Week 3
Christine Zuni Cruz
Just this year, Christine Zuni Cruz, a member of
the Isleta/San Juan Pueblo, became the first pueblo woman to earn
tenure as a law professor. A professor at the University of New
Mexico School of Law, Zuni Cruz joined the faculty in 1993 to
establish the Southwest Indian Law Clinic (SILC). SILC provides
hands-on opportunities for law students to represent clients in
various state, federal, and tribal courts, and governmental agencies.
Zuni Cruz has said that she enjoys teaching in the clinic because
it allows her "to keep one foot in practice" and because she is
able to fulfill her lifelong goal of working with clients in indigenous
communities who would be would be unable to afford counsel, otherwise.
She thrives on her one-on-one interactions with the students,
who are required to take a course in Indian Law before engaging
in their work at the clinic, where they choose from a variety
of projects including land claims, taxation, tribal court development,
environmental affairs and prisoners' rights. Under the leadership
of Zuni Cruz, SILC emphasizes community involvement and sensitivity,
a multi-disciplinary approach to problem-solving, and collaborative
lawyering.
As Editor-in-Chief of the Tribal Law Journal, an on-line
journal dedicated to providing a reliable forum for the discussion
of internal law for indigenous peoples, Zuni Cruz gives native
peoples, practitioners and law students an opportunity to contribute
their work. The Tribal Law Journal is published one time each
academic year, and includes an on-line forum that gives readers
and contributors a place to discuss relevant topics and comment
on journal items.
In her research and teaching, she explores law and culture, including
the impact of law on Indian families, the practice of Indian Law,
and lawyering for native communities, as well as the internal
traditional and modern law of indigenous peoples, both domestically
and internationally. During the summer of 2001, Zuni Cruz traveled
to Greenland to help teach an intensive course on international
indigenous human rights, at the premier session of the International
Training Center for Indigenous Peoples, in a program designed
to train indigenous leaders for working at the international level.
In April 2002, when New Mexico became the first state to require
federal Indian Law as a subject on its state bar exam, Zuni Cruz
was an enthusiastic proponent of the New Mexico Supreme Court's
action. Since Indian Law permeates many legal areas in New Mexico,
she stated her belief in the importance of lawyers in New Mexico
having a minimum level of familiarity with Indian Law in order
to deal effectively with related issues.
Zuni Cruz currently serves as an Associate Justice with the Pueblo
of Isleta Appellate Court and had served as a tribal court judge
with the Pueblos of Laguna, Taos, and as a judge pro tem with
Santa Clara. She was a presiding judge with the Isleta Court of
Tax Appeals and an appellate judge with the Southwest Intertribal
Court of Appeals, (SWITCA). SWITCA is a voluntary court available
to tribes in Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico and west Texas. Organized
in 1989, SWITCA provides a variety of support services to tribal
courts, including training, research assistance, court evaluation
and code drafting for the member tribes. Appellate services are
available at no cost to member tribes who have adopted formal
resolutions.
Christine Zuni Cruz's personal history shows familiarity with
both Native American culture and American society as a whole,
She moved from her native village at five, eventually earning
an her undergraduate degree at Stanford University, but then returned
to her home to stay. She has said that this was her greatest challenge.
She later earned a law degree from the University of New Mexico.
Prior to her appointment on the Law School faculty at University
of New Mexico, Zuni Cruz was engaged in the private practice of
law for ten years.
Zuni Cruz asserts that her greatest achievement has been raising
her two sonsManuel 20, and Fabrice, 5: "Raising two Indian sons
has taught me so much about the society in which we live and about
what is important." She believes that young people should envision
themselves as lawyers, as professors of law, as Justices, as whatever
they aspire to be, and to believe in themselves. She also urges
youth "not to forget who they are or the people they came from."
The ABA Division for Public Education is privileged to present
this profile of Christine Zuni Cruz in celebration of National
American Indian Heritage Month.
Photo Usage:
Permission to use the above photo granted by Christine Zuni Cruz.
American Indian Heritage
Month 2002 | Links
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