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40 Alaska L. Rev. i (2023-2024)

handle is hein.journals/allr40 and id is 1 raw text is: NOTE FROM THE EDITOR
The Alaska Law Review is pleased to present our June 2023 issue, the
first in our fortieth volume. In forty years, the Alaska Law Review has
grown and changed in many new and unexpected ways, much like
Alaska itself. I could not be more proud of what the Alaska Law Review has
achieved and all of the amazing editors who have dedicated so much of
their time in law school to helping continue its mission. I am also thankful
to you, our readers, for your support, your submissions, and your
contributions to Alaska's legal discourse.
I am also proud of the hard work our staff has dedicated to this issue
in particular. This issue features one article, four student notes, and one
case comment. These pieces discuss a wide variety of significant and
timely topics relevant to Alaska's modern legal landscape.
In Issues in Implementing Special Domestic Violence Criminal Jurisdiction
in Alaska's Tribal Courts, author Danika Watson writes about the 2022
Violence Against Women Act reauthorization, which applied the act's
special domestic violence criminal jurisdiction to 229 Alaska tribes for the
first time. This gives tribal courts new tools to deal with the high rates of
violence against women in Alaska Native communities. Ms. Watson
begins by discussing the history of VAWA as it relates to Native
Americans focusing on lessons from the 2013 reauthorization which
applied mainly to Native communities outside Alaska. She then maps out
issues that communities in Alaska may face with implementing the new
programs. Ms. Watson incorporates and expands on guidance provided
by non-Alaskan tribes who have spent the past decade evaluating what
works. She concludes by acknowledging that, while there are clear paths
forward, many new challenges lie ahead.
Our first student note, written by Alaska Law Review Executive Editor
Adam Beyer, is titled The Unique Promise of the Alaska Constitution: The
Right to Rehabilitation. He begins by discussing Abraham v. State, where the
Alaska Supreme Court recognized the state constitutional right to
rehabilitation for criminal offenders. Mr. Beyer then walks through how
the doctrine has developed in the last forty-five years, explaining that it
has mainly limited the state's ability to revoke inmates' rehabilitative
programming. However, he argues that this principle ought to be
expanded to initial sentencing, too, where individuals should have the
opportunity to challenge sentencing schemes or even individual
sentences for not providing for rehabilitation.

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