Haaland v. Brackeen
Case Overview
Haaland v. Brackeen (2023) upheld 7-2 the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) against constitutional challenges including anti-commandeering, equal protection, and non-delegation claims. ICWA's preference for placing Native American children with Native families in foster care and adoption proceedings was challenged by Texas and non-Native families who wanted to adopt Native children. The decision preserved ICWA's framework while leaving open some as-applied equal protection claims not yet ripe for review.
The Facts
ICWA (1978) establishes standards for state custody proceedings involving Native American children, requiring that placement preference go first to extended family members, then other tribal members, then other Native families. Texas, Indiana, and Louisiana (along with several non-Native families seeking to adopt Native children) challenged ICWA as racially discriminatory, as commandeering state court systems in violation of the Tenth Amendment, and as an impermissible delegation of legislative power to tribes. The Fifth Circuit en banc struck down ICWA. The Supreme Court reversed.
The Application
The Court upheld ICWA by invoking Congress's plenary power over Indian affairs, reframing the placement preferences under Morton v. Mancari as political rather than racial classifications entitled to heightened rational-basis review. Although the anti-commandeering doctrine would ordinarily prohibit federal direction of state court procedures, the Court found that Congress may condition state court participation in Indian child welfare cases to protect tribal sovereignty and interests in preserving tribal membership and family structures. The decision thus rejected the facial equal protection, anti-commandeering, and non-delegation challenges, though it preserved the possibility of future as-applied equal protection claims challenging ICWA's application in specific adoptive contexts.
The Conclusion
**Major 2023 ruling preserving the Indian Child Welfare Act's core placement preferences and procedural protections.** The decision reaffirmed the political-not-racial nature of tribal membership classifications under Morton v. Mancari, blocked the anti-commandeering and non-delegation challenges, but left for future proceedings whether ICWA's provisions are constitutional as applied to specific adoptive families with no prior tribal connection.
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