The Indian Child Welfare Act gives the tribes the power to determine the pl
acement of Indian children. American I;Indian tribes are semi-sovereign ent
ities which retain the power to control their internal affairs and are not
constrained by the Constitution. In making child welfare determinations tri
bes engage in practices which in other cases would be unconstitutional: the
y apply group rights to trump parental interests and they determine tribal
membership on the basis of criteria which are arguably racial. The Act reve
als the irresolvable conflict between tribal norms and concepts of identity
and those found in American liberalism.