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4 Am. Indian L.J. 1 (2015-2016)

handle is hein.journals/ailj4 and id is 1 raw text is: THE BINDING GUIDANCE PRINCIPLE: USING THE INDIAN
TRUST DOCTRINE TO TRUMP THE APA
John Robinson Jr.*
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION .................................................................................1
I. BACKGROUND ...............................................................................3
A. Historical Perspective: European Interaction with Indian
Peoples .................................................................................3
B. The Indian Trust Doctrine in Short .......................................9
II. JUDICIAL ENFORCEMENT OF AGENCY POLICY & GUIDANCE......12
A. Judicial Enforcement of Agency Policy in Typical
Circumstances....................................................................13
1. Disclaiming Language is Largely Irrelevant to Judicial
Enforceability...............................................................15
B. Atypical Circumstances: The Indian Trust Doctrine Modifies
Enforceability .....................................................................17
III. DISTILLATION AND APPLICATION..............................................21
A. Distillation of a Useful Rule ..............................................21
B. Applying the Rule to Environmental Justice ......................23
CONCLUSION...................................................................................26
INTRODUCTION
In 1979, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals held the Bureau
of Indian Affairs (BIA) accountable to its internal tribal
consultation policy in Oglala Sioux Tribe of Indians v. Andrus.1
This holding contradicted the Administrative Procedure Act's
(APA) general rule that an agency's internal policy and guidance
are not judicially enforceable.2 It also established a precedent that
supported a small line of cases that held similarly-in some
circumstances, Eighth Circuit courts have forced agencies to
follow their internal guidance when it comes to dealing with Indian
tribes.
* Copyright 2015 John Robinson Jr., J.D. 2014, University of Utah College of
Law. John practices natural resources law in Salt Lake City. Contact him at
mainerobinson@gmail. corm.
1 Oglala Sioux Tribe of Indians v. Andrus, 603 F.2d 707 (8th Cir. 1979).
2 See infra Part II.
1

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