AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYear
Maria Claudia Fuentes The Restoration and Protection of Afro-colombian Land to Establish Equality and Mitigate Violence 33 Emory International Law Review 399 (2019) As the Colombian government is attempting to achieve peace in its country after fifty-two years of civil conflict, peace will not be attainable unless the Colombian government addresses the vulnerable status of Afro-Colombians and their land rights in the Pacific region of the country. The vulnerability of Afro-Colombians and their land rights have... 2019
Najarian R. Peters The Right to Be and Become: Black Home-educators as Child Privacy Protectors 25 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 21 (Fall, 2019) The right to privacy is one of the most fundamental rights in American jurisprudence. In 1890, Samuel D. Warren and Louis D. Brandeis conceptualized the right to privacy as the right to be let alone and inspired privacy jurisprudence that tracked their initial description. Warren and Brandeis conceptualized further that this right was not... 2019
Brazitte A. Poole The School of Hard Knocks: Examining How Pennsylvania School Disciplinary Policies Push Black Girls into the Criminal Justice System 57 Duquesne Law Review 382 (Summer, 2019) I. Introduction. 383 II. The School-to-Prison Pipeline: An Overview. 384 III. The Criminalization of the Black Girl's Identity. 385 A. Adultification: Black Girls Are Treated Like Adults. 387 B. Black Girls Are Seen as Less Innocent Than Their Counterparts. 389 C. Black Girls' Bodies and Appearance Are Over-Policed. 390 IV. The... 2019
Yvette N. A. Pappoe The Shortcomings of Title Vii for the Black Female Plaintiff 22 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change Change 1 (2019) Various United States courts, including the Supreme Court, have decided numerous workplace discrimination cases in the past four decades. Kimberlé Crenshaw introduced and coined the term intersectionality 25 years after Congress enacted Title VII. The formal recognition of intersectionality opened the gate for several legal scholars to criticize... 2019
Patricia M. Muhammad The Trans-atlantic Slave Trade: European Slaving Corporations, the Papacy and the Issue of Reparations 26 Willamette Journal of International Law and Dispute Resolution 173 (2019) The Trans-Atlantic slave trade's legal institution from a regional economic practice into an international financial market originated from Papal grants initiated during the 16 century. Territories and nation-states party to this grant referred to it as the Asiento, as later affirmed by international custom and bilateral treaties. This article will... 2019
Jeffrey S. Adler 'To Stay the Murderer's Hand and the Rapist's Passions, and for the Safety and Security of Civil Society': the Emergence of Racial Disparities in Capital Punishment in Jim Crow New Orleans 59 American Journal of Legal History 297 (September, 2019) This essay examines capital punishment in New Orleans between 1920 and 1945. Building on a quantitative analysis of case-level data culled from police, court, and prison records, it explores the emergence of racial disparities in death-penalty sentencing and charts the increasing use of capital punishment as a mechanism of racial control. The paper... 2019
John Torpey Towards a More Perfect Union: an Approach to Rectifying White-black Racial Inequality in American Life 28 Tulane Journal of International and Comparative Law 41 (Winter 2019) How, after 400 years of white racial domination, are we to repair the accumulated damage to black people in the United States? I addressed this issue in a book I wrote a few years ago about the idea of reparations for historical injustices--a notion then sweeping the United States and the world. The book examined a number of different cases of... 2019
Anthony J. Ghiotto Traffic Stop Federalism: Protecting North Carolina Black Drivers from the United States Supreme Court 48 University of Baltimore Law Review 323 (Summer, 2019) Black drivers face a different constitutional reality than whites the moment they step behind the wheel in North Carolina. Although black drivers represent only about twenty-two percent of the North Carolina population, thirty-two percent of all traffic stops involve black drivers. This racial disparity may raise suspicion of either implicit or... 2019
Patricia A. Broussard Unbowed, Unbroken, and Unsung: the Unrecognized Contributions of African American Women in Social Movements, Politics, and the Maintenance of Democracy 25 William and Mary Journal of Race, Gender, and Social Justice 631 (Spring, 2019) You may write me down in history With your bitter, twisted lies, You may trod me in the very dirt But still, like dust, I'll rise. Introduction I. A History of Black Women's Strength: Early Movements A. Revolts, Rebellions, and Resistance II. A History of Black Women's Strength: Post-Emancipation and The Civil Rights Movement--Part 1 A.... 2019
John G. Browning Undaunted: Houston's Earliest African-american Lawyers 56-FEB Houston Lawyer 30 (January/February, 2019) The elusive and often foggy history of Texas' early African-American lawyers has only recently begun to attract the interest of historians and of the bar itself. One explanation for this lies in the paucity of surviving records and papers, since black attorneys practicing in Reconstruction Texas and the Jim Crow South were viewed more as a novelty... 2019
John G. Browning, Chief Justice Carolyn Wright Undaunted: William A. Price, Texas' First Black Judge and the Path to a Civil Rights Milestone 43 Thurgood Marshall Law Review 583 (Spring, 2019) History, despite its wrenching pain Cannot be unlived, but if faced With courage, need not be lived again - Maya Angelou The history of Texas' earliest African-American lawyers has been, until recent years, among the most neglected chapters in Texas legal history. Lack of available information, the confused or incomplete state of what extant... 2019
Alexzandria Johnson We Deserve Better: How Hip Hop Perpetuates the Rape Culture of Black Women 42 North Carolina Central Law Review 139 (2019) Hi, I'm an African American woman, and if I listened to what hip hop told me that I was, I'd be the equivalent of nothing. Nothing, is just what Ms. Shawana Hall felt like on her 31 birthday. While celebrating her birthday, Shawana met a middle-aged man, Calvin Ray Kelly, who offered to drive to a party store to buy her a celebratory drink.... 2019
Antron D. Mahoney , Heather Brydie Harris When the Spirit Says Dance: a Queer of Color Critique of Black Justice Discourse in Anti-transgender Policy Rhetoric 19 University of Maryland Law Journal of Race, Religion, Gender and Class 7 (Spring, 2019) In a closed-door forum on July 11, 2017, United States Attorney General Jeff Sessions invoked Martin Luther King, Jr. in a speech given to and in support of the Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), an anti-LGBT religious freedom group responsible for crafting many early anti-transgender bathroom bills. Employing King, Sessions parallels the racial... 2019
Iyiola Solanke Where Are the Black Judges in Europe? 34 Connecticut Journal of International Law 286 (Summer, 2019) C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 289 I. Discrimination as a Virus. 292 II. Challenges to Racial Diversity in the CJEU. 295 A. Recruitment to the CJEU. 296 B. Legal Education and Training. 297 C. The Politics of Race. 300 III. Diversity and Judgecraft. 301 IV. Diversity Charters and Corporate Social Responsibility. 304 V. A multi-level,... 2019
Janika Best Where Is My Seat at the Table: How Informed Consent Laws Foster the Legacy of Slavery and Discrimination Against Black Women 41 Women's Rights Law Reporter 1 (Fall/Winter 2019) C1-2Table of Contents Abstract. 1 Introduction. 2 I. Background. 6 A. 19 Century Gynecology. 9 B. 20 Century Gynecology. 13 II. The Competing Models of Informed Consent-The Standard Of Disclosure By Physicians To Patients. 13 A. The Physician or Community Rule. 14 B. The Patient Rule. 15 C. Issues Created by a Lack of Cultural Competency in... 2019
Chan Tov McNamarah White Caller Crime: Racialized Police Communication and Existing While Black 24 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 335 (Spring, 2019) Over the past year, reports to the police about Black persons engaged in innocuous behaviors have bombarded the American consciousness. What do we make of them? And, equally important, what are the consequences of such reports? This Article is the first to argue that the recent spike in calls to the police against Black persons who are simply... 2019
Meikhel M. Philogene Why the Black Man Is Really Gray 76 National Lawyers Guild Review 49 (Spring, 2019) Gray are the handcuffs that discriminatorily restrain Gray are the cell bars that disparately lock away Gray is the dream for coaches and athletes looking the same Gray is the hope for directors and musicians of a certain shade The black man isn't black; the black man is really gray It is no secret that racism and discrimination have an extensive,... 2019
Demarquin Johnson Why the Congressional Black Caucus must Reject Private Prison Money 35 Harvard Blackletter Law Journal 65 (Spring, 2019) We need to declare the era of mass incarceration and oppressive prison sentences over. The time for comprehensive criminal justice reform is now. Karen Bass, Chairwoman of the Congressional Black Caucus The fact that the United States incarcerates more people than any other country in the world at a rate higher than any other country in the world... 2019
Kimberly Welch William Johnson's Hypothesis: a Free Black Man and the Problem of Legal Knowledge in the Antebellum United States South 37 Law and History Review 89 (February, 2019) To day is the first Commencement of the Court. The Docket is a Light One. I did not do much To day for . I am not prepared to go to tryal yet in the Land Case. --William T. Johnson, 1850 In recent years, scholars have paid considerable attention to African Americans' engagement with the legal system in the pre-Civil War United States South and have... 2019
Ilana Friedman Youth at the Center: a Timeline Approach to the Challenges Facing Black Children 63 Saint Louis University Law Journal 583 (Summer, 2019) At the center of Forward Through Ferguson's Action Plan are children, a demographic critical to any long-range plan of reform in St. Louis. Yet the challenges facing African American children are often looked at in isolation to one another, whether it be education, health care, or juvenile justice. To fully capture the labyrinth of hurdles facing... 2019
Latiqua Liles A "Legacy Preference" for Descendants of Slaves: Why Georgetown's Approach to Admissions Is Misguided 19 Rutgers Race & the Law Review 25 (2018) In recent years, many of the United States' oldest Universities have begun examining their past associations with the institution of slavery. Recently, Georgetown University (Georgetown or the University) and more than a dozen other universities including Harvard, Brown, Colombia, and the University of Virginia, have publicly recognized their... 2018
Regina Austin A Dose of Color, a Dose of Reality: Contextualizing Intentional Tort Actions with Black Documentaries 68 Journal of Legal Education 45 (Autumn, 2018) [Most white Americans don't] know how Negroes live .. I'm sure they have nothing whatever against Negroes, but that's really not the question .. The question is really a kind of apathy and ignorance, which is the price we pay for segregation. That's what segregation means. You don't know what's happening on the other side of the wall, because you... 2018
William J. Black III A Higher Loyalty to Their Ultimate Sacrifice: Segregated Black War Casualties and Society's Monumental Mistake 11 John Marshall Law Journal 34 (Spring, 2018) Introduction. 34 I. The Great War Included Many Battlefields At Home And Abroad. 39 A. The Homefront In Context: Separate, but Equal'. 39 B. The Fulton County Heroes and Negroes. 41 C. They Were Good Enough To Drink From Our Canteens. 50 D. The War Mothers Service Star Legion of Fulton County. 55 II. A Framework For Preventing The Destruction Of... 2018
Jehan Crump-Gibson A Tribute to Firsts 97-MAY Michigan Bar Journal 28 (May, 2018) Insidious racism and sexism have plagued black female lawyers since the late nineteenth century. Those practicing today walk a path paved for them by many firsts. To truly appreciate the resolve and tenacity of this fearless group of leaders, let us pause and look back. In 1872, Charlotte E. Ray became the first black woman admitted to practice... 2018
Rafael I. Pardo Bankrupted Slaves 71 Vanderbilt Law Review 1071 (May, 2018) Responsible societies reckon with the pernicious and ugly chapters in their histories. Wherever we look, there exist ever-present reminders of how we failed as a society in permitting the enslavement of millions of black men, women, and children during the first century of this nation's history. No corner of society remains unstained. As such, it... 2018
Shantee Rosado, Sociology Department, University of Pennsylvania, Joint winner of the Herbert Jacob Book Prize by the Law and Society Association 2017 Becoming Black Political Subjects: Movements and Ethno-racial Rights in Colombia and Brazil. By Tianna S. Paschel. Princeton, Nj, and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2016 52 Law and Society Review 546 (June, 2018) Since the 1980s, broad social, political, and legal changes have reshaped law, politics, and policy in Latin America, as affirmative action and multiculturalism laws seeking to elevate the status of Black and Indigenous Latin Americans have been implemented in the region. Tianna S. Paschel's book, Becoming Black Political Subjects, challenges... 2018
Crystal Powell Bias, Employment Discrimination, and Black Women's Hair: Another Way Forward 2018 Brigham Young University Law Review 933 (2018) C1-2Contents I. Introduction. 933 II. History of Black Hair, Implicit Bias, and Workplace Grooming Standards. 937 A. History of Black Hair Texture and Hairstyle: Centuries of Stereotyping. 938 B. Clean, Neat, and Kept Versus Extreme, Eye-Catching, and Unprofessional: Workplace Grooming Policies Reflect Racial Stereotypes. 943 III. Should Black... 2018
Reema Sood Biases Behind Sexual Assault: a Thirteenth Amendment Solution to Under-enforcement of the Rape of Black Women 18 University of Maryland Law Journal of Race, Religion, Gender and Class 405 (Fall, 2018) Devaluation of Black women's bodies derives from the long history of slavery in this country. The treatment of Black women, from slavery to the present, ties closely to the systemic tactics of oppression utilized by White slave owners after our country's founding. In removing autonomy and control over Black female slaves' bodies, slave owners... 2018
Kaili Moss Black Hair(tage): Career Liability or Civil Rights Issue? 25 William and Mary Journal of Race, Gender, and Social Justice 191 (Fall, 2018) Introduction I. There's Nothing Dreadful About My Locks II. Strands of Title VII A. The Immutability Requirement B. Accident of Birth C. Fundamental to the Identity D. Race as a Social Construct III. Finding Precedent to Extend Title VII Protection to Ethnic Hairstyles IV. Recommendations Conclusion In 2014, the Census Bureau reported that of... 2018
Raja Staggers-Hakim, PhD, MPH Black Lives Matter, Civil Rights, and Health Inequities 40 Western New England Law Review 447 (2018) As a social justice and civil rights movement, Black Lives Matter (BLM) emerged out of state sanctioned violence against African-Americans. With police violence as the backdrop, the movement recognizes all forms of violence and oppression that unfairly target Black Americans. A Vision for Black Lives has called for the United States government to... 2018
Emmanuel Mauleón Black Twice: Policing Black Muslim Identities 65 UCLA Law Review 1326 (June, 2018) In a political moment that includes various iterations of a Muslim Ban, and a resurgent mainstreaming of white nationalism, race and religion clearly remain hotly contested in American life. And yet, in much of the recent scholarship and public debate on these issues, the intersecting experiences of Black Muslims are often elided, if not entirely... 2018
Dr. Bridgette Baldwin Black, White, and Blue: Bias, Profiling, and Policing in the Age of Black Lives Matter 40 Western New England Law Review 431 (2018) Most middle-class whites have no idea what it feels like to be subjected to police who are routinely suspicious, rude, belligerent, and brutal. Benjamin Spock On July 17, 2014, in Staten Island, New York, Eric Garner lost his life to an illegal chokehold at the hands of police officer Daniel Pantaleo. With his last words, Garner uttered the... 2018
Kathleen B. Simon Catalyzing the Separation of Black Families: a Critique of Foster Care Placements Without Prior Judicial Review 51 Columbia Journal of Law and Social Problems 347 (Spring, 2018) Although decades of efforts have realized significant progress toward the goal of eliminating racial discrimination in the child welfare system, black children continue to enter foster care at rates that exceed their level of need. This Note explores how the standard practice of removing a child without prior judicial authorization has quietly... 2018
Jordan Beardslee, Meagan Docherty , Edward Mulvey, Carol Schubert , Dustin Pardini , Arizona State University, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Arizona State University Childhood Risk Factors Associated with Adolescent Gun Carrying among Black and White Males: an Examination of Self-protection, Social Influence, and Antisocial Propensity Explanations 42 Law and Human Behavior 110 (April, 2018) Adolescent gun violence is a serious public health issue that disproportionately affects young Black males. Although it has been postulated that differential exposure to childhood risk factors might account for racial differences in adolescent gun carrying, no longitudinal studies have directly examined this issue. We examined whether childhood... 2018
Twila L. Perry Conscious and Strategic Representations of Race: Prince, Music, Black Lives, and Race Scholarship 27 Southern California Interdisciplinary Law Journal 549 (Spring, 2018) Prince has often been described in the media as an artist who transcended barriers of race, gender and music genre. However, the context of race has received much less attention than the contexts of gender and music. Although discussions of Prince in the media have seldom focused on his racial identity as an African-American, an examination of... 2018
Bruce Miller Constitutional Law--do Black Lives Matter to the Constitution? 40 Western New England Law Review 459 (2018) The question is, of course, a provocation. If read rhetorically, it lends itself (too) easily to equally categorical, opposing answers: of course black lives don't matter to the Constitution's infamous three-fifths clause, its protection of property interests in escaped enslaved people, and its recognition of the states' power to control... 2018
Sandra Wachter , Brent Mittelstadt , Chris Russell Counterfactual Explanations Without Opening the Black Box: Automated Decisions and the Gdpr 31 Harvard Journal of Law & Technology 841 (Spring, 2018) C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 842 II. Counterfactuals. 844 A. Historic Context and the Problem of Knowledge. 846 B. Explanations in A.I. and Machine Learning. 849 C. Adversarial Perturbations and Counterfactual Explanations. 851 D. Causality and Fairness. 853 III. Generating Counterfactuals. 854 A. LSAT Dataset. 856 B. Pima Diabetes... 2018
Mona Lynch , Marisa Omori Crack as Proxy: Aggressive Federal Drug Prosecutions and the Production of Black--white Racial Inequality 52 Law and Society Review 773 (September, 2018) In this article, we empirically examine jurisdictional variations in federal crack prosecutions to measure whether aggressive crack prosecutorial practices are associated with racial inequality in federal caseload characteristics and outcomes. Building on theories that address the production of inequality in institutional settings, we hypothesize... 2018
Jeffrey T. Horner De Jure Social Control of Blacks in Pre-1967 Detroit 18 Journal of Law in Society 169 (Fall, 2018) The 50 anniversary of the release of the Report of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders offers a propitious opportunity to examine the broad set of causes and solutions offered by the Kerner Commission following hundreds of urban insurrections that occurred in the 1960s. The deadliest of these, occurring in Detroit in July 1967, was... 2018
C. Daniel Chill Did the African-american Electorate Unintentionally Help Elect Donald Trump President? 34 Touro Law Review 713 (2018) Political scholars generally posit that income inequality is the primary cause for considering America to be electorally flawed. But, in fact, it is race, not wealth, that fundamentally impacts the electoral dynamic in the United States, at least during this past decade and more. Examples of racially driven electoral influences abound. Statistical... 2018
Dr. Julian Vasquez Heilig , Dr. Steven Nelson , Matt Kronzer Does the African American Need Separate Charter Schools? 36 Law & Inequality: A Journal of Theory and Practice 247 (Summer, 2018) In Does the Negro Need Separate Schools?, W.E. Burghardt Du Bois asked if separate schools and institutions [were] needed for the proper education of African Americans. The existing system of public education in the United States includes some places that are excelling and some that are struggling. Overall, the United States performs in the... 2018
Carla M. Newman Essay: Bartering from the Bench: a Tennessee Judge Prevents Reproduction of Social Undesirables; Historic Analysis of Involuntary Sterilization of African American Women 10 Georgetown Journal of Law & Modern Critical Race Perspectives 53 (Spring, 2018) At various points during American history, there have been stark moments where the autonomy of the African American female body has been compromised, degraded, and subjected to abuse due to the status of African American women. African American women who were victims of the slave trade experienced exploitation not only because of their race, but... 2018
Kenneth B. Nunn Essentially Black: Legal Theory and the Morality of Conscious Racial Identity 97 Nebraska Law Review 287 (2018) In philosophy, essentialism involves the claim that everything that exists has a fundamental character or core set of features that makes it what it is. Although this idea developed out of Platonic notions of ideal forms, it has spread beyond philosophy into the social sciences and hard scientific disciplines like mathematics and biology. Since the... 2018
Samone Ijoma False Promises of Protection: Black Women, Trans People & the Struggle for Visibility as Victims of Intimate Partner and Gendered Violence 18 University of Maryland Law Journal of Race, Religion, Gender and Class 255 (Spring, 2018) While new gun laws in Tennessee and Indiana aimed at victims of gendered violence are supposedly an added layer of protection, these laws assume that all victims of domestic violence receive equal treatment, both in the civil and criminal legal systems. Such laws are problematic because they would have a disparate impact on Black women and trans... 2018
Emma Luttrell Shreefter Federal Felon-in-possession Gun Laws: Criminalizing a Status, Disparately Affecting Black Defendants, and Continuing the Nation's Centuries-old Methods to Disarm Black Communities 21 CUNY Law Review 143 (Fall, 2018) I. His Brother's Keeper. 144 II. Examining the Felon in Possession Laws. 148 A. Elements of the Crime: Felon in Possession. 148 B. What These Laws Seek to Prevent and Punish: Criminalizing the Status of Being a Felon, Rather Than Harmful Action. 153 III. Unequal and Racially Disproportionate Crime Control Efforts and Enforcement of Felon in... 2018
Shaytonna V. Bullock Fee Simple Subject to Executory Interest: an Analysis of the Preemption and Revocation of Black Property Rights 12 Southern Journal of Policy and Justice 205 (Fall, 2018) Blacks have contributed to the fabric of the United States of America in ways that no other group has. Beyond building the very foundation of this country from the sweat, blood, and tears of generations of slaves, African Americans have substantially contributed to the intellectual and structural development of this nation by way of inventions,... 2018
Brad Tharpe Ftc V. At&t: Black Mirror Brought to Life? 62 Saint Louis University Law Journal 485 (Winter, 2018) The internet is the first thing that humanity has built that humanity doesn't understand, the largest experiment in anarchy that we've ever had. ~ Eric Schmidt, Google, Inc., CEO The Netflix original series, Black Mirror, paints the grim picture of a not-too distant future dominated by nefarious entities preying on the public through the titular... 2018
Janaya Trotter Bratton , Rickell Howard Smith Growing up a Suspect: an Examination of Racial Profiling of Black Children and Effective Strategies to Reduce Racial Disparities in Arrests 45 Northern Kentucky Law Review 137 (2018) Racial profiling is the practice of police and other law enforcement officers relying, to any degree, on race, color, descent or national or ethnic origin as the bases for subjecting persons to investigatory activities or for determining whether an individual is engaged in criminal activity. Discriminatory treatment and profiling of racial and... 2018
Katherine J. King Heller as Popular Constitutionalism? The Overlooked Narrative of Armed Black Self-defense 20 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law 1237 (May, 2018) On July 6, 2016, Diamond Lavish Reynolds live streamed a video on Facebook that was seen by millions of people in the days that followed. This video depicts the final moments of Philando Castile, Reynolds' thirty-two-year-old, black boyfriend, who had just been shot by Jeronimo Yanez, a Saint Anthony, Minnesota police officer. Viewers observe... 2018
Dorothy A. Brown Homeownership in Black and White: the Role of Tax Policy in Increasing Housing Inequity 49 University of Memphis Law Review 205 (Fall, 2018) I. Introduction. 205 II. Tax Subsidies for Homeownership. 207 III. Homeownership and Race. 213 A. Historical Racial Inequality in Homeownership. 213 B. The Race-Based Appreciation Gap. 214 C. Homeownership Wealth in Black and White. 221 IV. Tax Subsidies and Race. 223 V. Suggestions for Reform. 225 VI. Conclusion. 227 2018
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