Standard Clauses in State-Tribal Agreements: The Navajo Nation Experience

Paul Spruhan
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Abstract

The paper discusses the attempts by the Navajo Nation and the States of Arizona and New Mexico to create standard contract clauses for agreements between the Nation and those states. The Nation and the States have numerous contractual relationships, primarily concerning funding for Nation programs, but also concerning law enforcement, rights-of-way grants, and other issues. Sovereignty issues on both sides have complicated the contracting process, as the Nation and the states have legislatively-mandated contract clauses that each must include in their agreements. Further, dispute resolution issues have caused friction, as each side possesses sovereign immunity but allows arbitration if enforcement of an award is brought in its own court system. In an attempt to resolve these issues, the Nation and the states recently have established standard contract clauses that apply generally to agreements between the sovereigns. The standard clauses allow for arbitration of disputes, with enforcement against the states in state court, and against the Nation in Navajo Nation court. In the case of Arizona, the standard clauses also cover discrimination, citizenship verification, and other issues. Though all issues have not been resolved by these clauses, and it remains to be seen how such clauses will be implemented, the standard contract clause model can be useful to other tribes and states who seek efficient and consistent methods of contracting without sacrificing core principles of tribal and state sovereignty.
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州-部落协议中的标准条款:纳瓦霍族的经验
本文讨论了纳瓦霍族与亚利桑那州和新墨西哥州为纳瓦霍族与这些州之间的协议创建标准合同条款的尝试。国家和各州有许多合同关系,主要涉及国家项目的资金,但也涉及执法、路权授予和其他问题。双方的主权问题使合同过程复杂化,因为国家和各州都有立法授权的合同条款,必须包括在各自的协议中。此外,争端解决问题引起了摩擦,因为每一方都拥有主权豁免,但如果裁决的执行是在自己的法院系统进行的,则允许进行仲裁。为了解决这些问题,国家和各州最近建立了标准合同条款,这些条款一般适用于主权国家之间的协议。标准条款允许对争议进行仲裁,在州法院对州执行,在纳瓦霍民族法院对民族执行。在亚利桑那州的案例中,标准条款还涵盖了歧视、公民身份验证和其他问题。虽然这些条款并没有解决所有问题,而且这些条款将如何实施还有待观察,但标准合同条款模式对其他寻求有效和一致的合同方法而不牺牲部落和国家主权核心原则的部落和国家来说是有用的。
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