as Boom for Many Tribes But Some Indians Worry that Wal-Marts and Wendy's may Harm Their Cultural Heritage, Christian Science Monitor, p.1 (September 22, 1998).

  • Kurman, Michael J. Indian investment and employment tax incentives, 41 Federal Bar News & Journal, 578 (September 1994).

  • Lake, Brian C. The unlimited sovereign immunity of Indian tribal businesses operating outside the reservation: an idea whose time has gone, Columbia Business Law Review, 87 (1996).

  • Laurence, R. American Indians and the environment: a legal primer for newcomers, 7 Natural Resources & Environment 3 (Spring 1993).

  • LeBeau, Tracy A. Reclaiming reservation infrastructure: regulatory and economic opportunities for tribal development. (The state of Native America and its unfolding Self-Governance). 12 Stanford Law & Policy Review 237. (Spring 2001)

  • Lenertz, Karen L. and Glass-Sirany, Sandra. State regulatory authority in Indian country: state OSHA jurisdiction. (Symposium on Native American Law), 17 Hamline Law Review 447 (Spring 1994).

  • Littman, Jonathan, And the dealer stays, 13 California Lawyer, 44 (January 1993).

  • Litvack, Rose. State taxation of business conducted on Indian reservations, 16 Journal of State Taxation 31 (Spring 1998).

  • Looker, Dan. Growing Native Foods in Arizona '5 Desert..., Successful Farming, p.58 (February 1995).

  • Mack, Joel H. and Timms, Gwyn Goodson. Cooperative agreements: government-to-government relations to foster reservation business development, 20 Pepperdine Law Review, 1295 (May 1993).

  • McFadden, Karen S. The stakes are too high to gamble away tribal self-government, self- sufficiency, and economic development when amending the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, 21 The Journal of Corporation Law 807 (Summer 1996).

  • McNeil, H. L. Indian gaming in Arizona, 34 Arizona Attorney 13 (January 1998).

  • Mezey, Naomi. The distribution of wealth, sovereignty, and culture through Indian gaming, 48 Stanford Law Review 711 (February 1996).

  • Mika, Karin. Private dollars on the reservation: will recent Native American economic development amount to cultural assimilation? 25 New Mexico Law Review 23 (Winter 1995).

  • Monje, Kathleen. Fighting the Quinault Indian Tribes Increase Control Over Their Economic Destiny, Oregonian, (May 26, 1992)

  • Moore, Josh D. Justice too long delayed on the Navajo reservation: the "Bennett Freeze" as a case study in government treatment of Native Americans, 6 Harvard Human Rights Journal 222 (Spring 1993).

  • Moore, Paula. Indian Entrepreneurs Set Their Own Course, Denver Business Journal, p.3A (December 29, 1995).

  • Murphy, William J. Jurisdiction--sovereign immunity--business owned by Native American nation granted sovereign immunity from suit arising from its private off-reservation transaction, In re Greene, 980 F.2d 590, 17 Suffolk Transnational Law Review 599 (Spring 1994).

  • Murray, Marshall. Business and investment income under Section 87 of the Indian Act: Recalma v. Canada [(1998) 158 D.L.R. 4th 59]. 77 Can. Bar Review 528

  • Nason, James D. Traditional property and modern laws: the need for Native American community intellectual property rights legislation. (The state of Native America and its unfolding Self-Governance) 12 Stanford Law & Policy Review 255 (Spring 2001)

  • O'Connell, Michael P. Business transactions with tribal governments in Arizona, 34 Arizona Attorney 27 (January 1998).

  • O'Grady, Mark. Native Americans Focus on Economic Development and Exports at Reservation Economic Summit in Denver, Business America, p.27 (May 1998).

  • O'Sullivan, Kathleen M. What would John Marshall say? Does the federal trust responsibility protect tribal gambling revenue? 84 Georgetown Law Journal 123 (November 1995).

  • Odenwald, Arlene. A Sturdy, Single Voice for Native American Entrepreneurs, New Mexico Business Journal, p.49 (November 1994).

  • Overstreet, Greg. Re-empowering the Native American: a conservative proposal to restore tribal sovereignty and self-reliance to federal Indian policy, 14 Hamline Journal of Public Law and Policy 1 (Fall 1993).

  • Pacheco, Michael M. Toward a truer sense of sovereignty: fiduciary duty in Indian corporations, 39 South Dakota Law Review 49 (1994).

  • Parsley, Jon Keith. Regulation of counterfeit Indian arts and crafts: an analysis of the Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990, 18 American Indian Law Review 487 (Summer 1993).

  • Paul, Paula. Growing in Indian Country, The New Mexico Business Journal, p.34 (October 1998).

  • Petoskey, John F. Doing business with Michigan Indian tribes, 76 Michigan Bar Journal 440 (May 1997).

  • Pico, Anthony A. A 'yes' on Prop. 1A wil provide jobs, decrease welfare. (Tribal Gaming) (California) The Los Angeles Daily Journal, Feb. 25 2000 v113 i38 p6 col3 (5 col in).

  • Regis-Civetta, Jennifer M. The effect of the Endangered Species Act on tribal economic development in Indian country, 50 Washington University Journal of Urban and Contemporary Law 303 (Fall 1996).

  • Rice, G. William. Employment in Indian country: considerations respecting tribal regulation of the employer-employee relationship, 72 North Dakota Law Review 267 (1996).

  • Ridgeway, Michael W. The Potawatomi/Oklahoma Gaming Compact of 1992: have two sovereigns achieved a meeting of the minds? 18 American Indian Law Review 515 (Summer 1993)

  • Rosenthal, M. A. Where there is smoke there is fire: New York's battle to collect taxes on cigarette sales mad by Indian retailers to non-Indians: Milhelm Attea & Bros., Inc. v. Department of Taxation and Finance of the State of New York, 17 Hamline Law Review 507 (Spring 1994).

  • Sheppard, Doug. House panel debates Indian taxation bill, 80 Tax Notes 19 (July 1998).

  • Shesgreen, Deirdre. Stacked deck; tribes claim gaming panel favors old-line casinos. Legal Times, MArch 28, 1999 v21 i44 p1 col1 (50 col in).

  • Sicius, Francis J. Spirit myth and economic activity: the harmonious world of Florida's Indians, 7 St. Thomas Law Review, 465 (Summer 1995).

  • Sitkowski, Robert. Commercial hazardous waste projects in Indian country: an opportunity for tribal economic development through land use planning, 10 Journal of Land Use & Environmental Law 239 (Spring 1995).

  • Slade, L. H. Structuring and financing natural resource and energy development on Indian lands, 7 Natural Resources & Environment 7 (Spring 1993).

  • Stern, Walter E. Environmental regulation on Indian lands: a business perspective, 7 Natural Resources & Environment 20 (Spring 1993).

  • Stern, Walter E. Environmental compliance considerations for developers of Indian lands, 28 Land and Water Law Review 77 (1993).

  • Stetson, C. B. and Gover, K. CERCLA liability and regulation of solid and hazardous waste on Indian lands, 7 Natural Resources & Environment 24 (Spring 1993).

  • Strickland, R. and Protti, M. The dilemma of preserving tribal culture and promoting resource development: a bibliographic essay, 7, Natural Resources & Environment 34 (Spring 1993).

  • Strommer, Geoffrey D. & Jackobson, Craig A. Indian tribes and the Base Realignment and Closure Act: recommendations for future trust land acquisitions. 75 North Dakota Law Review 509 (Summer 1999)

  • Suskin, Steven P. and Bartlett, F. Thomas. Arizona law answers some Indian law property tax questions. (Indian Law Theme Issue), 29 Arizona Attorney  33 (July 1993).

  • Swaney, Karen Lee. Waiver of Indian tribal sovereignty immunity in the context of economic development, 31 Arizona Law Review 389 (1989).

  • Swimmer, Ross O. Modern tribal government: social and economic realities and opportunities, 7 St. Thomas Law Review, 479 (Summer 1995).

  • Taradash, Alan R. Natural resource royalty management and accounting: special issues associated with valuation and royalty accounting for production from Indian lands, past, current, and proposed oil and gas valuation regulations. 1999 Mineral Law Series: Rocky Mountain Mineral Law Foundation CH8(23) (May)

  • Tsosie, Rebecca. Tribal environmental policy in an era of self-determination: the role of ethics, economics, and traditional ecological knowledge, 21 Vermont Law Review 225 (Fall 1996).

  • Tsosie, Rebecca. Economic development on the Reservation: a survey of relevant environmental considerations, 36 Arizona Law Review 169 (1994).

  • Tsosie, Rebecca. Negotiating economic survival: the consent principle and tribal-state compacts under the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, 29 Arizona State Law Journal 25 (1996).

  • Vetter, William V. Doing business with Indians and the three "S"es: secretarial approval, sovereign immunity, and subject matter jurisdiction, 36 Arizona Law Review 169 (Spring 1994).

  • Walker, Jana L.; Gover, Kevin. Commercial solid and hazardous waste disposal projects on Indian lands, 10 Yale Journal on Regulation 229 (Winter 1993)

  • Warrior Apparel: Profiting from a Non-tribal Partnership, New Mexico Business Journal, p.50 (June 1995).

  • Webster, Joseph J. & Dean, S. Bobo. Contract support funding and the federal policy of Indian tribal self-determination. (Symposium: Native American Law). 36 Tulsa Law Journal 349 (Wntr 2000)

  • West, Beth. Natural resources development on Indian reservations: overview of Tribal, State, and Federal Jurisdiction, 17 American Indian Law Review 71 (1992).

  • Whiteing, J. S. Tribal and state taxation of natural resources on Indian reservations, 7, No. 4 Natural Resources & Environment 17 (Spring 1993).

  • Wilson, Thomas L. Indian gaming and economic development on the reservation, 14, No. 2 NARF Legal Review 1 (1989).

  • Witmer, Richard C. The high stakes of Indian gaming: economic development and political participation on Native American homelands, 5 Red Ink 26 (Fall 1996).

  • Zah, Peterson. Environmental justice and cultural conflict, 2 Tulsa Journal of Comparative & International Law 129 (Fall 1994).

  • Zeh, Charles R. and Hearne, Treva J. Development considerations on Indian lands, 13 Natural Resources & Environment, 350 (Summer 1998).

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