AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearKey Terms in Title or Summary
Olympia Duhart SOLDIER SUICIDES AND OUTCRIT JURISPRUDENCE: AN ANTI-SUBORDINATION ANALYSIS 44 Creighton Law Review 883 (2011) There was no miracle cure, no drug they could take to hold back or dissipate their feelings of horror, grief, or fear. There is no preparation in our training for the mental health struggles that come later . . . . Even if they survive the war, the soldiers who make it home are struggling to stay alive. Soldier suicides, which have reached... 2011  
Arlene S. Kanter THE LAW: WHAT'S DISABILITY STUDIES GOT TO DO WITH IT OR AN INTRODUCTION TO DISABILITY LEGAL STUDIES 42 Columbia Human Rights Law Review 403 (Winter, 2011) Imagining disability as ordinary, as the typical rather than the atypical human experience, can promote practices of equality and inclusion that begin to fulfill the promise of a democratic order. Rosemarie Garland Thomson (2001) In the introduction to No Pity: People with Disabilities Forge New Civil Rights Movement, journalist and author, Joseph... 2011  
Addie C. Rolnick THE PROMISE OF MANCARI: INDIAN POLITICAL RIGHTS AS RACIAL REMEDY 86 New York University Law Review 958 (October, 2011) In 1974, the Supreme Court declared that an Indian employment preference was based on a political rather than racial classification. The Court's framing of Indianness as a political matter and its positioning of political and racial as opposing concepts has defined the trajectory of federal Indian law and influenced common sense ideas about... 2011  
William M. Carter, Jr. THE THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT, INTEREST CONVERGENCE, AND THE BADGES AND INCIDENTS OF SLAVERY 71 Maryland Law Review 21 (2011) The Thirteenth Amendment was intended to eliminate the institution and legacy of slavery. Having accomplished the former, the Amendment has rarely been extended to the latter. The Thirteenth Amendment's full scope therefore remains unrealized. This Article explores the gap between the Thirteenth Amendment's promise and its implementation. Drawing... 2011  
Keith Aoki THE YELLOW PACIFIC: TRANSNATIONAL IDENTITIES, DIASPORIC RACIALIZATION, AND MYTH(S) OF THE "ASIAN CENTURY" 44 U.C. Davis Law Review 897 (February, 2011) Introduction. 899 I. The Twenty-First Century as the Asian Century: Is There a There There?. 902 II. Fear of a Yellow Planet: Was the Twentieth Century the Asian Century?. 907 A. Prelude to the Asian Century: Harsh Nineteenth and Early- to Mid-Twentieth Century Immigration Policies Towards Asian Immigrants. 912 B. The Gentleman's Agreement of... 2011  
Harry G. Hutchison WAGING WAR ON "UNEMPLOYABLES"? RACE, LOW-WAGE WORK, AND MINIMUM WAGES: THE NEW EVIDENCE 29 Hofstra Labor and Employment Law Journal 25 (Fall 2011) Capturing both popular and academic imaginations, recent literature contributions contest the standard treatment of minimum wage statutes as vehicles that enlarge the economic and social dislocation of vulnerable workers. A persistent strain of the current scholarship dedicated to progressive labor ideology implies that minimum wages, or,... 2011  
D. Kapua'ala Sproat WAI THROUGH KNWAI: WATER FOR HAWAI'I'S STREAMS AND JUSTICE FOR HAWAIIAN COMMUNITIES 95 Marquette Law Review 127 (Fall 2011) Kaulana N Wai Eh: Famous are the Four Great Waters of Waihee River, and Waiehu, ao, and Waikap Streams in the heart of Central Maui. Since time immemorial, Knaka Maoli (Native Hawaiians) revered the abundance of fresh water in Hawaii's rivers and streams, including N Wai Eh, as a physical embodiment of Kneikawaiola, a gift from the... 2011  
Michèle Alexandre WE REAP WHAT WE SOW: USING POST-DISASTER DEVELOPMENT PARADIGMS TO REVERSE STRUCTURAL DETERMINIST FRAMEWORKS AND EMPOWER SMALL FARMERS IN MISSISSIPPI AND HAITI 14 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change 135 (2011) . . .Because of the interrelationships among crops, a major shortfall in the U.S. harvest could tip global grain and soy markets into chaos. It would affect the prices of food made directly from these commodities, such as bread, pasta and tortillas, and food made indirectly, such as pork, poultry, beef, milk and eggs. . . The rest of the world is... 2011  
Regina F. Burch WORLDVIEW DIVERSITY IN THE BOARDROOM: A LAW AND SOCIAL EQUITY RATIONALE 42 Loyola University Chicago Law Journal 585 (Summer 2011) I. Introduction. 586 II. Empirical Research on Corporate Boards. 597 A. Empirical Research on the Gender and Racial Composition of Corporate Boards. 597 B. Diversity, Governance, Fairness, and Profitability. 601 III. Research on the Theory of Cultural Cognition. 606 A. Cultural Cognition Theory and Empirical Research. 607 B. Critiques. 613 IV.... 2011  
Kaimipono David Wenger "TOO BIG TO REMEDY?" RETHINKING MASS RESTITUTION FOR SLAVERY AND JIM CROW 44 Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review 177 (Fall 2010) Slavery and Jim Crow inflicted horrific harms on Blacks in America. Official silence aggravated that harm, as neither victims nor their descendants received monetary restitution, nor even (until very recently) any official apology. Reparations advocates have repeatedly called for compensation to slave descendants. But how exactly does society... 2010  
Kendra Fox-Davis A BADGE OF INFERIORITY: ONE LAW STUDENT'S STORY OF A RACIALLY HOSTILE EDUCATIONAL ENVIRONMENT 23 National Black Law Journal 98 (2010) In 1967, my father was one of four African American students in the entering first year class at the University of Iowa School of Law. My father had journeyed from a historically black college in North Carolina to the Midwest because of a targeted outreach and admission effort for minority students. Before classes started, an associate dean met... 2010  
Christina J. Bostick A BARREL OF LAUGHS? OR, A RIVER OF TEARS? THE PROBLEM WITH AFRICAN AMERICANS USING COMEDY TO AIR DIRTY LAUNDRY 2 Georgetown Journal of Law & Modern Critical Race Perspectives 257 (Fall, 2010) Some of the most uncomfortable memories of my childhood revolve around what my grandmother often referred to as my big mouth. I was a smart, spunky kid with a keen knack for speaking at an early age. People often admired me for being such a well-spoken child; unfortunately, the frequent praise I received encouraged me to talk in spite of my... 2010  
Cheryl L. Wade AFRICAN-AMERICAN ENTREPRENEURS: INTEGRATION, EDUCATION, AND EXCLUSION 32 Western New England Law Review 483 (2010) In this Article, I describe some of the subtle, obscure, and hidden challenges that African-American entrepreneurs face by providing the narratives of three African-American businesspeople. Two of the narratives are about African Americans who started businesses in the first half of the twentieth century. Theirs is a success story. Their businesses... 2010  
Robert S. Chang , Adrienne D. Davis AN EPISTOLARY EXCHANGE MAKING UP IS HARD TO DO: RACE/GENDER/SEXUAL ORIENTATION IN THE LAW SCHOOL CLASSROOM 33 Harvard Journal of Law & Gender 1 (Winter 2010) Abstract. This exchange of letters picks up where Professors Adrienne Davis and Robert Chang left off in an earlier exchange that examined who speaks, who is allowed to speak, and what is remembered. Here, Professors Davis and Chang explore the dynamics of race, gender, and sexual orientation in the law school classroom. They compare the... 2010  
Christine Tamer ARAB AMERICANS, AFFIRMATIVE ACTION, AND A QUEST FOR RACIAL IDENTITY 16 Texas Journal on Civil Liberties & Civil Rights 101 (Fall 2010) I. Introduction. 101 II. The Worst of Both Worlds. 103 A. Post 9-11 Racism, Hate, and Discrimination. 105 B. Discrimination, Racism, and Overt Acts of Hate on Campus. 106 III. Officially White; Realistically Black. 108 A. Check it Right, You Ain't White!. 112 B. The Mark of Blackness. 114 IV. Race-Based Affirmative Action and Why Arab Americans... 2010  
Harvey Gee ASIAN AMERICANS AND CRIMINAL LAW AND CRIMINAL PROCEDURE: A MISSING CHAPTER FROM THE RACE JURISPRUDENCE ANTHOLOGY 2 Georgetown Journal of Law & Modern Critical Race Perspectives 185 (Fall, 2010) The issue of Asian American youth gangs has received scant attention from the media and law enforcement; but on a personal level, I have always been aware that Asian Americans are affected by crime and the criminal justice system. Like many Asian Americans growing up in San Francisco during the 1970s and 1980s, I was aware of the existence of... 2010  
  AUTHOR BIOGRAPHIES 20 Southern California Interdisciplinary Law Journal 5 (Fall 2010) Maria Aristodemou teaches legal theory at Birkbeck College, University of London. She is the author of Law and Literature: Journeys from Her to Eternity (Oxford University Press 2000) and of numerous articles on law, literature and psychoanalysis. Her current work focuses on the intersections between legal and psychoanalytic theory, particularly in... 2010  
Lindsay Pérez Huber BEAUTIFULLY POWERFUL: A LATCRIT REFLECTION ON COMING TO AN EPISTEMOLOGICAL CONSCIOUSNESS AND THE POWER OF TESTIMONIO 18 American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy and the Law 839 (2010) I. Introduction. 840 II. Coming to the Study. 841 III. Description of the Study. 843 IV. Coming to an Epistemological Consciousness. 844 V. The Power of Testimonio. 848 VI. Conclusion. 851 2010  
Angela P. Harris BEYOND THE MONSTER FACTORY: GENDER VIOLENCE, RACE, AND THE LIBERATORY POTENTIAL OF RESTORATIVE JUSTICE 25 Berkeley Journal of Gender, Law & Justice 199 (Spring 2010) Some years ago, Frank Zimring and Gordon Hawkins noted that American crime rates are similar to those of other industrialized nations in most categories of nonviolent crime - even lower, in some cases. Only when it comes to lethal violence does the United States outpace other Western nations, with homicide rates many, many times greater. Zimring... 2010  
Lloyd Liu BREAKING THE SOCIAL CONTRACT TO COVER: ELITE LAW FIRMS AND THE ERASURE OF MINORITY CULTURE 2 Georgetown Journal of Law & Modern Critical Race Perspectives 277 (Fall, 2010) During my mid-summer evaluation at a large law firm, I was told I exhibited a perceived lack of self-confidence in my work. We sit across a large oak conference table. The two evaluators, a White female intellectual property partner and a White male litigation partner, have put on their proper professional faces. They smile before they insert a... 2010  
Sharmila Lodhia BRIDES WITHOUT BORDERS: NEW TOPOGRAPHIES OF VIOLENCE AND THE FUTURE OF LAW IN AN ERA OF TRANSNATIONAL CITIZEN-SUBJECTS 19 Columbia Journal of Gender and Law 703 (2010) As she peeked through her rich and intricately woven maroon and golden veil to catch a glimpse of her husband Manoj, 18-year-old Neeta started daydreaming about the luxurious life that lay ahead of her. The first in her family to go abroad, she thought to herself: this wedding is a dream come true. Reminisces Neeta's mother; We thought this was... 2010  
Meghan Condon BRUISE OF A DIFFERENT COLOR: THE POSSIBILITIES OF RESTORATIVE JUSTICE FOR MINORITY VICTIMS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE 17 Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy 487 (Summer, 2010) O.J. threw me against the walls . and on the floor. Put bruises on my arm and back. The window scared me. Thought he'd throw me out . [He] threw a fit, chased me, grabbed me, threw me into walls. Threw all my clothes out of the window into the street three floors below. Bruised me . Everywhere I go . he shows up. I really think he is going to kill... 2010  
Kimberlé W. Crenshaw CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THREE KINDS: ON TEACHING DOMINANCE FEMINISM AND INTERSECTIONALITY 46 Tulsa Law Review 151 (Fall 2010) I am pleased to be a part of this symposium honoring Catharine MacKinnon's groundbreaking work as a feminist theorist, legal advocate, and global activist. This invitation not only presents the opportunity to examine the interface between dominance theory and intersectionality, but also the occasion to delve further into the vexed rhetorical... 2010  
Angela Onwuachi-Willig COMPLIMENTARY DISCRIMINATION AND COMPLEMENTARY DISCRIMINATION IN FACULTY HIRING 87 Washington University Law Review 763 (2010) This Article focuses on one form of discrimination in faculty hiring. Specifically, this Article concentrates on discrimination against the overqualified minority faculty candidate, the candidate who is presumed to have too many opportunities and thus gets excluded from faculty interview lists and consideration. In so doing, this Article poses... 2010  
Adrien Katherine Wing CONCEPTUALIZING GLOBAL SUBSTANTIVE JUSTICE IN THE AGE OF OBAMA 13 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 705 (Spring 2010) The election of Barack Obama as the forty-fourth President of the United States has given hope to many in the United States that our nation could be on the verge of a new era. The U.S. government should seriously address many of the lingering inequities that have plagued its people since the founding of the United States--racism, sexism,... 2010  
Bennett Capers CRIME MUSIC 7 Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law 749 (Spring, 2010) There is a small but rich history of legal scholars drawing uncommon connections between music and the law. Professor Jerome Frank argued that understanding the work musicians do when they interpret a musical composition can help us better understand the work judges do when they interpret rules and statutes, and when they engage in fact finding.... 2010  
Beverly I. Moran DISAPPEARING ACT: THE LACK OF VALUES TRAINING IN LEGAL EDUCATION - A CASE FOR CULTURAL COMPETENCY 38 Southern University Law Review 1 (Fall, 2010) More than one hundred years ago United States higher education changed in response to European universities from institutions that civilized elite young males into centers for the production of knowledge. The new science centered United States university altered both undergraduate and professional education. Prior to the late nineteenth century,... 2010  
Osagie K. Obasogie DO BLIND PEOPLE SEE RACE? SOCIAL, LEGAL, AND THEORETICAL CONSIDERATIONS 44 Law and Society Review 585 (September/December, 2010) Although the meaning, significance, and definition of race have been debated for centuries, one thread of thought unifies almost all of the many diverging perspectives: a largely unquestioned belief that race is self-evident and visually obvious, defined largely by skin color, facial features, and other visual cues. This suggests that seeing race... 2010  
Kathryn Abrams EMPATHY AND EXPERIENCE IN THE SOTOMAYOR HEARINGS 36 Ohio Northern University Law Review 263 (2010) For four days last summer, I felt I had taken a dizzying plunge down a rabbit hole and landed in a very strange place. The visual markers identified it as the U.S. Senate, exercising its advise and consent powers on the nomination of a new justice of the Supreme Court. But much of what I heard there seemed utterly baffling. A federal judge, who... 2010  
Harry G. Hutchison EMPLOYEE FREE CHOICE OR EMPLOYEE FORGED CHOICE? RACE IN THE MIRROR OF EXCLUSIONARY HIERARCHY 15 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 369 (Spring 2010) The Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA) is arguably the most transformative piece of labor legislation to come before Congress since the enactment of the National Labor Relations Act of 1935 (NLRA). Putting the potential impact of the EFCA in historical perspective, one commentator contends that the NLRA marked the culmination of a systematic effort of... 2010  
Robert A. Kahn FLEMMING ROSE, THE DANISH CARTOON CONTROVERSY, AND THE NEW EUROPEAN FREEDOM OF SPEECH 40 California Western International Law Journal 253 (Spring 2010) I. A Brave (Yet Inclusive) New World of Freedom of Speech. 254 II. The Strange Career of Flemming Rose. 258 A. Flemming Rose, Denmark, and a Growing Fear of Radical Islam. 258 B. Rose Publishes the Cartoons and the Controversy Builds. 260 C. Rose in the Eye of the Storm. 263 D. Free Speech Celebrity. 265 E. Hero or Huckster?. 267 III. The... 2010  
Dean Spade FOR THOSE CONSIDERING LAW SCHOOL 6 Unbound: Harvard Journal of the Legal Left 111 (2010) I get several emails every week from people who want to go to law school or are trying to figure out if they want to go to law school. Most are queer or trans activists or people who want to somehow transform the world and end various harmful and horrible dynamics impacting people and communities they are a part of or care about. Because I talk on... 2010  
Nancy Ehrenreich FOREWORD: CONCEPTUALIZING SUBSTANTIVE JUSTICE 13 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 533 (Spring 2010) In April 2009, in the midst of a freak, city-stopping spring snowstorm, the conference on Conceptualizing Substantive Justice was held at the University of Denver's Sturm College of Law. The nation was flush with optimism, and those on the left of the political spectrum felt particularly hopeful. Barack Obama's election just a few months earlier... 2010  
Harvey Gee FROM HALLWAY CORRIDOR TO HOMELESSNESS: TENANTS LACK RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN NEW YORK HOUSING COURT 17 Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy 87 (Winter, 2010) The New York City Housing Court (Housing Court) has been widely regarded as an ineffective institution that has not fulfilled its mandate of preserving the City's housing stock since its creation in 1972. Despite the Legislature's broad delegation of power to the Housing Court, it has never been accorded the stature or resources essential to... 2010  
Suzette M. Malveaux FRONT LOADING AND HEAVY LIFTING: HOW PRE-DISMISSAL DISCOVERY CAN ADDRESS THE DETRIMENTAL EFFECT OF IQBAL ON CIVIL RIGHTS CASES 14 Lewis & Clark Law Review 65 (Spring 2010) Although the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure are trans-substantive, they have a greater detrimental effect on certain substantive claims. In particular, the Supreme Court's recent interpretation of Rule 8(a)(2)'s pleading requirement and Rule 12(b)(6)'s dismissal criteria--in Bell Atlantic v. Twombly and Ashcroft v. Iqbal--sets forth a... 2010  
Michael S. Vastine GIVE ME YOUR TIRED, YOUR POOR . . . AND YOUR CONVICTED? TEACHING "JUSTICE" TO LAW STUDENTS BY DEFENDING CRIMINAL IMMIGRANTS IN REMOVAL PROCEEDINGS 10 University of Maryland Law Journal of Race, Religion, Gender and Class 341 (Fall 2010) Why do you want to participate in the immigration clinic? I asked the student, the fifth of twelve interviews I was conducting that spring day, as my teaching fellow and I sought to choose the incoming class of eight students for the next academic year. I am just totally committed to human rights, she replied. Her earnestness did not leave any... 2010  
Ernesto Hernández-López GUANTÁNAMO AS A "LEGAL BLACK HOLE": A BASE FOR EXPANDING SPACE, MARKETS, AND CULTURE 45 University of San Francisco Law Review 141 (Summer 2010) WHY DOES THE U.S. NAVAL Station at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba (Guantánamo or GTMO) appear as a legal black hole? It's been labeled a quirky outpost with an unusual jurisdictional status and an anomalous legal zone. After eight years, nearly 800 persons have been detained on the base. Cases from this year show that elemental legal questions... 2010  
Ernesto Hernández-López GUANTÁNAMO AS OUTSIDE AND INSIDE THE U.S.: WHY IS A BASE A LEGAL ANOMALY? 18 American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy and the Law 471 (2010) I. Intro. 471 II. Empire in Territorial Expansion, Wealth-Creation, and Cultural Superiority. 478 III. GTMO's Past: a Base for Empire's Space, Markets, and Culture. 484 A. Expanding Space and Flexible Borders with the Platt Amendment and Insular Cases. 484 B. A Base Protects Regional Markets and Global Power After 1898. 487 C. GTMO's Cultural... 2010  
Carol Izumi IMPLICIT BIAS AND THE ILLUSION OF MEDIATOR NEUTRALITY 34 Washington University Journal of Law and Policy 71 (2010) Plaintiff (P), the owner/operator of a carpet cleaning business, sued the defendant-homeowners for $500 in a breach of contract action for the unpaid balance of a $1,000 carpet cleaning agreement. Defendants (Ds or Mr. and Mrs. D) counterclaimed for the return of the $500 deposit they paid before work began. Ds hired P to dry out and clean the... 2010  
Rebecca Tsosie INDIGENOUS WOMEN AND INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW: THE CHALLENGES OF COLONIALISM, CULTURAL SURVIVAL, AND SELF-DETERMINATION 15 UCLA Journal of International Law and Foreign Affairs 187 (Spring 2010) As indigenous peoples move toward full realization of their right to self-determination, as affirmed by the text of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, some have queried whether this will promote the ability of indigenous groups to violate the rights of vulnerable members, particularly women. International human... 2010  
Jeanne M. Woods INTRODUCTION: THEORETICAL INSIGHTS FROM THE CUTTING EDGE 104 American Society of International Law Proceedings 389 (March 24-27, 2010) This panel was convened at 12:45 p.m., Friday, March 26, by its moderator, Jeanne M. Woods of Loyola University College of Law, who introduced the panelists: Henry Richardson III of Temple University Beasley School of Law and Siba Grovogui of Johns Hopkins University. Balakrishnan (Raj) Rajagopal of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,... 2010  
Dean Spade INTRODUCTION: TRANSGENDER ISSUES AND THE LAW 8 Seattle Journal for Social Justice 445 (Spring/Summer, 2010) This year, scholars and activists are marking the twentieth anniversary of the enunciation and analysis of intersectionality by legal theorist Kimberlé W. Crenshaw. The early 1990s also saw the emergence of some important galvanizing texts in what would come to be identified as trans studies and trans politics, especially Leslie Feinberg's... 2010  
Emily Albrink Hartigan JUST TALKING WITH THE FURNITURE 13 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 615 (Spring 2010) Ma'am, trying to have a conversation with you would be like trying to argue with a dining room table. I have no interest in doing it.--Rep. Barney Frank Faced with a woman at a health care town hall in the contentious times of August, 2009, Representative Barney Frank made clear that someone carrying a picture of President Barack Obama with a... 2010  
David S. Cohen KEEPING MEN "MEN" AND WOMEN DOWN: SEX SEGREGATION, ANTI-ESSENTIALISM, AND MASCULINITY 33 Harvard Journal of Law & Gender 509 (Summer 2010) Introduction. 509 I. The Stubborn Persistence of Sex Segregation. 513 II. Gender, Antiessentialism, and Masculinities. 517 A. Gender and Antiessentialism. 517 B. Multiple Masculinities. 521 III. Hegemonic Masculinity. 522 A. Not Feminine. 525 B. Heterosexual. 528 C. Physically Aggressive. 532 IV. The Hegemony of Men. 535 A. The Category of Men .... 2010  
Marc-Tizoc González LATINA/O (PUBLIC/LEGAL) INTELLECTUALS, SOCIAL CRISES, AND CONTEMPORARY SOCIAL MOVEMENTS 18 American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy and the Law 787 (2010) I. Introduction. 787 II. Historicizing Inquiries About Latina/o Intellectuals. 789 A. Agents, Actors, and Subjects of History. 791 B. Gente de corazón - activistas y intelectuales. 794 1. Latina Labor Leaders. 795 2. Latino Journalists. 797 III. Conclusion. 799 2010  
Beth Caldwell LATINAS' EXPERIENCES IN RELATION TO GANGS: INTERSECTIONALITY OF RACE, CLASS, GENDER, AND THE STATE 2 Georgetown Journal of Law & Modern Critical Race Perspectives 19 (Spring, 2010) Women involved with gangs face gender bias and oppression at the micro, mezzo, and macro levels: within themselves and their families, within the gang subculture, at the community level, and through the state, as enacted by the law and its systems of enforcement. Gang-involved women face multiple experiences of victimization that occur within these... 2010  
Andrew W. Bribriesco LATINO/A PLAINTIFFS AND THE INTERSECTION OF STEREOTYPES, UNCONSCIOUS BIAS, RACE-NEUTRAL POLICIES, AND PERSONAL INJURY 13 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 373 (Winter 2010) A man is driving down the street in his pickup truck. He is on his way to work. For twenty years, the man has taken the same route to the factory--he passes two large intersections on Highway One and turns right on Riverside Drive. While crossing the second intersection, another car fails to stop at the red light and crashes into the side of the... 2010  
Calvin Morrill, Lauren B. Edelman, Karolyn Tyson, Richard Arum LEGAL MOBILIZATION IN SCHOOLS: THE PARADOX OF RIGHTS AND RACE AMONG YOUTH 44 Law and Society Review 651 (September/December, 2010) In this article, we analyze ethnoracial patterns in youth perceptions and responses to rights violations and advance a new model of legal mobilization that includes formal, quasi-, and extralegal action. Slightly more than half of the 5,461 students in our sample reported past rights violations involving discrimination, harassment, freedom of... 2010  
With Richard Delgado, Jean Stefancic LIVING HISTORY INTERVIEW 19 Transnational Law & Contemporary Problems 221 (Winter 2010) One of the unique features of Transnational Law and Contemporary Problems (TLCP) is the publication of a Living History Interview with a person of international accomplishment and renown. The Living History Interview complements the symposium format of TLCP by blending theory and practice, thus giving a practical perspective to the questions... 2010  
Robert Rubinson MAPPING THE WORLD: FACTS AND MEANING IN ADJUDICATION AND MEDIATION 63 Maine Law Review 61 (2010) [N]o system of concepts that serves as an ordering structure can have categories, definitions, prototypes, principles, or what-have-you that are as numerous, variegated, and nuanced as the circumstances which bring the system into play. Anthony G. Amsterdam [I]f one's only tool is a key, then every problem will seem to be a lock. Diane Ackerman... 2010  
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