NATIVE AMERICAN LAW PROGRAM
Created to educate Indian Country’s next generation of advocates, entrepreneurs, and policy makers. The University of Idaho Native American Law (NAL) Program was created to educate Indian Country’s next generation of advocates, entrepreneurs, and policy makers. The roots of the program lie with its curricular offerings focused on providing interested law students with a strong foundation in the interrelationship between tribal, federal, and state laws affecting tribal nations and people. The overview course, Native American Law introduces students to the foundations of Tribal civil jurisdiction, sovereignty, and natural resource management. Other courses focus on natural resources law, Tribal nation economics, and family law. The NAL Program works closely with regional tribes throughout the Northwest to ensure that the course work and experiences students have remain relevant to legal issues occurring in Indian Country. The NAL Program provides
students with one-of-a-kind opportunities to experience practicing law with or on behalf of Native nations. Students are placed in internships with tribal governments, courts, private law firms, federal agencies and other organizations that support tribal nations. Law students work in collaboration with regional tribal communities on specific projects designed to provide real-world experiences for future lawyers. The University of Idaho College of Law has an ongoing commitment to educating students in Native American law and encouraging Native Americans to enter the field of law. One measure of that support is the Tribal Homelands Scholarship program. Enrolled members of a federally recognized Indian tribe qualify for a scholarship in the amount of $10,000.00 per year, reducing the cost of attaining a legal education.
For more information on any of these programs please visit uidaho.edu/law/academics/emphasis-area/native-american-law