AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearKey Terms in Title or Summary
Lucy Gubernick ERASING THE MARK OF CAIN: AN EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS OF THE EFFECT OF BAN-THE-BOX LEGISLATION ON THE EMPLOYMENT OUTCOMES OF PEOPLE OF COLOR WITH CRIMINAL RECORDS 44 Fordham Urban Law Journal 1153 (August, 2017) Criminals, it turns out, are the one social group in America we have permission to hate. --Michelle Alexander C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 1154 I. Why Are Governments Banning the Box?. 1157 A. Criminal Records in the Labor Market. 1157 II. The Negative Credential and Race. 1164 A. The Legal History That Gave Rise to the Need for States to... 2017  
Caroline Mala Corbin ESSAY: TERRORISTS ARE ALWAYS MUSLIM BUT NEVER WHITE: AT THE INTERSECTION OF CRITICAL RACE THEORY AND PROPAGANDA 86 Fordham Law Review 455 (November, 2017) When you hear the word terrorist, who do you picture? Chances are, it is not a white person. In the United States, two common though false narratives about terrorists who attack America abound. We see them on television, in the movies, on the news, and, currently, in the Trump administration. The first is that terrorists are always (brown)... 2017  
Steven L. Nelson , Alison C. Tyler EXAMINING PENNSYLVANIA HUMAN RELATIONS COMMISSION v. SCHOOL DISTRICT OF PHILADELPHIA: CONSIDERING HOW THE SUPREME COURT'S WANING SUPPORT OF SCHOOL DESEGREGATION AFFECTED DESEGREGATION EFFORTS BASED ON STATE LAW 40 Seattle University Law Review 1049 (Spring, 2017) This study examines the enforcement of desegregation orders mandated under state law as a result of the Supreme Court's handling of school desegregation cases at the federal level. The Article tracks the development of school desegregation cases starting shortly before Brown v. Board of Education and continues through the recent voluntary school... 2017  
Michelle Page FORGOTTEN YOUTH: HOMELESS LGBT YOUTH OF COLOR AND THE RUNAWAY AND HOMELESS YOUTH ACT 12 Northwestern Journal of Law & Social Policy 17 (Winter, 2017) Over the years, the rate of youth homelessness in America has steadily risen, prompting the creation and subsequent revision of corrective policies. One such policy is the Runaway and Homeless Youth Act of 1974. The Act is not a cure-all for homelessness, but it does provide services and programs specifically designed to aid homeless youth. It has... 2017  
Richard Delgado , Jean Stefancic FOUR IRONIES OF CAMPUS CLIMATE 101 Minnesota Law Review 1919 (May, 2017) One of the central issues in the campus-climate controversy is hate speech, including verbal microaggressions. Although the controversy encompasses many other issues--such as safe spaces, trigger warnings by classroom teachers, curricular coverage of topics of particular interest to minorities, fraternity parties that feature blackface or other... 2017  
Adrien Katherine Wing HENRY J. RICHARDSON III: A CRITICAL RACE MAN 31 Temple International and Comparative Law Journal 377 (Spring, 2017) I knew Henry Richardson before I knew myself. I knew Henry Richardson before I knew there was a Henry Richardson. What can I possibly mean by these seemingly nonsensical statements? In the early 1960s, my father Dr. John E. Wing Jr. and my mother Katherine P. Wing moved with our family of three tiny children from Los Angeles, California to... 2017  
James T. Gathii HENRY J. RICHARDSON III: THE FATHER OF BLACK TRADITIONS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 31 Temple International and Comparative Law Journal 325 (Spring, 2017) Without any doubt, Professor Henry J. Richardson III is the father of Black traditions of international law. Before he came along, the voices, perspectives, and concerns of Blacks in particular, and other subordinated groups around the globe in general, were missing in international legal scholarship as well as in the leading societies of the... 2017  
Taifha N. Baker HOW TOP LAW SCHOOLS CAN RESUSCITATE AN INCLUSIVE CLIMATE FOR MINORITY AND LOW-INCOME LAW STUDENTS 9 Georgetown Journal of Law & Modern Critical Race Perspectives 123 (Fall, 2017) Diversity is being invited to the party. Inclusion is being asked to dance. --Vernâ Myers, Esq., TED Talk presenter, nationally-recognized diversity expert specializing in law school and law firm diversity trainings, and Principal of Vernâ Myers Consulting Group, LLC. C1-3Table of Contents L1-2Introduction . L3124 I. Defining Terms: Minority and... 2017  
Rebekah Joab INCARCERATING NATIVE AMERICAN YOUTH IN FEDERAL BUREAU OF PRISONS FACILITIES: THE PROBLEM WITH FEDERAL JURISDICTION OVER NATIVE YOUTH UNDER THE MAJOR CRIMES ACT 9 Georgetown Journal of Law & Modern Critical Race Perspectives 155 (Fall, 2017) Within the context of the United States system of incarceration, there is a growing consensus upon which both sides of the political spectrum can agree: there are far too many people in American prisons. It is well known that minority populations are overrepresented within the criminal justice system. Many scholars trace the current state of... 2017  
Anthony V. Alfieri INNER-CITY ANTI-POVERTY CAMPAIGNS 64 UCLA Law Review 1374 (December, 2017) This Article offers a defense of outsider, legal-political intervention and community triage in inner-city anti-poverty campaigns under circumstances of widespread urban social disorganization, public and private sector neglect, and nonprofit resource scarcity. In mounting this defense, the Article revisits the roles of lawyers, nonprofit legal... 2017  
Licia Carlson INTELLIGENCE, DISABILITY, AND RACE: INTERSECTIONS AND CRITICAL QUESTIONS 43 American Journal of Law & Medicine 257 (2017) Historically, many theories of racial inferiority have been articulated in terms of intellectual and cognitive incapacity; at the same time, many definitions and categories of intellectual disability bear the mark of racist ideologies and racialized notions of disease, including genetic, biological, anatomical, and physiological abnormalities. As a... 2017  
Melvin J. Kelley IV INTERPRETING EQUAL PROTECTION CLAUSE JURISPRUDENCE UNDER THE WHITENESS-BELL CURVE: HOW DIVERSITY HAS OVERTAKEN EQUITY IN EDUCATION 21 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 135 (Winter 2017) Racial inequities in educational opportunities persist despite decades of race-based affirmative action policies pursuing integration and diversity. The late Professor Derrick Bell long argued that the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, standing alone, would not provide racial equality for Blacks. His conclusion was premised on... 2017  
Aubrey Coffey-Urban INTERSECTIONALITY, DIVERSITY AND THE LEGAL PROFESSION 53-APR Arizona Attorney 38 (April, 2017) As I sit and talk with my mom about my experience at the Women's March in Phoenix, I realize I hadn't talked to a single person about intersectionality. I had gone to the match ready to talk about my thoughts and ask people about theirs on a variety of topics, but intersectionality had been at the front of my mind. But once I got to the Senate... 2017  
Nicholas F. Stump MOUNTAIN RESISTANCE: APPALACHIAN CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE IN CRITICAL LEGAL RESEARCH MODELED LAW REFORM 41-FALL Environs Environmental Law and Policy Journal 69 (Fall, 2017) John Rawls authored the modern seminal work on civil disobedience in A Theory of Justice. Like all Rawlsian political theory, civil disobedience is very much conceived vis-à-vis the liberalism paradigm. Through this restrictive lens, the role of civil disobedience is in communicating injustices to the societal majority and to legal-institutional... 2017  
Lucy Jewel NEURORHETORIC, RACE, AND THE LAW: TOXIC NEURAL PATHWAYS AND HEALING ALTERNATIVES 76 Maryland Law Review 663 (2017) Persuasion happens in both the brain and the body. Departing from a Cartesian view of rationality, neuroscience explains that the mind and the body are highly integrated. It is a fallacy to believe that we engage with arguments in an abstract, analytical, and unemotional fashion. Instead, neuroscience explains that when rhetoric influences us, it... 2017  
Richard Delgado NONCONFORMITY IN AMERICAN LAW AND LIFE: HOW MUCH DO WE REALLY VALUE DIVERSITY? 2016 MEADOR LECTURE 68 Alabama Law Review 901 (2017) Abstract. 902 Introduction. 902 I. Policing Identity in Street Encounters: The Case of The Indian Grandfather. 907 A. A Thought Experiment: President Wellington Takes a Late-Night Stroll Across Campus. 914 II. Policing Identity and Culture in Schools: Mexican-American Studies in Tucson, Arizona. 916 III. No Mas--Identity Politics and the War... 2017  
  POLICE IN AMERICA: ENSURING ACCOUNTABILITY AND MITIGATING RACIAL BIAS 11 Northwestern Journal of Law & Social Policy 385 (Fall, 2017) KEYNOTE ADDRESS held at Northwestern Pritzker School of Law, Thorne Auditorium, 375 East Chicago Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, on the 13th day of November, A.D. 2015. KEYNOTE SPEAKER: MR. PAUL BUTLER, Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center (Washington, D.C.). PROFESSOR BEDI: Okay. Welcome back, everybody. We are going to get started with... 2017  
Darrell D. Jackson, JD, PhD PROFILING THE POLICE: FLIPPING 20 YEARS OF WHREN ON ITS HEAD 85 UMKC Law Review 671 (Spring, 2017) In this article, I argue a simple, time-honored philosophy - What's good for the goose is good for the gander. The Supreme Court and a large swath of law enforcement appear to be comfortable with the idea of profiling - racially and generally. Simultaneously, historically marginalized communities throughout the country are calling for increased... 2017  
Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw RACE LIBERALISM AND THE DERADICALIZATION OF RACIAL REFORM 130 Harvard Law Review 2298 (October, 2017) In the era that followed the formal collapse of white supremacy, efforts to sustain and broaden reformist agendas against the denouement of social justice movements exposed a series of discordant debates on the Left. While many such conflicts surfaced throughout the social order, some of these debates were staged in elite spaces like Harvard Law... 2017  
I. Bennett Capers RACE, POLICING, AND TECHNOLOGY 95 North Carolina Law Review 1241 (May, 2017) This Essay argues that if we truly care about making policing egalitarian and fair to everyone, then that could mean more policing, not less. It advocates harnessing technology, including surveillance technology, to help deracialize policing. This turn to technology will not be cost free. Indeed, one cost will be the redistribution of privacy. This... 2017  
Brad Desnoyer , Anne Alexander RACE, RHETORIC, AND JUDICIAL OPINIONS: MISSOURI AS A CASE STUDY 76 Maryland Law Review 696 (2017) On November 9, 2015, the president of the University of Missouri System resigned after months of escalating racial tension surrounding high-profile incidents on the flagship campus. The resignation and events preceding it, including a graduate student's hunger strike and a threatened boycott by the University of Missouri's football team, prompted... 2017  
Patricia J. Williams RACE, THE NEW BLACK: ON FASHIONING GENETIC BRAND 43 American Journal of Law & Medicine 183 (2017) This conference has asked us to take a critical look at the concept of race and its diverse applications in health sciences, medical research, empirical and data analytics, as well as social sciences. For all the apparent breadth of that mandate, there are three themes that have united our concerns. First is the question of privatization--or... 2017  
Katherine E. Leung RACIAL IDENTITY PERFORMANCE AND EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION LAW 24 Virginia Journal of Social Policy and the Law 57 (Winter, 2017) Introduction. 58 I. Framing Racial Identity Performance Protection. 59 A. Critical Framework. 59 B. The Development of Modern Disparate Impact Theory. 61 II. History of Identity Performance Protections Under Title VII. 63 A. The Evolution of Sex Discrimination Under Title VII. 63 B. Protecting Religious Identity Performance. 66 Before and After... 2017  
Steven L. Nelson, J.D., Ph.D. RACIAL SUBJUGATION BY ANOTHER NAME? USING THE LINKS IN THE SCHOOL-TO-PRISON PIPELINE TO REASSESS STATE TAKEOVER DISTRICT PERFORMANCE 9 Georgetown Journal of Law & Modern Critical Race Perspectives Persp. 1 (Spring, 2017) The state takeover of locally governed schools in predominately black communities has not disrupted the racial subjugation of black people in the United States. Using proportional analyses and the cities of Detroit, Memphis, and New Orleans as sites, the researcher finds that state takeover districts have not consistently disrupted the... 2017  
Andrea Freeman RACISM IN THE CREDIT CARD INDUSTRY 95 North Carolina Law Review 1071 (May, 2017) In a social and financial climate characterized by deep racial and socioeconomic divide, racism against credit card applicants and consumers is a core piece of the systemic inequality that perpetuates dramatic disparities in wealth, employment, health, and education. Over several decades, credit cards have evolved into an essential tool for lower-... 2017  
Robert Rubinson REALIZING DISPUTE RESOLUTION: MEETING THE CHALLENGES OF LEGAL REALISM THROUGH MEDIATION 18 Nevada Law Journal 1 (Fall, 2017) C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 2 I. Realism. 3 A. The Realist Challenge. 3 B. The Original Realists. 4 1. Holmes's Critique. 5 2. The Original Realists. 6 C. The New Legal Realism. 9 D. The Continuing Challenge for Old and New Realism: What To Do?. 12 II. Mediation. 16 A. Mediation and ADR. 17 B. How Is Mediation Defined?. 18 III.... 2017  
Lori D. Johnson REDEFINING ROLES AND DUTIES OF THE TRANSACTIONAL LAWYER: A NARRATIVE APPROACH 91 Saint John's Law Review 845 (Winter 2017) Mr. Lewis and I are going to build ships together, great big ships. Put yourself in the shoes of an in-house transactional lawyer at a major, privately-held technology company. We will call the company MicroChips. This lawyer, we will call him Michael, greatly enjoys working at MicroChips, in part because of the company's successful,... 2017  
Daniel L. Hatcher REMEMBERING ANTI-ESSENTIALISM: RELATIONSHIP DYNAMICS STUDY AND RESULTING POLICY CONSIDERATIONS IMPACTING LOW-INCOME MOTHERS, FATHERS, AND CHILDREN 35 Law & Inequality: A Journal of Theory and Practice 239 (Summer, 2017) The Relationship Dynamics and Social Life Study (RDSL) is a new and important longitudinal study that examines the relationships, and the partners, of young unmarried women who become pregnant. One of the particularly concerning findings of the RDSL is that the relationships resulting in pregnancies were more likely to include intimate partner... 2017  
Richard Delgado RODRIGO'S FOOTNOTE: MULTI-GROUP OPPRESSION AND A THEORY OF JUDICIAL REVIEW 51 U.C. Davis Law Review Online 1 (August, 2017) C1-2Table of Contents Introduction: In Which Rodrigo Walks in on Me in the Middle of an Embarrassing Operation. 3 I. In Which Rodrigo Describes His Sabbatical Project. 6 A. Rodrigo Discusses Latinos, African Americans, and Multi-Stage Oppression. 7 B. Multi-Group Oppression and the New Southern Strategy. 8 1. The New Southern Strategy--Step One:... 2017  
Shun-Ling Chen SAMPLING AS A SECONDARY ORALITY PRACTICE AND COPYRIGHT'S TECHNOLOGICAL BIASES 17 Journal of High Technology Law 206 (2017) L1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 208 II. The Exclusion and Inclusion of Sound Reproduction in US Copyright Law. 213 A. Copyright, and the Technologization of Word. 213 B. Mechanical Reproduction and the Technologizing of the Sound. 215 C. Sound Recording as Writing? Copyright's Technological Biases. 222 III. Sampling, Secondary Orality and... 2017  
Celesta A. Albonetti SENTENCING OF FEDERAL COCAINE TRAFFICKING/MANUFACTURING DEFENDANTS: ASSESSING DIRECT AND CONDITIONING EFFECTS OF DEFENDANT'S RACE/ETHNICITY AND GENDER ON LENGTH OF IMPRISONMENT 21 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 1 (Winter 2017) I. Introduction. 1 II. Federal Sentencing Guidelines--Legal and Policy Issues. 3 III. Empirical Research on Federal Sentencing Outcomes. 9 IV. Theoretical Perspectives and Federal Sentencing. 12 V. Data and Analytical Procedures. 15 VI. Findings. 24 A. Univariate Descriptive Analyses. 24 B. Multivariate Analyses. 26 C. Race/Ethnicity Interactions.... 2017  
Francisco Valdes SEXUAL MINORITIES IN LEGAL ACADEMIA: A RETROSPECTION ON COMMUNITY, ACTION, REMEMBRANCE, AND LIBERATION 66 Journal of Legal Education 510 (Spring, 2017) By the late 1980s and early 1990s, pioneering members of the U.S. legal academy finally were able to activate, within the structures of our profession, that self-liberating sense of individual and collective consciousness that had fueled a (conflicted) understanding of sexual minority-hood among women and men with same-sex orientations in the U.S.... 2017  
Antony Anghie SLAVERY AND INTERNATIONAL LAW: THE JURISPRUDENCE OF HENRY RICHARDSON 31 Temple International and Comparative Law Journal 11 (Spring, 2017) In the planning and writing of my work, I had witnessed more than five hundred years of human history pass before my eyes. I had seen one slave ship after another from Portugal, Spain, France, Holland, England and the United States pile black human cargo into its bowels as it would coal or even gold had either been more available and profitable at... 2017  
Steven L. Nelson, J.D., Ph.D. SPECIAL EDUCATION REFORM POLICIES AND THE PERMANENCE OF OPPRESSION: A CRITICAL RACE CASE STUDY OF SPECIAL EDUCATION REFORM IN SHELBY COUNTY, TENNESSEE 60 Howard Law Journal 459 (Winter, 2017) ABSTRACT. 460 INTRODUCTION. 460 I. THE OVERREPRESENTATION OF BLACK STUDENTS IN SPECIAL EDUCATION PROGRAMS. 463 II. OVERREPRESENTATION OF BLACK STUDENTS IN SPECIAL EDUCATION AS RACIAL OPPRESSION. 465 III. SPECIAL EDUCATION POLICY AND EDUCATION REFORM POLICIES: A NOSTRUM FOR SCHOOL FAILURE?. 469 IV. THE TENNESSEE DIPLOMA PROJECT. 471 VI. METHODS. 473... 2017  
Steven L. Nelson STILL SERVING TWO MASTERS? EVALUATING THE CONFLICT BETWEEN SCHOOL CHOICE AND DESEGREGATION UNDER THE LENS OF CRITICAL RACE THEORY 26 Boston University Public Interest Law Journal 43 (Winter, 2017) I. Introduction. 44 II. School Choice and School Desegregation: An Attempt to Serve Two Masters?. 45 A. Derek Black's Analysis of the Public Good: A Need to Expand the Framework?. 51 B. The Troubling Historical Intersection Between Desegregation and School Choice. 52 1. Understanding White Flight. 53 2. Segregation Academies. 55 3. Freedom of... 2017  
Paul Stancil SUBSTANTIVE EQUALITY AND PROCEDURAL JUSTICE 102 Iowa Law Review 1633 (May, 2017) ABSTRACT: The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure reflect a formal equality approach to civil justice. Formally equal systems promote justice by treating like cases as like. Theories embracing formal equality norms therefore implicitly depend on the idea that identical treatment equates to fair treatment. Alternatively, substantive equality theorists... 2017  
Avis Kuuipoleialoha Poai TALES FROM THE DARK SIDE OF THE ARCHIVES: MAKING HISTORY IN HAWAI'I WITHOUT HAWAIIANS 39 University of Hawaii Law Review 537 (Summer, 2017) [H]e makemake ko'u e pololei ka moolelo o ko'u one hanau, aole na ka malihini e ao mai ia'u i ka mooolelo o ko'u lahui, na'u e ao aku i ka moolelo i ka malihini. I want the history of my homeland to be correct, it is not the foreigner who will teach me the history of my people, it is I who shall teach the foreigner. --Samuel M. Kamakau I.... 2017  
Otis Grant TEACHING LAW EFFECTIVELY WITH THE SOCRATIC METHOD: THE CASE FOR A PSYCHODYNAMIC METACOGNITION 58 South Texas Law Review 399 (Spring, 2017) I. Introduction. 399 II. The Socratic Method. 401 A. The Socratic Method. 401 B. Applying the Socratic Method. 402 III. Metacognition. 403 A. Metacognition. 403 B. Metacognition can be Taught. 404 IV. Psychodynamic Psychology. 406 A. Psychodynamic psychology. 406 B. Psychodynamic learning theory. 407 C. Psychodynamic metacognition. 409 V. Summary... 2017  
Olivia C. Jerjian THE DEBTORS' PRISON SCHEME: YET ANOTHER BAR IN THE BIRDCAGE OF MASS INCARCERATION OF COMMUNITIES OF COLOR 41 New York University Review of Law and Social Change 235 (2017) Though officially deemed unconstitutional, the debtors' prison scheme consists of jailing low-income individuals for not being able to pay their legal financial obligations (LFOs), also known as criminal justice debt. These LFOs include fines, fees, and assessments--from traffic tickets to public defender fees. Two lawsuits, Cleveland, et al. v.... 2017  
Lundy Braun THEORIZING RACE AND RACISM: PRELIMINARY REFLECTIONS ON THE MEDICAL CURRICULUM 43 American Journal of Law & Medicine 239 (2017) The current political economic crisis in the United States places in sharp relief the tensions and contradictions of racial capitalism as it manifests materially in health care and in knowledge-producing practices. Despite nearly two decades of investment in research on racial inequality in disease, inequality persists. While the reasons for... 2017  
Sarah Khanghahi THIRTY YEARS AFTER AL-KHAZRAJI: REVISITING EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION UNDER SECTION 1981 64 UCLA Law Review 794 (March, 2017) Many scholars have written about the racialization process experienced by people of Southwest Asia and North African (SWANA) descent, emphasizing the increased discrimination experienced by those perceived as Middle Eastern or SWANA. There is very little scholarship, however, concentrating specifically on employment discrimination faced by those of... 2017  
Jasmine B. Gonzales Rose TOWARD A CRITICAL RACE THEORY OF EVIDENCE 101 Minnesota Law Review 2243 (June, 2017) It's not what you know, it's what you can prove in court! This oft-used movie line shows how even Hollywood recognizes the importance of evidence law. At trial, the facts are not determined through an independent investigation of the truth but by how the rules of evidence are employed to admit or exclude evidence. Attorneys use evidence rules to... 2017  
Leslie P. Culver WHITE DOORS, BLACK FOOTSTEPS: LEVERAGING "WHITE PRIVILEGE" TO BENEFIT LAW STUDENTS OF COLOR 21 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 37 (Winter 2017) Law students of color typically avoid seeking the mentorship of white law professors, largely white males, finding female faculty and faculty of color more approachable and willing to serve as mentors. Yet, according to recent ABA statistics, white people make up eighty-eight percent of the legal profession, with sixty-four percent being male. In... 2017  
Shirley Lin "AND AIN'T I A WOMAN?": FEMINISM, IMMIGRANT CAREGIVERS, AND NEW FRONTIERS FOR EQUALITY 39 Harvard Journal of Law & Gender 67 (Winter 2016) Introduction. 67 I. Feminist Legal Theory at the Crossroads: Immigrant Women Caregivers and the Carceral Matrix. 71 A. Feminism, Economic Insecurity, and Social Reproduction: Gender Equity in Context. 74 B. Immigrants and the Deepening Paradox of Wrongs Without Remedies. 81 1. From Contradiction to Lawful Retaliation: IRCA and Hoffman Plastics... 2016  
Lindsay Pérez Huber "MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!": DONALD TRUMP, RACIST NATIVISM AND THE VIRULENT ADHERENCE TO WHITE SUPREMACY AMID U.S. DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGE 10 Charleston Law Review 215 (Fall, 2016) I. INTRODUCTION. 215 II. THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK. 217 III. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!. 222 IV. VOTE FOR WHITE SUPREMACY!. 229 V. SHIFTING U.S. DEMOGRAPHICS (AND RESPONSES). 232 VI. CONCLUSION. 239 VII. EPILOGUE: MAKE AMERICA SAFE AGAIN. 244 2016  
Mario L. Barnes "THE MORE THINGS CHANGE . . .": NEW MOVES FOR LEGITIMIZING RACIAL DISCRIMINATION IN A "POST-RACE" WORLD 100 Minnesota Law Review 2043 (May, 2016) If race is something about which we dare not speak in polite social company, the same cannot be said of the viewing of race. How, or whether, blacks are seen depends upon a dynamic of display that ricochets between hypervisibility and oblivion. Blacks are seen everywhere, taking over the world one minute; yet the great ongoing toll of poverty and... 2016  
Mauricio García-Villegas A COMPARISON OF SOCIOPOLITICAL LEGAL STUDIES 12 Annual Review of Law and Social Science 25 (2016) comparative sociology of law, sociology of law, critical legal theory, sociolegal studies This article compares sociopolitical perspectives about the law in three regions of the world: the United States, France, and Latin America. Despite their heterogeneity, these sociolegal perspectives share many practical and theoretical similarities. For this... 2016  
Mario L. Barnes AFTERWORD: EVERYTHING OLD 6 UC Irvine Law Review 243 (June, 2016) What do you replace it with? Introduction. 243 I. The New Look of Legal Realism. 246 A. Connecting the New to the Old. 246 II. Doing New Legal Realism Research. 248 III. Including or Connecting with Presumably Compatible Movements. 249 Conclusion. 253 According to R. Michael Fischl, it was the question above--what do you replace it... 2016  
Sarudzayi M. Matambanadzo , Francisco Valdes , Sheila Velez AFTERWORD: KINDLING THE PROGRAMMATIC PRODUCTION OF CRITICAL AND OUTSIDER LEGAL SCHOLARSHIP, 1996-2016 37 Whittier Law Review 439 (Spring, 2016) The United States is at a monumental juncture in its trajectory as a nation-state. Insecurity, inequality, and violence characterize much of contemporary life. Now, as before, activists and scholars frequently turn to law for solutions; however, law often fails to provide adequate tools to challenge social injustice. It is legal to suffer the... 2016  
Sarudzayi M. Matambanadzo , Francisco Valdes , Sheila I. Vélez-Martinez AFTERWORD: LATCRIT THEORY @ XX: KINDLING THE PROGRAMMATIC PRODUCTION OF CRITICAL AND OUTSIDER LEGAL SCHOLARSHIP, 1996-2016 10 Charleston Law Review 297 (Fall, 2016) I. INTRODUCTION. 298 II. FRAMING LATCRIT THEORY AND SCHOLARSHIP: . A SUBSTANTIVE RECAP OF BASICS AND HIGHLIGHTS. 302 III. LATCRIT AND/AS SCHOLARSHIP: GALVANIZING TWO DECADES OF PROGRAMMATIC KNOWLEDGE PRODUCTION. 314 A. LatCritical Advancement of OutCrit Theorizing: A Few Substantive Highlights. 316 1. Latina/o Identities and Diversities. 317 2.... 2016  
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