Federal–State Subsistence Conflict Becomes a Known Structural Problem

ERA V — Overlay of Federal Land & Subsistence Law
Legal
1987

It becomes clear that federal subsistence law and Alaska’s constitution are structurally misaligned.

What Happened

By the late 1980s, policymakers, agencies, and courts recognized that the conflict between ANILCA’s rural priority and Alaska’s constitutional framework was not easily resolvable.

Why It Matters Today

This is where “temporary confusion” hardens into “permanent friction,” setting the stage for decades of recurring disputes.

Related Patterns

Pattern 1: Finality Without Adaptation
Pattern 6: Jurisdictional Confusion

Related Governance Themes

Alignment Between Operational Practice and Written Policy
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Sources

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