Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year | Gender in title or Summary | Ethnicity Identified in Title |
Kelsey R. Chapple |
Sports for Boys, Wedding Cakes for Girls: the Inevitability of Stereotyping in Schools Segregated by Sex |
94 Texas Law Review 537 (February, 2016) |
This Note argues that in light of psychological research demonstrating that stereotypes flourish when groups are segregated on the basis of visible characteristics such as sex, all schools that are segregated on the basis of sex violate the Fourteenth Amendment's guarantee against sex discrimination. Though the Supreme Court in United States v....; Search Snippet: ...LAW REVIEW Texas Law Review February, 2016 Notes SPORTS FOR BOYS, WEDDING CAKES FOR GIRLS: THE INEVITABILITY OF STEREOTYPING IN SCHOOLS... |
2018 |
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African/Black American |
L. Patricia Mock |
Effective Outreach to Underserved Communities of Color: an Arduous Sojourn to Cultivate and Attain Trust |
17 Thomas M. Cooley Journal of Practical and Clinical Law 51 (2015) |
This article examines parallel outreach initiatives employed by a law school clinic to reach two underserved communities of color. It describes the experiences and the lessons learned about structuring outreach to such communities. The article suggests steps a similar office might take to successfully achieve a reputation of offering an inclusive...; Search Snippet: ...derives from the fact that she successfully sued a white man who had illegally purchased and enslaved her five-year-old son. She recovered her child-becoming one of the first black women to go to court against a white man and win. She was a valiant freedom fighter now remembered... |
2017 |
Yes |
African/Black American |
Jeremy I. Levitt |
Fuck Your Breath: Black Men and Youth, State Violence, and Human Rights in the 21st Century |
49 Washington University Journal of Law & Policy 87 (2015) |
During bad circumstances, which is the human inheritance, you must decide not to be reduced. You have your humanity, and you must not allow anything to reduce that. We are obliged to know we are global citizens. Disasters remind us we are world citizens, whether we like it or not. --Maya Angelou I cherish my breath; it is an invaluable gift that I...; Search Snippet: ...Law & Policy 2015 Ferguson and Beyond FUCK YOUR BREATH: BLACK MEN AND YOUTH, STATE VIOLENCE, AND HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE 21ST... |
2017 |
Yes |
African/Black American |
Jelani Jefferson Exum |
RECONSTRUCTION SENTENCING: REIMAGINING DRUG SENTENCING IN THE AFTERMATH OF THE WAR ON DRUGS |
58 American Criminal Law Review 1685 (Fall, 2021) |
L1-2Introduction . L31685 I. The Need for Reconstruction: Then and Now. 1687 II. Understanding the War on Drugs: The Weapons, The Tactics, and the Casualties. 1691 III. Why Interpretation Matters: A Lesson from the Thirteenth Amendment. 1698 A. The Thirteenth Amendment: Original Interpretation. 1698 B. Reinterpreting the Thirteenth Amendment: An... |
2017 |
Yes |
|
Alisha Desai, Kelley Durham, Stephanie C. Burke, Amanda NeMoyer, Kirk Heilbrun , Drexel University |
RELEASING INDIVIDUALS FROM INCARCERATION DURING COVID-19: PANDEMIC-RELATED CHALLENGES AND RECOMMENDATIONS FOR PROMOTING SUCCESSFUL REENTRY |
27 Psychology, Public Policy, and Law 242 (May, 2021) |
The emergence and rapid growth of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has significantly impacted the U.S. criminal justice system as federal and state governments consider allowing the early release of select currently incarcerated individuals to mitigate the pandemic's spread. As a result, the number of incarcerated individuals... |
2017 |
Yes |
|
Stephanie Hall Barclay , Michalyn Steele |
RETHINKING PROTECTIONS FOR INDIGENOUS SACRED SITES |
134 Harvard Law Review 1294 (February, 2021) |
Introduction. 1296 I. The History of Government Callousness and Coercion Regarding Indigenous Sacred Sites. 1303 A. The Significance of Sacred Sites to Indigenous Peoples. 1304 B. Government Disregard of Indigenous Religious Practices and Divestiture of Sacred Sites. 1307 C. Potentially Applicable Tools for Indigenous Sacred Sites. 1317 II.... |
2017 |
Yes |
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RIGHT TO A JURY TRIAL |
50 Georgetown Law Journal Annual Review of Criminal Procedure 651 (2021) |
Under the Sixth Amendment, criminal defendants have a right to trial by an impartial jury drawn from the state and district where the crime allegedly occurred. The right to a jury trial exists only in prosecutions for serious crimes, as distinguished from petty offenses. In determining whether a crime is serious under the Sixth Amendment, courts... |
2017 |
Yes |
|
Brian Erickson |
SECOND AMENDMENT FEDERALISM |
73 Stanford Law Review 727 (March, 2021) |
In the decade since District of Columbia v. Heller, the paradigm-shifting 2008 Supreme Court case affirming the right of individuals to keep handguns in the home for self-defense, lower courts have struggled to reconcile the case's broad conception of the Second Amendment with longstanding restrictions on the keeping and bearing of... |
2017 |
Yes |
|
Priya Baskaran |
SERVICE, SCHOLARSHIP, AND RADICAL CITATION PRACTICE |
73 Rutgers University Law Review 891 (Spring, 2021) |
C1-3Table of Contents I. Introduction. 891 II. Invisible and Unrewarded Service Burdens. 895 A. PoC Lunches--Creating Counter Space. 896 B. Informal Mentoring of Students. 898 III. Scholarship Promotion & Critical Legal Research. 902 A. Time is NOT on Your Side. 902 B. The Legal Scholarship Hegemony. 903 C. The Politics of Citation. 905 D. A Path... |
2017 |
Yes |
|
Dallan F. Flake |
SPECTATOR HARASSMENT |
56 Wake Forest Law Review 441 (2021) |
Instances of spectators harassing professional athletes because of their race, color, religion, sex, or national origin are well documented. This is not a new problem, but it is becoming worse in this age of emboldened bigotry. Fans are sometimes punished for such behavior, as are players who retaliate in response. Meanwhile, the teams and leagues... |
2017 |
Yes |
|
Susannah Camic Tahk |
SPILLOVER TAX PRECEDENT |
2021 Wisconsin Law Review 657 (2021) |
We know that pro se litigants often lose. However, we know almost nothing about the circumstances in which they win. One such circumstance, this Article finds, is when they can take advantage of favorable precedent. This Article calls those favorable precedents for pro se litigants spillover precedents. Spillover precedents are cases with... |
2017 |
Yes |
|
Adrienne D. Davis |
Straightening it Out: Joan Williams on Unbending Gender |
49 American University Law Review 823 (April, 2000) |
As most men and women acknowledge, gender is a battleground. Most of us are fairly clear on biological sex: who bears children, who ejaculates sperm, even whose (big) hands might open a stuck jar and whose (smaller ones) could pull that cufflink out of the garbage disposal. What remains less clear is how social gender roles flow from this: Does...; Search Snippet: ...About It. Foreword STRAIGHTENING IT OUT: JOAN WILLIAMS ON UNBENDING GENDER Adrienne D. Davis [FNa1] Copyright (c) 2000 American University Law... |
2017 |
Yes |
Multiple Groups |
James Thuo Gathii |
STUDYING RACE IN INTERNATIONAL LAW SCHOLARSHIP USING A SOCIAL SCIENCE APPROACH |
22 Chicago Journal of International Law 71 (Summer, 2021) |
This Essay takes up Abebe, Chilton, and Ginsburg's invitation to use a social science approach to establish or ascertain some facts about international law scholarship in the United States. The specific research question that this Essay seeks to answer is to what extent scholarship has addressed international law's historical and continuing... |
2017 |
Yes |
|
Emily Suski |
SUBVERTING TITLE IX |
105 Minnesota Law Review 2259 (May, 2021) |
By the time elementary school teacher Gary Stroup put his hand down [fourth grade student John Doe's] pants and fondled hi[m], school administrators had been receiving reports for six years of Stroup's inappropriate behavior with children. That behavior included kicking students' buttocks, pinching their chests and posteriors, touching a... |
2017 |
Yes |
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SYMPOSIUM TRANSCRIPT |
33 Saint Thomas Law Review 107 (Spring, 2021) |
The symposium was moderated by Professor andré douglas pond cummings of University of Arkansas at Little Rock William H. Bowen School of Law. Daniel Gabuardi: Good morning everyone, and welcome to the St. Thomas Law Review Symposium on Race and Policing in America. My name is Daniel Gabuardi, I am the Law Review Article Solicitation Editor and Host... |
2017 |
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Pedro A. Malavet |
THE ACCIDENTAL CRIT III: THE UNBEARABLE LIGHTNESS OF BEING . PEDRO? |
22 Rutgers Race & the Law Review 247 (2021) |
C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction: Names, Titles and Academic Survival. 249 II. How did you get to your current position?. 255 III. Why did you stay?. 281 IV. Conclusion: Reveling in Law Geekness. 289 |
2017 |
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Hannah C. Mery |
THE DANGERS OF DOXING AND SWATTING: WHY TEXAS SHOULD CRIMINALIZE THESE MALICIOUS FORMS OF CYBERHARASSMENT |
52 Saint Mary's Law Journal 905 (2021) |
I. Introduction. 906 II. Doxing, Swatting, and Cyberstalking--The Example of Gamergate. 908 III. Cyberharassment's Broad Ramifications and Proposal for a Solution. 911 IV. Background and History of Laws Pertaining to Cyberharassment. 916 A. Federal Laws. 918 B. Texas Laws. 921 V. Analysis. 927 A. Analyzing the Complexities of Doxing and... |
2017 |
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Sara E. Yates |
THE DIGITIZATION OF THE CARCERAL STATE: THE TROUBLING NARRATIVE AROUND POLICE USAGE OF FACIAL RECOGNITION TECHNOLOGY |
19 Colorado Technology Law Journal 483 (Summer, 2021) |
The technological veil conceals the reproduction of inequality and enslavement. -Herbert Marcuse This Note applies a racial social control frame to the problem of facial recognition technology (FRT), showing how this technology may entrench preexisting inequalities and disparate treatment of people of color by law enforcement. Police usage of FRT... |
2017 |
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Barbara A. Fedders |
THE END OF SCHOOL POLICING |
109 California Law Review 1443 (August, 2021) |
Police officers have become permanent fixtures in public schools. The sharp increase in the number of school police officers over the last twenty years has generated a substantial body of critical legal scholarship. Critics question whether police make students safer. They argue that any safety benefits must be weighed against the significant role... |
2017 |
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Vincent M. Southerland |
THE INTERSECTION OF RACE AND ALGORITHMIC TOOLS IN THE CRIMINAL LEGAL SYSTEM |
80 Maryland Law Review 487 (2021) |
A growing portion of the American public--including policymakers, advocates, and institutional stakeholders--have accepted the fact that racism endemic to the United States infects every stage of the criminal legal system. Acceptance of this fact has resulted in efforts to address and remedy pervasive and readily observable systemic bias. Chief... |
2017 |
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Brandon Hasbrouck |
THE JUST PROSECUTOR |
99 Washington University Law Review 627 (2021) |
As the most powerful actors in our criminal legal system, prosecutors have been and remain one of the principal drivers of mass incarceration. This was and is by design. Prosecutorial power derives from our constitutional structure--prosecutors are given almost unfettered discretion to determine who to charge, what to charge, and, often, what the... |
2017 |
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Allen Slater , Richard Delgado |
THE LEAST OF THESE: THE CASE FOR NATIONWIDE INJUNCTIONS IN IMMIGRATION CASES AS A CRITICAL DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTION |
25 U.C. Davis Social Justice Law Review 100 (Summer, 2021) |
Truly I tell you, whatever you did not do for one of the least of these, you did not do for me. --Matthew 25:45 America is fortunate to have a long running and relatively stable democratic government, due in large part to the robustness of many of its democratic institutions. Analogically, one can describe democratic institutions as some of the... |
2017 |
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Ernest F. Lidge III |
The Male Employee Disciplined for Sexual Harassment as Sex Discrimination Plaintiff |
30 University of Memphis Law Review 717 (Summer, 2000) |
I. L2-4Introduction 717 II. L2-4The Courts' Unjustified Imposition of a Similarly Situated Requirement 721 III. L2-4The Male Employee Disciplined for Harassment May Meet the Because of Sex Requirement in a Variety of Ways 729 A. Sexual Stereotyping. 729 B. Oncale, Sex Specific Language, and Rumors as Sexual Harassment. 733 C. Cat's Paw Cases....; Search Snippet: ...REVIEW University of Memphis Law Review Summer, 2000 Articles THE MALE EMPLOYEE DISCIPLINED FOR SEXUAL HARASSMENT AS SEX DISCRIMINATION PLAINTIFF Ernest... |
2017 |
Yes |
Multiple Groups |
Eisha Jain |
THE MARK OF POLICING: RACE AND CRIMINAL RECORDS |
73 Stanford Law Review Online 162 (June, 2021) |
This Essay argues that racial reckoning in policing should include a racial reckoning in the use of criminal records. Arrests alone--regardless of whether they result in convictions--create criminal records. Yet because the literature on criminal records most often focuses on prisoner reentry and on the consequences of criminal... |
2017 |
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Scott W. Stern |
THE NAACP'S RAPE DOCKET AND THE ORIGINS OF CRIMINAL PROCEDURE |
24 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change 241 (2021) |
This Article provides the definitive account of the surprisingly voluminous docket of rape cases argued by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). It argues, for the first time, that the NAACP's rape docket was central to the development of modern criminal procedure--to the establishment of the right to... |
2017 |
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Randall Kennedy , Eugene Volokh |
THE NEW TABOO: QUOTING EPITHETS IN THE CLASSROOM AND BEYOND |
49 Capital University Law Review 1 (Spring, 2021) |
Is it wrong for professors to quote epithets in class or in other educational settings? In law schools, this question has arisen as to nigger when a professor quoted the defendants' speech from a leading First Amendment case (Brandenburg v. Ohio) in a First Amendment class; a professor (one of us) quoted the facts in a rare example of a hate... |
2017 |
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Elizabeth A. Reese |
THE OTHER AMERICAN LAW |
73 Stanford Law Review 555 (March, 2021) |
American legal scholarship focuses almost exclusively on federal, state, and local law. However, there are 574 federally recognized tribal governments within the United States, whose laws are largely ignored. This Article brings to the fore the exclusion of tribal governments and their laws from our mainstream conception of American law... |
2017 |
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Ethan Herenstein , Yurij Rudensky |
THE PENALTY CLAUSE AND THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT'S CONSISTENCY ON UNIVERSAL REPRESENTATION |
96 New York University Law Review 1021 (October, 2021) |
Many judges and scholars have read Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment as evidence of the Constitution's commitment to universal representation--the idea that representation should be afforded to everyone in the political community regardless of whether they happen to be eligible to vote. Typically, this analysis starts and stops with Section 2's... |
2017 |
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L. William Schmidt Jr. |
THE POST-PANDEMIC FUTURE OF LAW FIRMS |
50-MAY Colorado Lawyer 22 (May, 2021) |
The future ain't what it used to be. --Yogi Berra The world looks much different today than what it was or will likely ever be again. The changes we see are not necessarily new, but they are moving at warp speed. We can yearn endlessly for the past, or we can pivot to the practice of law as it will look in the future. In my five decades as an... |
2017 |
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Gregory S. Parks , Julia Doyle |
THE RAGE OF A PRIVILEGED CLASS |
89 Fordham Law Review 2541 (May, 2021) |
Being a lawyer is difficult. Both the training and practice are demanding. Even when compared to other stressful occupations and graduate or professional programs, the legal profession has consistently had some of the highest rates of major depressive disorders. A number of factors may contribute to these conditions, such as high occupational... |
2017 |
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Kathryn Stanchi |
THE RHETORIC OF RACISM IN THE UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT |
62 Boston College Law Review 1251 (April, 2021) |
Introduction. 1252 I. Methodology. 1255 II. Doctrinal Theoretical Overview. 1257 III. The Categories and Rhetorical Analysis. 1264 A. Calling Out the Court's Complicity in Racism. 1267 1. The Five Strong References Calling Out the Court's Racism. 1269 2. The Eight Weak Calling-Out References. 1273 B. Pointing Out Racism Without Implicating the... |
2017 |
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Lindsay Holcomb |
THE ROLE OF TORTS IN THE FIGHT AGAINST NONCONSENSUAL PORNOGRAPHY |
27 Cardozo Journal of Equal Rights & Social Justice 261 (Spring, 2021) |
C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 262 II. Defining Nonconsensual Porn. 265 A. Micro Level Analysis--Experiences of Victims and Perpetrators. 267 B. Meso Level Analysis--Cultures of Shame. 270 C. Macro Level Analysis--The Digital Landscape. 272 III. Efforts to Criminalize Revenge Porn. 276 IV. Torts as the Solution to Nonconsensual Porn. 280 A.... |
2017 |
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Paul Finkelman |
Coping with a New "Yellow Peril": Japanese Immigration, the Gentlemen's Agreement, and the Coming of World War Ii |
117 West Virginia Law Review 1409 (Spring, 2015) |
I. Introduction. 1409 II. Early Opposition to Immigration in a Continent of Immigrants. 1412 III. Hostility to Immigration from the Revolution to the Civil War. 1415 IV. Hostility to European Immigrants, 1880-1924. 1420 V. East Asian Immigration. 1421 VI. The New Yellow Peril: Japanese Immigration. 1426 VII. The Rise of Anti-Japanese Sentiment,...; Search Snippet: ...Conference COPING WITH A NEW YELLOW PERIL: JAPANESE IMMIGRATION, THE GENTLEMEN'S AGREEMENT, AND THE COMING OF WORLD WAR II Paul Finkelman... |
2016 |
Yes |
African/Black American |
Kimberly Jade Norwood |
Gender Bias as the Norm in the Legal Profession: It's Still a [White] Man's Game |
62 Washington University Journal of Law & Policy 25 (2020) |
This volume, born in the spirit of commemoration, celebrates 150 years of women at Washington University School of Law. I am honored to be a part of an institution that has facilitated the entry of women into the legal profession since 1869. That year, not one but two women--Phoebe Couzins and Lemma Barkeloo--were admitted to Washington University...; Search Snippet: ...Law & Policy 2020 Celebrating 150 Year of Women at WashULaw GENDER BIAS AS THE NORM IN THE LEGAL PROFESSION: IT'S STILL A [WHITE] MAN'S GAME Kimberly Jade Norwood [FNa1] Copyright © 2020 by Washington University... |
2016 |
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Vinecea Edwards |
Gender Equality in the Legal Workplace |
37 GPSolo 22 (July/August, 2020) |
I'm a millennial lawyer who dreams of bursting through the glass ceiling for those who follow behind me. As a mixed-race, Black and Muscogee Creek Native woman lawyer, I am inspired by Lyda Conley (the first Native American woman admitted to the bar), Charlotte E. Ray (the first African American woman admitted to the bar), my mother, and my...; Search Snippet: ...22 2020 WL 5758857 GPSOLO GPSolo July/August, 2020 Feature GENDER EQUALITY IN THE LEGAL WORKPLACE The Heart of the Matter... |
2016 |
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Wendy Webster Williams |
Georgetown Hallways |
1 Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law 181 (Fall, 1999) |
I've been thinking about the title of this Symposium, Hostile Hallways--the hallways of schools and workplaces and courts and legislatures and apartment buildings and homes--all the places where a person should be able to feel that she belongs, all the places where, when the world is right, she feels safe, competent, whole, fully human, and part of...; Search Snippet: ...it matters when and how we did it. The first African- American men were admitted to the Law Center in 1948, seventy-eight... |
2016 |
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Multiple Groups |
Michael Z. Green |
Just Another Little Black Boy from the South Side of Chicago: Overcoming Obstacles and Breaking down Barriers to Improve Diversity in the Law Professoriate |
31 Columbia Journal of Gender and Law 135 (2015) |
As I reflected on my personal experience to help address the persistence of discrimination in legal academia, I chose to focus on five areas of discussion for the open mic portion of the program held at the Association of American Law Schools Cross-Cutting Program, The More Things Change .: Exploring Solutions to Persistent Discrimination in Legal...; Search Snippet: ...Journal of Gender and Law 2015 JUST ANOTHER LITTLE BLACK BOY FROM THE SOUTH SIDE OF CHICAGO: OVERCOMING OBSTACLES AND BREAKING... |
2016 |
Yes |
African/Black American |
Shontel Stewart |
Man's Best Friend? How Dogs Have Been Used to Oppress African Americans |
25 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 183 (Winter, 2020) |
The use of dogs as tools of oppression against African Americans has its roots in slavery and persists today in everyday life and police interactions. Due to such harmful practices, African Americans are not only disproportionately terrorized by officers with dogs, but they are also subject to instances of misplaced sympathy, ill-suited laws, and...; Search Snippet: ...LAW Michigan Journal of Race and Law Winter, 2020 Article MAN'S BEST FRIEND? HOW DOGS HAVE BEEN USED TO OPPRESS AFRICAN AMERICANS Shontel Stewart [FNa1] Copyright © 2020 by University of Michigan Law... |
2016 |
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Michael Serota |
Mens Rea, Criminal Responsibility, and the Death of Freddie Gray |
114 Michigan Law Review First Impressions 31 (October, 2015) |
Who (if anyone) is criminally responsible for the death of Freddie Gray, the 25-year-old African-American man who died from injuries suffered while in the custody of Baltimore police? This question has been at the forefront of the extensive coverage of Gray's death, which has inspired a national discussion about law enforcement's relationship with...; Search Snippet: ...REVIEW FIRST IMPRESSIONS Michigan Law Review First Impressions October, 2015 MENS REA, CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY, AND THE DEATH OF FREDDIE GRAY Michael... |
2016 |
Yes |
African/Black American |
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Murder, He Wrote |
117 Harvard Law Review 711 (December, 2003) |
On their engagement night, a man beat his fiancée to death after seeing her dance with a male friend (p. 35). Incensed by an aggressive sexual overture, a young man brutally attacked and left for dead a gay stranger with whom he had been walking across a baseball field (p. 88). A police officer shot and killed an inebriated Taiwanese man in his...; Search Snippet: ...2003 Book Note MURDER, HE WROTE Murder and the Reasonable Man: Passion and Fear in the Criminal Courtroom. By Cynthia Lee... |
2016 |
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Hispanic/Latinx American |
Craig Hemmens ; Daniel Levin |
'Not a Law at All' : a Call for a Return to the Common Law Right to Resist Unlawful Arrest |
29 Southwestern University Law Review 1 (1999) |
When one by force subdues men, they do not submit to him in heart. They submit, because their strength is not adequate to resist. Who overcomes By force hath overcome but half his foe. That no person may be deprived of liberty without due process of law is one of the bedrock principles of the Anglo-American legal tradition, important enough to...; Search Snippet: ...Curtis, a California case, concerned the unlawful arrest of an African- American man who matched a general description of a burglary suspect in... |
2016 |
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Multiple Groups |
Pamela J. Smith ; |
Part Ii--romantic Paternalism--the Ties That Bind: Hierarchies of Economic Oppression That Reveal Judicial Disaffinity for Black Women and Men |
3 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 181 (Fall 1999) |
Preface I. Introduction II. Black Women and Economic Exploitation: No Romance and No Paternalistic Protection A. Economic Exploitation of Black Women's Labor B. Expanded Economic Exploitation 1. Exploitation Shown Through Type of Work Availability 2. Exploitation Shown Through Wage Disparities C. Black Women's Quasi-Protection Under Sex Plus D....; Search Snippet: ...ECONOMIC OPPRESSION THAT REVEAL JUDICIAL DISAFFINITY FOR BLACK WOMEN AND MEN Pamela J. Smith [FNa1] Copyright (c) 1999 Journal of Gender... |
2016 |
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Multiple Groups |
Edward Stein |
Queers Anonymous: Lesbians, Gay Men, Free Speech, and Cyberspace |
38 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 159 (Winter, 2003) |
Anonymity is a shield from the tyranny of the majority. It thus exemplifies the purpose behind the Bill of Rights and of the First Amendment in particular: to protect unpopular individuals from retaliationand their ideas from suppressionat the hand of an intolerant society. Pseudonymity allows people who are experimenting with different sorts of...; Search Snippet: ...Liberties Law Review Winter, 2003 Article QUEERS ANONYMOUS: LESBIANS, GAY MEN, FREE SPEECH, AND CYBERSPACE Edward Stein [FNa1] Copyright © 2003 by... |
2016 |
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Hispanic/Latinx American |
Catherine Powell |
Race, Gender, and Nation in an Age of Shifting Borders: the Unstable Prisms of Motherhood and Masculinity |
24 UCLA Journal of International Law and Foreign Affairs 133 (Spring, 2020) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 134 I. Nationhood, Borders, and Fluidity. 140 II. The Welfare Cheat Narrative: Using the Race and Gender of Latina Mothers to Shift Borders Inward. 142 A. The New Welfare Queen. 143 B. Shifting the Border Inward: A New Way of Understanding the Family Separation Policy. 147 III. The Criminal and the...; Search Snippet: ...and Foreign Affairs Spring, 2020 Article and Comment Article RACE, GENDER, AND NATION IN AN AGE OF SHIFTING BORDERS: THE UNSTABLE... |
2016 |
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Cassandra A. Bailey, Betsy E. Galicia, Kalin Z. Salinas, Melissa Briones, Sheila Hugo, Kristin Hunter, Amanda C. Venta, Sam Houston State University, Community Supervision and Corrections Department, Huntsville, Texas, Sam Houston State University |
Racial/ethnic and Gender Disparities in Anger Management Therapy as a Probation Condition |
44 Law and Human Behavior 88 (February, 2020) |
Objective: This study examined whether race/ethnicity and gender predicted sentencing to anger management therapy as a probation condition. Hypotheses: We predicted judges would be more likely to assign African Americans and Hispanics, and males to anger management than Caucasians and women, respectively. We hypothesized demographic variables would...; Search Snippet: ...BEHAVIOR Law and Human Behavior February, 2020 RACIAL/ETHNIC AND GENDER DISPARITIES IN ANGER MANAGEMENT THERAPY AS A PROBATION CONDITION [FNa1... |
2016 |
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Luke A. Boso |
Real Men |
37 University of Hawaii Law Review 107 (Winter, 2015) |
Men experience discrimination every day at work and at school because they fail to look or behave like real men. Most courts now hold that men can prove sex discrimination by presenting evidence that the defendant harassed or bullied the plaintiff because he fails to conform to sex stereotypes. But judges in these cases are reluctant to find that...; Search Snippet: ...REVIEW University of Hawaii Law Review Winter, 2015 Article REAL MEN Luke A. Boso [FNa1] Copyright © 2015 by the University of... |
2016 |
Yes |
African/Black American |
Richard M. Southall, Mark S. Nagel, Paul J. Batista, James T. Reese, State University Of West Georgia, Georgia State University, Texas A & M University, Ohio University |
The Board of Regents of the University of Minnesota V. Haskins: the University of Minnesota Men's Basketball Academic Fraud Scandal - a Case Study |
13 Journal of Legal Aspects of Sport 121 (Spring/Summer 2003) |
In May 2002, former University of Minnesota Men's Basketball Coach Clem Haskins was ordered by a Minnesota State District Judge to return $815,000.00 of a $1,075,000.00 settlement arising from his coaching contract buyout by the University of Minnesota (Arbitrator's compromise. . ., 2002). This marked the conclusion of the three-year University...; Search Snippet: ...THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA V. HASKINS: THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA MEN'S BASKETBALL ACADEMIC FRAUD SCANDAL - A CASE STUDY Richard M. Southall... |
2016 |
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Hispanic/Latinx American |
James W. Fox Jr. |
The Fourteenth Amendment and the Privileges and Immunities of American Citizenship. Kurt T. Lash. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2014. Pp. Xvii + 307. $99.00 (Cloth). |
30 Constitutional Commentary 567 (Fall 2015) |
The Privileges or Immunities Clause has been a puzzle. It was probably more important to those who drafted the Amendment than the Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses, yet it has played almost no role in judicial enforcement of the Fourteenth Amendment. Even in the hands of originalists, the Clause eludes consistency, being described as...; Search Snippet: ...68 Southern states. Considering that Southern ratification engaged and included African- American men in the constitutional process far more significantly than at any... |
2016 |
Yes |
African/Black American |
Lorelei Lee |
THE ROOTS OF "MODERN DAY SLAVERY": THE PAGE ACT AND THE MANN ACT |
52 Columbia Human Rights Law Review 1199 (Spring, 2021) |
Usage of the phrase modern day slavery to describe human trafficking, especially sex trafficking, is widespread despite work by numerous scholars and activists to point out how such usage harms attempts to remedy both slavery and trafficking. In order to more clearly recognize the continuing harms of this usage, it is imperative that we know its... |
2016 |
Yes |
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John D. Bessler |
THE RULE OF LAW: A NECESSARY PILLAR OF FREE AND DEMOCRATIC SOCIETIES FOR PROTECTING HUMAN RIGHTS |
61 Santa Clara Law Review 467 (2021) |
This essay traces the history and development of the concept of the Rule of Law from ancient times through the present. It describes the elements of the Rule of Law and its importance to the protection of human rights in a variety of contexts, including under domestic and international law. From ancient Greece and Rome to the Enlightenment, and... |
2016 |
Yes |
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