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D. Responsibility of Hiring


 The judge should decide who will participate in the hiring process, which can be lengthy and time-
 consuming. The judge may not have time to handle the entire process. Therefore, enlisting the help
 of other judges, court staff, tribal council, and tribal members may be necessary. However, the judge   Part III. Selecting a
 should make the final decision.
        Judicial Law Clerk

 1. The Judge


 If the judge has sole authority to hire the judicial law clerk, then the hiring process likely depends on
 what law governs, if any. There may be tribal employment regulations including:



 Tribal/Native American or Alaska Native preference  Selecting a judicial law clerk should be

 Veteran preference
        a thorough process. “Not only must
 Merit-based employment (hiring based on ability to perform)  you be comfortable with the selection,

 Standardized position descriptions
        but the court staff must feel at ease
 Internal versus external hiring                               82

 Eligibility for employment benefits  with the person selected.”



 Even if there is no applicable regulation, the tribe’s governing body may have adopted a hiring policy.
 An external funding entity may require a drug-free workplace, a criminal background check, and   The candidate must be a good fit
 minimum education and work experience.
        with the tribal court staff because the


 2. Human Resources or another agency  clerk will interact with the staff daily.
        Therefore, the judge should choose the
 Some tribes use an Human Resources (HR) department to oversee hiring. The department manages
 the relationship between the employee and the employer. These departments often develop   appropriate person very carefully.
 standardized job announcements, position descriptions, and applications. Other tribes may have
 administrative officials in charge of hiring. While the judge may make the final hiring decision, the
 nuts and bolts of the process are handled by the HR team or the administrative official. The judge
 should ensure that any funding requirements or other conditions are met.
        This section offers tips on interviewing
 During the hiring process, HR sends the judge the list of applicants and may identify which applicants
 satisfy hiring-preference criteria and meet the minimum qualifications. The judge should review   candidates, narrowing the applicant
 each application carefully to identify the most suitable candidates. When the judge has selected   pool, selecting a candidate, and the
 one or more candidates, HR may reach out to contact references and to set up interviews. This is a
 good stage of the process to assign applicants a research and writing project with a firm deadline.   final steps of the hiring process.
 Candidates who miss the deadline may not be invited to an interview.

 Prior to the interview, HR may present standardized questions and ask the judge for a list of job-
 specific questions. Examples of these questions are located in Appendix C. There may be an interview
 panel of one or more judges, an HR representative, and/or a tribal official who works with the tribe’s
 justice system. Even though HR facilitates the hiring process, the judge or the panel decides who to
 hire. HR works with the judge on the start date, time, and location.

        82      Case & Tompkins, supra note 1, at 42.
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