AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYear
Regina Kline , Michael Morris , Nanette Goodman , Peter Blanck DISABILITY REPARATIONS AND THE MODERNIZATION OF THE COMMUNITY REINVESTMENT ACT OF 1977 24 NYU Journal of Legislation and Public Policy 375 (2021-2022) The Community Reinvestment Act of 1977 (CRA) was enacted to reverse the historical exclusion of low and moderate income (LMI) communities from bank lending, investment, and services. This practice of so-called redlining was endemic to a system of finance in which banks typically took wealth out of LMI communities while denying the credit... 2022
Thalia González DISCIPLINE OUTSIDE THE SCHOOLHOUSE DOORS: ANTI-BLACK RACISM AND THE EXCLUSION OF BLACK CAREGIVERS 70 UCLA Law Review Discourse 40 (2022) This Essay calls upon the civil rights and education justice communities to expand their vision of school discipline law and policy reform to include the often ignored, yet deeply impacted lives of parents, caregivers, and families. Deploying what critical race theorists define as storytelling or counternarratives, we share Nyla's story to bring... 2022
Anita L. Allen DISMANTLING THE "BLACK OPTICON": PRIVACY, RACE EQUITY, AND ONLINE DATA-PROTECTION REFORM 131 Yale Law Journal Forum 907 (20-Feb-22) abstract. African Americans online face three distinguishable but related categories of vulnerability to bias and discrimination that I dub the Black Opticon: discriminatory oversurveillance, discriminatory exclusion, and discriminatory predation. Escaping the Black Opticon is unlikely without acknowledgement of privacy's unequal distribution and... 2022
Simon Balto, Department of History, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA, sebalto@wisc.edu, https://doi.org/10.1093/ajlh/njac006, Advance Access Publication Date: 25 March 2022 DOUGLAS J. FLOWE, UNCONTROLLABLE BLACKNESS: AFRICAN AMERICAN MEN AND CRIMINALITY IN JIM CROW NEW YORK (CHAPEL HILL: UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS 2020), PP 332, US $29.95 (HARDBACK). ISBN 978-1469655727 62 American Journal of Legal History 129 (March, 2022) On a steamy August night in 1900, Arthur Harris, a Black migrant from Virginia to New York, stabbed a White plainclothes police officer named Robert Thorpe to death in the Tenderloin district on Manhattan's West Side. Harris was defending his common-law wife May Enoch from Thorpe, who had approached Enoch as she stood outside a saloon waiting for... 2022
Mickaela J. Fouad DOWN AND DIRTY: REMEDIES AND REPARATIONS FOR INTERSECTED ENVIRONMENTAL AND REPRODUCTIVE JUSTICE 87 Brooklyn Law Review 1423 (Summer, 2022) In 2016, Flint, Michigan's water crisis captured the nation's attention and prompted widespread conversations concerning environmental racism. In the fall of 2021, claims, including a class action suit, brought by city residents culminated in a historic $626 million award. But today, even after this settlement, many Flint residents still mistrust... 2022
Sidney Balman ENSURING BLACK LIVES MATTER WHEN THE PENALTY IS DEATH 15 Idaho Critical Legal Studies Journal J. 1 (2022) [I]t is not so much that the death penalty has a race problem as it is that the race problems of America manifest themselves through the implementation of the death penalty. Trayvon Martin. Michael Brown. Breonna Taylor. George Floyd. These are several of the names that come to mind when we think about the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement. They... 2022
João Figueiredo, Nova Law School, Nova University of Lisbon ESCLAVOS Y TIERRAS ENTRE POSESIÓN Y TÍTULOS LA CONSTRUCCIÓN SOCIAL DEL DERECHO DE PROPIEDAD EN BRASIL (SIGLO XIX) [SLAVES AND LANDS FROM POSSESSION TO TITLE-OWNING. THE SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION OF PROPERTY LAWS IN BRAZIL (19TH CENTURY)], MARIANA ARMOND DIAS PA 45 PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review Rev. 1 (November, 2022) Esclavos y tierras entre posesión y títulos is a ground-breaking historical account of the early development of liberal property laws in Brazil. In this stimulating volume, Mariana Armond Dias Paes uses data collected from 74 randomly sampled legal proceedings of the Court of Appeals of Rio de Janeiro to ground a bottom-up interpretation of legal... 2022
Alicia E. Plerhoples ESG & ANTI-BLACK RACISM 24 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Business Law 909 (2022) Introduction. 910 I. ESG Racial Equity Goals. 912 II. The Actors Setting ESG Racial Equity Standards. 916 A. Federal Regulation. 916 1. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission: EEO-1. 916 2. The Securities Exchange Commission's Diversity Assessment Report. 917 3. The Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs. 918 B. Private ESG Efforts. 919 1.... 2022
Lan Cao ETHNIC ECONOMIES, CULTURAL RESOURCES, AND THE AFRICAN AMERICAN QUESTION 91 University of Cincinnati Law Review 303 (2022) Ethnic economies are complex. Scholars have debated their many facets, starting with basic questions like how and why they are formed to the thornier philosophical issues surrounding their establishment and functioning. At its core, ethnic economies depend on the creation of an in-group, which conversely, means drawing a line that distinguishes... 2022
Felix B. Chang ETHNICALLY SEGMENTED MARKETS: KOREAN-OWNED BLACK HAIR STORES 97 Indiana Law Journal 479 (Winter, 2022) Races often collide in segmented markets where buyers belong to one ethnic group while sellers belong to another. This Article examines one such market: the retail of wigs and hair extensions for African Americans, a multi-billion-dollar market controlled by Korean Americans. Although prior scholarship attributed the success of Korean American... 2022
Steven A. Dean FILING WHILE BLACK: THE CASUAL RACISM OF THE TAX LAW 2022 Utah Law Review 801 (2022) The tax law's race-blind approach produces bad tax policy. This Essay uses three very different examples to show how failing to openly and honestly address race generates bias, and how devasting the results can be. Ignoring race does not solve problems; it creates them. ProPublica has shown, for example, that because of the perils of filing income... 2022
Nicholas J. Johnson FIREARMS AND PROTEST: LESSONS FROM THE BLACK TRADITION OF ARMS 54 Connecticut Law Review 953 (July, 2022) Kenosha was no aberration. Our history is filled with episodes of righteous protest boiling over into violence. Where violence is imminent, our traditions and laws allow innocents to use corresponding violence in self-defense. This arrangement is imperfect and demands hard thinking about how to refine and possibly improve it. One source of lessons... 2022
Trevion Freeman FOR FREEDMEN'S SAKE: THE STORY OF THE NATIVE BLACKS OF THE MUSCOGEE NATION AND THEIR FIGHT FOR CITIZENSHIP POST-MCGIRT 57 Tulsa Law Review 513 (Winter, 2022) I. Introduction. 514 II. Understanding Federal Indian Law. 516 A. Tribal Sovereignty. 517 i. Defining Indian & Tribal Membership. 518 B. Federal Plenary Power: United States Government Power Over Indian Affairs. 520 C. The Power of Tribal Sovereignty in Relationship with Membership Acceptance (Santa Clara Pueblo v. Martinez). 521 D. Tribal Treaty... 2022
Wangui Muigai FRAMING BLACK INFANT AND MATERNAL MORTALITY 50 Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 85 (Spring, 2022) Keywords: Race, Birth, Infant Death, Maternal Death, Health Disparities Abstract: This article looks to the past to consider how government officials, health professionals, and legal authorities have historically framed racial disparities in birth and the lasting impact these explanations have had on Black birthing experiences and outcomes. In the... 2022
Charisa Smith FROM EMPATHY GAP TO REPARATIONS: AN ANALYSIS OF CAREGIVING, CRIMINALIZATION, AND FAMILY EMPOWERMENT 90 Fordham Law Review 2621 (May, 2022) America's legacy of violent settler colonialism and racial capitalism reveals a misunderstood and neglected civil rights concern: the forced separation of families of color and unwarranted state intrusion upon caregiving through criminalization and surveillance. The War on Drugs, the Opioid Crisis, and the COVID-19 pandemic are a few examples... 2022
Alexandra Eagle GREEN IS THE NEW BLACK: ACHIEVING WHOLE-SYSTEM SUSTAINABILITY IN U.S. COFFEE VIA A HYBRID CERTIFICATION SCHEME 54 Arizona State Law Journal 663 (Summer, 2022) Near the village of Las Capucas, in the Copán region of Honduras, Omar Rodríguez Romero manages a coffee farm and a coffee farmer cooperative called Cooperativa Cafetalera Capucas Limitada (COCAFCAL). COCAFCAL assists hundreds of small coffee farmers in the region with growing, processing, and distributing their coffee each season. Coffee is a... 2022
Richard Winchester HOMEOWNERSHIP WHILE BLACK: A PATHWAY TO PLUNDER, COMPLIMENTS OF UNCLE SAM 110 Kentucky Law Journal 611 (2021-2022) Table of Contents. 611 Introduction. 612 I. Housing and Housing Finance Before the New Deal. 615 A. A Long Tradition of Racial Segregation in Housing. 615 B. A Federally Unregulated Housing Finance Market. 617 C. The Shock of the Great Depression. 619 II. Federal Intervention in Mortgage Lending. 621 A. Home Owners' Loan Corporation. 621 B. Federal... 2022
Zandy Dudiak HOMER S. BROWN DIVISION BLACK HISTORY MONTH CELEBRATION TO BE HELD FEB. 24 24 Lawyers Journal J. 1 (28-Jan-22) The annual Homer S. Brown Division Black History Month Celebration will take place via Zoom at 5:30 p.m. on Thursday, February 24. The decision to make the event virtual occurred during a week when the Omicron variant of COVID-19 had a high infection rate throughout Allegheny County. Further details about attending HSBD's 2022 Black History Month... 2022
Mitchell F. Crusto HOW TO GET AWAY WITH MURDER: WHEN A WHITE MALE POLICE OFFICER KILLS A YOUNG BLACK PERSON 79 Washington and Lee Law Review Online Online 1 (18-Jan-22) Systemic racism in policing allows police officers, in particular white men, to continue to perpetuate the violent killings of Black people. This violence is not accidental. Rather it is intentional and allowed to continue due to a failure by the Supreme Court to hold police officers accountable. This Article explains how the doctrines of qualified... 2022
Debora Kristensen Grasham IDA LEGGETT: IDAHO'S FIRST AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMAN LAWYER AND JUDGE 65-APR Advocate 28 (March/April, 2022) Preface by Hon. Candy W. Dale As I began my third year of law school, I recall watching President Reagan's historical nomination of Sandra Day O'Connor as the first woman associate justice to the Supreme Court of the United States. She was confirmed by the Senate by a 99-0 vote on September 11, 1981. This first signified a beginning that led... 2022
Aisatou Diallo IMMIGRATION LAW--THE $2 COST OF DEPORTATION FOR BLACK IMMIGRANTS 43 Western New England Law Review 295 (2022) The United States is a nation with protected borders and in order to protect the immigration laws control who may or may not come into the country. One way this is done is been by excluding individuals who have been convicted of crimes involving moral turpitude. There is no single definition of what a crime involving moral turpitude is, but over... 2022
Margaret H. C. Tippett IMPLICITLY INCONSISTENT: THE PERSISTENT AND FATAL LACK OF SECOND AMENDMENT RIGHTS FOR BLACK AMERICANS IN SELF-DEFENSE CLAIMS AND THE IMPORTANCE OF TELLING THE COUNTER-STORY 82 Maryland Law Review Online 68 (2022) It's bigger than [B]lack and white. It's a problem with the whole way of life. It can't change overnight. But we gotta start somewhere. Lil Baby, The Bigger Picture (Quality Control Music 2020). Gun control legislation in the United States began in the 1700s, when white people prohibited the purchase or use of guns by Black people. While the... 2022
Megan S. Wright , Shima Baradaran Baughman , Christopher Robertson INSIDE THE BLACK BOX OF PROSECUTOR DISCRETION 55 U.C. Davis Law Review 2133 (April, 2022) In their charging and bargaining decisions, prosecutors have unparalleled and nearly-unchecked discretion that leads to incarceration or freedom for millions of Americans each year. More than courts, legislators, or any other justice system player, in the aggregate prosecutors' choices are the key drivers of outcomes, whether the rates of mass... 2022
Timothy Webster JAPAN'S TRANSNATIONAL WAR REPARATIONS LITIGATION: AN EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS 63 Harvard International Law Journal 181 (Winter, 2022) Negotiating war reparations is traditionally the province of the political branches, yet in recent decades, domestic courts have presided over hundreds of compensation lawsuits stemming from World War II. In the West, governments responded to these lawsuits with elaborate compensation mechanisms. In East Asia, by contrast, civil litigation... 2022
Mason McMillan JUDGES BE TRIPPIN: A LEGAL ANALYSIS OF BLACK ENGLISH IN THE COURTROOM 57 Tulsa Law Review 451 (Winter, 2022) I. Introduction. 452 II. Black English Is Not Standard English with Mistakes. 454 A. Black English Has Distinct Grammatical Features. 455 i. Durative & Narrative Tense. 456 ii. Negation. 457 iii. Zero Plural/Possessive -S. 458 iv. Existential It & Zero Copula. 458 B. Black English Has Distinct Phonological Features. 459 i. Reduction. 460 ii.... 2022
John Herlyn Antón Sánchez LATIN AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL LAW AND AFRO-DESCENDANT PEOPLES 116 AJIL Unbound 334 (2022) After the Third World Conference Against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia, and Related Intolerance, held by the United Nations in Durban, South Africa, in 2001, an important movement emerged. The African diaspora communities in the Americas, or Afro-descendants, as they prefer to self-identify, began to seek legal recognition in the... 2022
Kelsey Goldman LETTING THE CAT OUT OF THE BAG: HOW LACK OF ACCESS TO ANIMAL COMPANIONSHIP AND HUSBANDRY FOSTERS INEQUALITY FOR BLACK AMERICANS 12 UC Irvine Law Review 693 (February, 2022) Throughout American history, animals have been used by those in power to harm and terrorize Black Americans. While state-sanctioned use of slave-patrol and police dogs have been a commonly discussed issue, there has been little to no analysis on the harms Black Americans have faced from the systemic deprivation of animal companionship and... 2022
Jazmine Langley LIGHT IN A DARK TUNNEL? TORRES v. MADRID: RECOMMITMENT TO THE FOURTH AMENDMENT AND ONE STEP TOWARDS JUSTICE FOR AFRICAN-AMERICAN VICTIMS OF POLICE VIOLENCE 44 North Carolina Central Law Review 81 (2022) How does a Fourth Amendment seizure occur? Does it occur when the government intentionally terminates an individual's movement or when there is an application of force with an intent to restrain a person? Does it matter if the person being seized is successfully controlled, captured, or restrained? Recently, this topic has come under significant... 2022
Zachary Parrish LOCKED UP AND LOCKED DOWN IN THE LAND OF THE FREE: A LOOK AT THE UNITED STATES' PRISONS AND COVID-19'S DISPROPORTIONATE EFFECT ON BLACK AMERICANS' RIGHT TO HEALTH 37 American University International Law Review 391 (2022) I. INTRODUCTION. 393 II. BACKGROUND. 396 A. Racism in the United States: A Brief History. 396 i. Mass Incarceration. 396 ii. Systemic Racism. 399 B. COVID-19. 399 i. COVID-19's effect on Black Americans within prisons. 400 C. The International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (the Convention). 405 i. Article 1:... 2022
Nina Oishi LOVE, MEMORY, AND REPARATIONS: LOOKING TO THE BOTTOM TO UNDERSTAND HAWAI'I'S MAUNA KEA MOVEMENT 29 Asian American Law Journal 126 (2022) The activism on Mauna Kea opposing the construction of the Thirty Meter Telescope has become a flashpoint in local media and a watershed moment for Hawaiian movements. In this Note, I apply the critical legal theory concept of looking to the bottom to understand the Mauna Kea movement as part of a broader theory of reparations for Native... 2022
McKenzi B. Baker MADE WHOLE: THE EFFICACY OF LEGAL REDRESS FOR BLACK WOMEN WHO HAVE SUFFERED INJURIES FROM MEDICAL BIAS 57 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 321 (Summer, 2022) Kira Johnson died a preventable death when physicians at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center failed to adequately respond to hemorrhaging from what was supposed to be a routine cesarean section. After waiting twelve hours for imperative attention that could have saved her life, Kira's husband was callously told that she was just not a priority. Four hours... 2022
Jeremy Peel MAKING ENDS MEAT: FIFTH CIRCUIT HOLDS THAT COVID-19 RELATED LOSSES ARE NOT COVERED UNDER INSURANCE POLICY FOR "DIRECT PHYSICAL LOSSES" 41 Corporate Counsel Review 93 (May, 2022) Us Texans love our barbecue. However, most of us found it difficult to go out and get during the COVID-19 lockdowns. Like most restaurants, Terry Black's Barbecue (Terry Black's) felt that pain, too, but in a very different way. Terry Black's owns and operates barbecue restaurants in Dallas and Austin. After the onset of COVID-19, civil... 2022
Hon. Willie J. Epps, Jr. , Jonathan M. Warren MISSOURI'S BLACK JUDICIAL PIONEERS: LEADING AND PRESIDING 67 Washington University Journal of Law & Policy 27 (2022) In this Article, Judge Epps and Jonathan Warren collect and compose an unparalleled amount of information about Missouri's Black judges from 1922 to the present. Laser-focused on barrier-breaking judges, this Article offers insights about the most well-known Black judges, in addition to details about lesser-known Black judges. According to the... 2022
Lisa A. Crooms-Robinson MURDERING CROWS: PAULI MURRAY, INTERSECTIONALITY, AND BLACK FREEDOM 79 Washington and Lee Law Review 1093 (Summer, 2022) What is intersectionality's origin story and how did it make its way into human rights? Beginning in the 1940s, Pauli Murray (1910-1985) used Jane Crow to capture two distinct relationships between race and sex discrimination. One Jane used the race-sex analogy to show that race and sex were both unconstitutionally arbitrary. The other Jane... 2022
Madison N. Heckel NO JUSTICE, NO PEACE: THE NEED FOR A STATE VERSION OF § 1983 IN RESPONSE TO THE MOVEMENT FOR BLACK LIVES 15 DePaul Journal for Social Justice Just. 1 (Winter/Spring, 2021-202) After the Civil War, violence raged across the South against Black Americans as an attempt by racist Confederates to refuse the racial equality guaranteed by the recent Constitutional Amendments. Congress recognized the lack of state action in enforcing the Reconstruction Amendments and passed the Ku Klux Klan Act in response, which allowed... 2022
Judge Elizabeth L. Gunn , Joy D. Kleisinger NOT SO BLACK AND WHITE 61 Judges' Journal J. 4 (Fall, 2022) A core tenet of the bankruptcy system is the fresh start for those who file for relief under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. However, a debtor's fresh start becomes more complicated in the context of certain types of debt, including student loans. While it is often assumed by student loan borrowers that bankruptcy is not an option to discharge student... 2022
Joseph D. G. Castro NOT WHITE ENOUGH, NOT BLACK ENOUGH: REIMAGINING AFFIRMATIVE ACTION JURISPRUDENCE IN LAW SCHOOL ADMISSIONS THROUGH A FILIPINO-AMERICAN PARADIGM 49 Pepperdine Law Review 195 (January, 2022) Writing the majority opinion upholding the use of racial preferences in law school admissions in 2003, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor anticipated that racial preferences would no longer be necessary in twenty-five years. On the contrary, 2021 has seen the astronomic rise of critical race theory, the popularity of race-driven diversity initiatives in... 2022
Thomas H.L. Forster OUT OF THE "BLACK HOLE": TOWARD A NEW APPROACH TO MDL PROCEDURE 100 Texas Law Review 1227 (May, 2022) Multidistrict litigation (MDL) allows the consolidation of claims in a single forum. Usually, these suits share common facts but involve individual liability questions that prevent class-action certification. Under 28 U.S.C. § 1407, the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation (JPML) may transfer and consolidate all pending actions before its... 2022
R.A. Lenhardt PARENTING WHILE BLACK 90 Fordham Law Review 2591 (May, 2022) As a child, I delighted in stories about my mother and her four sisters. In one of my favorite narratives from 1944, my mother's three oldest sisters, not one of them older than nine at the time, were determined to take my infant mother and her twin to get vaccinated. Because they appreciated that such an obligation was serious, the older girls... 2022
Anthony Gregory POLICING JIM CROW AMERICA: ENFORCERS' AGENCY AND STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATIONS 40 Law and History Review 91 (February, 2022) These districts are not usually protected by police--rather victimized and tyrannized over by them. No one who does not know can realize what tyranny a low-grade white policeman can exercise in a colored neighborhood. W.E.B. Du Bois Scholars widely agree that law enforcers came to serve white supremacy in the post-Civil War United States. More... 2022
Theodoros Papazekos POWER PLAY GOAL: ANALYZING ZONING LAW AND REPARATIONS AS REMEDIES TO HISTORIC DISPLACEMENT IN PITTSBURGH'S HILL DISTRICT 29 Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy 407 (Spring, 2022) Pittsburgh's Hill District ranked among the most important historically Black neighborhoods in America until the heart of the neighborhood was razed in 1956. When urban renewal hit Pittsburgh, 1,500 families were displaced from the Lower Hill District, replaced by what would become a hockey arena. The displacement had catastrophic results for the... 2022
Denise Ama Ghartey PROTECT BLACK GIRLS 69 UCLA Law Review Discourse 64 (2022) At its core, Critical Race Theory (CRT) provides us with a panoply of necessary tools and a lens through which to analyze the multilayered relationship between Black girls, their education, and the criminal legal system. Florida's history, especially the historical landscape of Central Florida, distinctly highlights the grave importance of CRT when... 2022
Akilah M. Browne, A. Mychal Johnson PUBLIC LAND FOR PUBLIC GOOD: A CALL FOR A REPARATIVE APPLICATION OF THE PUBLIC TRUST DOCTRINE IN NEW YORK 30 New York University Environmental Law Journal 303 (2022) Introduction. 304 I. The Racially Discriminatory History of American Property Law. 311 II. New York's Interpretation and Application of the Public Trust Doctrine. 313 III. An Expansive and Reparative Application of the Public Trust Doctrine. 317 Conclusion. 322 2022
Chalana M. Scales-Ferguson, Esq. PUT SOME 'RESPEK' ON HER NAME: HOW RBG'S LEGACY CREATES SPACE FOR BLACK WOMEN IN THE PURSUIT OF EQUAL JUSTICE 43 Women's Rights Law Reporter 34 (Spring/Summer, 2022) With 2020 in our rearview mirrors, it is impossible to reflect on that year without remembering the many ways grief was experienced in American society, whether or not you felt the grief yourself. Just as we entered the second quarter of a year of presumed optimism, when many professed they would find clarity through 20/20 vision and find... 2022
Marc Spindelman QUEER BLACK TRANS POLITICS AND CONSTITUTIONAL ORIGINALISM 13 ConLawNOW 93 (2022) Oh friends, my friends--bloom how you must, wild until we are free. --Cameron Awkward-Rich, Cento Between the Ending and the End LGBTQIA+ communities are still learning how and why to center Black trans lives in their individual and collective politics. These communities are coming to understand the power of saying--as the Black Queer &... 2022
Damian A. Gonzalez-Salzberg QUEERING REPARATIONS UNDER INTERNATIONAL LAW: DAMAGES, SUFFERING, AND (HETERONORMATIVE) KINSHIP 116 AJIL Unbound Unbound 5 (2022) It is a long-standing principle of international law that every breach of an international obligation that results in harm gives rise to a duty to make adequate reparation. Reparations can take different forms, from the ideal of full restitution to the provision of satisfaction, and the payment of compensation. Notwithstanding reparation's main... 2022
Kevin D. Brown , Kenneth G. Dau-Schmidt RACIAL AND ETHNIC ANCESTRY OF THE NATION'S BLACK LAW STUDENTS: AN ANALYSIS OF DATA FROM THE LSSSE SURVEY 22 Berkeley Journal of African-American Law & Policy Pol'y 1 (2022) Introduction. 2 I. Changing Racial and Ethnic Ancestries of Black People in the United States Since Affirmative Action Began. 6 A. Historical Race and Ethnicity of Black People at the Commencement of Affirmative Action. 6 B. Current Racial and Ethnic Ancestry of Black People. 8 C. Impact of Change in Census Definitions on the Ability to Collect... 2022
Felix B. Chang , Anisha Rakhra , Janelle Thompson RACIALLY COLLUSIVE BOYCOTTS: AFRICAN-AMERICAN PURCHASING POWER IN THE WIGS AND HAIR EXTENSIONS MARKET 102 Boston University Law Review 1277 (May, 2022) This Essay analyzes expressive boycotts in the market for wigs and hair extensions, where consumers are primarily African Americans and producers are almost uniformly Korean Americans. This type of ethnically segmented and misaligned (ESM) market raises unique doctrinal and theoretical questions. Under antitrust case law, the treatment of a... 2022
Elise C. Boddie RACIALLY TERRITORIAL POLICING IN BLACK NEIGHBORHOODS 89 University of Chicago Law Review 477 (March, 2022) This Essay explores police practices that marginalize Black people by limiting their freedom of movement across the spaces of Black neighborhoods. In an earlier article, I theorized racial territoriality as a form of discrimination that excludes people of color from--or marginalizes them within--racialized White spaces that have a racially... 2022
Maia Foster , P.J. Austin RATTLESNAKES, DEBT, AND ARPA § 1005: THE EXISTENTIAL CRISIS OF AMERICAN BLACK FARMERS 71 Duke Law Journal Online 159 (June, 2022) Black farmers have sought just compensation from the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) for decades. Despite the USDA's acknowledgement that it has provided Black farmers with inferior access to loans and services, proposals to pay farmers for past discrimination have languished in controversy and red tape. In the words of the... 2022
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