Mullenix, Philip S.Rosser, Ezra2024-05-162024-05-162024-03-01101 Or. L. Rev. 3070196-2043https://hdl.handle.net/1794/2946252 pagesThe inability or unwillingness of the U.S. Supreme Court, and to some extent all other non-Indian governance institutions at the state and federal level, to take tribal sovereignty seriously forces a question: Should the Navajo Nation pursue statehood? Such a question may seem far-fetched or merely an academic thought experiment, but there is historical precedent for contemplating the idea that an Indian nation might form a state. Moreover, journalists, academics, and politicians have floated the possibility that the Navajo Nation already meets many of the attributes required to form a new state. So, although the idea of the Navajo Nation becoming the fifty-first state of the Union seems far fetched, considering the possibility provides a way to better understand both statehood and the hard choices Indian nations must make.en-USAll Rights Reserved.Federal Indian LawConstitutional lawStatehoodNavajo NationTribal sovereigntyNavajo Statehood: From Domestic Dependent Nation to 51st StateArticle