Office

Tribal Partnerships Program

Badger-Two Medicine. (Rebecca Drobis for Earthjustice)

Media Inquiries

Timna Axel
Public Affairs and Communications Strategist
(773) 828-0712
taxel@earthjustice.org

Legal Assistance Inquiries

Contacto de Prensa

Robert Valencia
Estratega de Comunicaciones y Asuntos PĂşblicos Hispanos/Latinos
rvalencia@earthjustice.org
(212) 845-7376

Legal Alerts Email Listserv

For Tribes and Indigenous communities and affiliated in-house counsel interested in alerts on government notices, public comment periods, and more. Sign up.

Who We Are

Earthjustice’s Tribal Partnerships Program fights to ensure our Tribal and Indigenous clients’ natural and cultural resources are protected for future generations. See bar admissions for our attorneys.

Laura BerglanSenior Attorney

Caitlyn BrandtLitigation Assistant

Gussie LordManaging Attorney

Robert LundbergAssociate Attorney

Stefanie TsosieSenior Attorney

Our Impact

Earthjustice has a long history of partnering with Tribes, Native groups, and Indigenous communities to ensure their natural and cultural resources are protected for future generations. Today, as Native peoples lead from the frontlines of many pivotal environmental fights, our Tribal Partnerships Program is proud to continue that tradition.

Tribes and Indigenous communities and affiliated in-house counsel can receive email alerts and monthly summaries of government notices, public comment periods, and sign on opportunities for litigation and legislation through the Tribal Partnerships Program’s email listserv.

Listen to a conversation with attorneys Gussie Lord and Stefanie Tsosie on their work.

Partnering with Indigenous Communities from Coast to Coast

We proudly partner with and represent over 100 Tribes, Alaska Natives, Native Hawaiians, and other Indigenous groups who are fighting to protect their water, wildlife, and sacred lands from extractive industries. Earthjustice and the Tribal Partnerships Program will continue to fight efforts to impair or destroy tribal or Indigenous lands, resources, or areas of cultural significance.

Elevating Indigenous Voices and Applying Indigenous Knowledge

In addition, we will continue to elevate Indigenous voices on the frontlines of environmental degradation and destruction, and to support traditional land and wildlife management practices, which are crucial tools in our fight to combat climate change. “A lot of Tribes are innovators,” explains Senior Attorney Stefanie Tsosie. “Earthjustice can be innovators with them and help elevate their voices, especially in the times we see now.”

Highlights of Our Work:

  • Alongside the International Program and Alaska regional office, we are working on behalf of the Southeast Alaska Indigenous Transboundary Commission (SEITC), a consortium of 15 Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian Nations, to oppose dangerous mining in the headwaters of the culturally significant Taku, Stikine, and Unuk Rivers.
  • We are representing the Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa in Wisconsin in efforts to stop the rerouting of Line 5, a dangerous and outdated oil pipeline that has been trespassing on their reservation for more than a decade. With colleagues in the Midwest office, we also represent the Bay Mills Indian Community in Michigan, whose way of life is threatened by the proposed Line 5 tunnel project.
  • We are fighting in court on behalf of the Hualapai Tribe in Arizona to stop a lithium exploration operation that is endangering Tribal lands, including the sacred medicinal spring called Ha’Kamwe’ in the Big Sandy River Watershed.
  • Earthjustice attorneys in Alaska protect the Tongass National Forest, public lands of the Western Arctic, the Chukchi Sea, and countless rivers and streams that have supported subsistence practices of Alaska Native people for generations.
  • We worked with the Penobscot Nation and the Houlton Band of Maliseet Indians to successfully defeat a mining proposal in Maine’s Katahdin region that was vehemently opposed by the Tribes, conservation groups, local outdoor recreation businesses, and hundreds of residents statewide.
  • Our Mid-Pacific Office in HawaiĘ»i has long stood with Native Hawaiian communities to uphold rights to cultural access and resources and to establish legal principles that water is a public trust, which specifically protects Native water rights.
  • Attorneys in the Northwest Office represent the Yurok Tribe in its fight to ensure flows in the Klamath River are adequate to protect salmon habitat and the Tribe’s ancient spiritual and subsistence practices.

Recent News
Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Tribal Vice Chairman Patrick Bigboy, Senior Member Liz Arbuckle, and Tribal Chairman Robert Blanchard, left to right. Photos from Ashland, Wisconsin and the Bad River Reservation on March 22, 2024. (Jaida Grey Eagle for Earthjustice)
November 14, 2024 Press Release

Wisconsin Bows to Enbridge, Approving Line 5 Reroute Permits

The Bad River Band and allies continue to fight the dangerous oil pipeline

A group of people march on a sidewalk holding flags and signs protesting mining.
November 6, 2024 Press Release: Victory

In a Major Win for Hualapai Tribe, Judge Extends Drilling Freeze

Arizona Lithium must pause activity near Ha’Kamwe’ until lawsuit plays out

November 5, 2024 document

Order Extending Drilling Freeze on Hualapai Land

A federal judge granted a preliminary injunction sought by Earthjustice and Western Mining Action Project, extending a temporary pause on harmful drilling for the duration of the Hualapai Tribe’s legal case challenging federal approval of the Sandy Valley Lithium Exploration Project.

Features