AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearKey Terms in Title or Summary
John Tehranian TOWARDS A CRITICAL IP THEORY: COPYRIGHT, CONSECRATION, AND CONTROL 2012 Brigham Young University Law Review 1237 (2012) All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others. -- George Orwell, Animal Farm Intellectual-property jurisprudence increasingly informs the way in which social order is maintained in the twenty-first century. By regulating cultural production and patrolling the dissemination of knowledge, copyright law mediates the exercise of... 2012  
Jeremiah Chin WHAT A LOAD OF HOPE: THE POST-RACIAL MIXTAPE 48 California Western Law Review 369 (Spring 2012) I get down for my grandfather who took my momma Made her sit in that seat where white folks ain't want us to eat At the tender age of six she was arrested for the sit-ins With that in my blood I was born to be different That's why I hear new music and I just don't be feeling itRacism's still alive they just be concealing it. As a hip-hop producer,... 2012  
Anthony Paul Farley WHEN THE STARS BEGIN TO FALL: INTRODUCTION TO CRITICAL RACE THEORY & MARXISM 1 Columbia Journal of Race and Law 226 (July, 2012) My Lord, what a morning My Lord, what a morning When the stars begin to fall. Slavery is not dead. Slavery is death. Slavery is white-over-black to white-over-black to white-over-black, and that continually. Whether white-over-black appears before us as slavery or as segregation or as neosegregation is not at all important. All three haunts,... 2012  
Christian Joerges, David M. Trubek, Peer Zumbansen "CRITICAL LEGAL THOUGHT: AN AMERICAN-GERMAN DEBATE" AN INTRODUCTION AT THE OCCASION OF ITS REPUBLICATION IN THE GERMAN LAW JOURNAL 25 YEARS LATER 12 German Law Journal 1 (January 1, 2011) Precisely 25 years ago, two of us, namely CJ and DT, initiated a conference project on American and German traditions of sociological jurisprudence and critique of law which was in fact realized in July 1986 in a somewhat romantic castle near Bremen where we had intense discussions which remained alive in the minds of the participants from both... 2011  
Kristen K. Robbins-Tiscione A CALL TO COMBINE RHETORICAL THEORY AND PRACTICE IN THE LEGAL WRITING CLASSROOM 50 Washburn Law Journal 319 (Winter 2011) [I]n the field of . . . legal instruction a knowledge of theories and techniques is of the greatest importance. The theory and practice of law have been separated in legal education to their detriment since the turn of the twentieth century. As history teaches us and even the 2007 Carnegie Report perhaps suggests, teaching practice without theory... 2011  
Steven W. Bender , Francisco Valdes AT AND BEYOND FIFTEEN: MAPPING LATCRIT THEORY, COMMUNITY, AND PRAXIS 1 University of Miami Race & Social Justice Law Review 177 (2011) Introduction. 178 I. Taking Stock: Latcrit at Fifteen. 181 A. Critical Roots: Latcrit Theory, Praxis, And Community, 1995-2010. 182 1. OutCrit Democracy in Theory and Practice: Values, Functions, Guideposts, and Postulates. 182 2. The LatCrit Record: Highlights and Shortfalls in Substance and Method. 191 a. Substantive Highlights: Lats Plus.... 2011  
Beth Ribet EMERGENT DISABILITY AND THE LIMITS OF EQUALITY: A CRITICAL READING OF THE UN CONVENTION ON THE RIGHTS OF PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES 14 Yale Human Rights and Development Law Journal 155 (2011) The UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities marks a shift in international legal relationships to, and conceptions of, disability. The Convention is the first binding international instrument of its kind related to disability. Its premises differ from the earlier World Programme on Disability, and more closely integrate the... 2011  
SpearIt ENSLAVED BY WORDS: LEGALITIES & LIMITATIONS OF "POST-RACIAL" LANGUAGE 2011 Michigan State Law Review 705 (2011) Introduction. 706 I. The Temple of Taxonomy: Built on Sand. 708 A. Race & Color in the Language of Law. 710 1. Constitutions. 710 2. Statutes. 714 3. The U.S. Census. 720 B. Legal & Social Constructions of Whiteness. 726 II. Structural Racism. 729 A. The Politics of Naming. 730 1. Objectifying the Other. 732 2. Ritualizing Otherness. 734 B.... 2011  
Deleso Alford Washington EXAMINING THE "STICK" OF ACCREDITATION FOR MEDICAL SCHOOLS THROUGH REPRODUCTIVE JUSTICE LENS: A TRANSFORMATIVE REMEDY FOR TEACHING THE TUSKEGEE SYPHILIS STUDY 26 Journal of Civil Rights & Economic Development 153 (Fall 2011) False And What About The Women Of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study? The Tuskegee Syphilis Study was never really a study to find the answer or even an end to the disease of racist and race-based science that hides the truth from all mankind. It left out the women who wore race - with tight lips and heavy hearts, dresses often ironed and sometimes torn,... 2011  
Justin C. Aday FITTING SQUARE PEGS INTO ROUND HOLES: HOW RACE-BASED AFFIRMATIVE ACTION IN HIGHER EDUCATION ADMISSIONS IS AN INADEQUATE AND INEQUITABLE MEANS TO AN END 6 University of Massachusetts Roundtable Symposium Law Journal 125 (2011) We have all probably heard the old adage, It's like trying to fit a square peg into a round hole. With this statement, we assume that because of the incompatibility of the shapes, the square peg cannot fit into the round hole. If this is the case, then how can the square peg fit into the round hole? There are three possibilities: make the hole... 2011  
Thomas P. Ziehnert FOOD DESERTS: IS THE LET'S MOVE CAMPAIGN AN OASIS FOR THE URBAN MINORITY COMMUNITY? 7 Modern American 22 (Fall, 2011) I work, sometimes three and four jobs, and I still get SNAP assistance. I finally got one job that has reduced my need for assistance from $450.00 a month to $60.00 a month. But the fact is, that when it comes to access[ing] quality, healthy food in my community on my income, it is still almost impossible. The barriers are staggering--whether it's... 2011  
Tanya Katerí Hernández HATE SPEECH AND THE LANGUAGE OF RACISM IN LATIN AMERICA: A LENS FOR RECONSIDERING GLOBAL HATE SPEECH RESTRICTIONS AND LEGISLATION MODELS 32 University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law 805 (Spring 2011) When she passes she calls my attention, but her hair, there's no way no. Her catinga [African] (body odor) almost caused me to faint. Look, I cannot stand her odor. Look, look, look at her hair! It looks like a scouring pad for cleaning pans. I already told her to wash herself. But she insisted and didn't want to listen to me. This smelly negra... 2011  
Frank Rudy Cooper HYPER-INCARCERATION AS A MULTIDIMENSIONAL ATTACK: REPLYING TO ANGELA HARRIS THROUGH THE WIRE 37 Washington University Journal of Law & Policy 67 (2011) Angela Harris's article in this symposium makes a valuable contribution to our understanding of hyper-incarceration. She argues, quite persuasively, that the term gender violence should be understood broadly to include men's individual and structural violence against other men. She then considers what we ought to do about the incredible increase... 2011  
Steven W. Bender , Francisco Valdes LATCRIT XV SYMPOSIUM AFTERWORD--AT AND BEYOND FIFTEEN: MAPPING LATCRIT THEORY, COMMUNITY, AND PRAXIS 14 Harvard Latino Law Review 397 (Spring 2011) Introduction. 398 I. Taking Stock: LatCrit at Fifteen. 400 A. Critical Roots: LatCrit Theory, Praxis, and Community, 1995-2010. 401 1. OutCrit Democracy in Theory and Practice: Values, Functions, Guideposts, and Postulates. 401 2. The LatCrit Record: Highlights and Shortfalls in Substance and Method . 409 a. Substantive Highlights: Lats Plus... 2011  
César Cuauhtémoc García Hernández , Marc-Tizoc González LATCRIT XV SYMPOSIUM FOREWORD: FIFTEEN YEARS OF RECONSTRUCTING THE WORLD 14 Harvard Latino Law Review 243 (Spring 2011) %21Eramos sólo jóvenes cuando el proyecto que ahora es LatCrit nació. While we were navigating the transitions from adolescence to adulthood with awkwardness, luck, and grace, a small band of activist scholars gathered on Cinco de Mayo in 1996 to discuss social and legal issues especially germane to Latinas/os, initiate the creation of a body of... 2011  
Bela August Walker MAKING ROOM IN THE PROPERTY CANON INTEGRATING SPACES: PROPERTY LAW AND RACE. BY ALFRED BROPHY, ALBERTO LOPEZ & KALI MURRAY. NEW YORK, NEW YORK: ASPEN PUBLISHERS, 2011. 368 PAGES. $40.00. 90 Texas Law Review 423 (December, 2011) Property is oft considered the province of the antediluvian, far situated from modern concerns, particularly issues of race and diversity. Even more so than other areas of legal academia, Property remains the province of dead white men. Courses and casebooks continue to hark back to Blackstone, the epitome of the antiquated. The thread of old... 2011  
Rachel Kahn Best, Lauren B. Edelman, Linda Hamilton Krieger, Scott R. Eliason MULTIPLE DISADVANTAGES: AN EMPIRICAL TEST OF INTERSECTIONALITY THEORY IN EEO LITIGATION 45 Law and Society Review 991 (December, 2011) A rich theoretical literature describes the disadvantages facing plaintiffs who suffer multiple, or intersecting, axes of discrimination. This article extends extant literature by distinguishing two forms of intersectionality: demographic intersectionality, in which overlapping demographic characteristics produce disadvantages that are more than... 2011  
andré douglas pond cummings POST RACIALISM? 14 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 601 (Summer 2011) The 2008 election of President Barack Obama represents a halcyon moment in U.S. history. President Obama's election begs a critical question: whether his nationwide landslide victory catapulted the United States, with its sordid racial past, into a truly post-racial place as many claim. While Obama's election was possible due to important changes... 2011  
andré douglas pond cummings RACIAL CODING AND THE FINANCIAL MARKET CRISIS 2011 Utah Law Review 141 (2011) The financial market crisis of 2008 has plagued the United States and countries around the world. The underlying causes of the 2008 collapse are numerous, intricate, and complex. Academic scholars, investigative reporters, and leading economists are now deconstructing the multiplicity of failures that enabled the breathtaking meltdown that nearly... 2011  
Craig Livermore RACIAL COMPLEXITY AND THE ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY EDUCATION ACT 26 Journal of Civil Rights & Economic Development 67 (Fall 2011) The fact is that the comments that have been made and the issues that have surfaced over the last few weeks reflect the complexities of race in this country that we've never really worked through--a part of our union that we have yet to perfect. And if we walk away now, if we simply retreat into our respective corners, we will never be able to come... 2011  
Alfredo Mirandé RASCUACHE LAWYER: A PARADIGM OF ORDINARY LITIGATION 1 University of Miami Race & Social Justice Law Review 155 (2011) I. Introduction. 155 II. Rascuache Lawyering: Toward a Theory of Ordinary Litigation. 157 III. Rebellious Lawyering and Rascuache Lawyering. 162 IV. The Brown Buffalo and Rascuache Lawyering. 168 V. A Paradigm of Rascuache Lawyering. 170 VI. Conclusion. 175 2011  
Caroline Bettinger-Lopez, Davida Finger, Meetali Jain, JoNel Newman, Sarah Paoletti, Deborah M. Weissman, University of Miami School of Law, Human Rights Clinic, Loyola University N.O. College of Law, Community Justice Clinic, Faculty of Law, University o REDEFINING HUMAN RIGHTS LAWYERING THROUGH THE LENS OF CRITICAL THEORY: LESSONS FOR PEDAGOGY AND PRACTICE 18 Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy 337 (Symposium 2011) In recent years, human rights clinics have mushroomed across United States law schools, specializing in work ranging from direct representation of asylum seekers in U.S. courts, to international litigation, to project-based advocacy that includes fact-finding visits and production of reports documenting human rights violations throughout the world.... 2011  
Richard Delgado RODRIGO'S RECONSIDERATION: INTERSECTIONALITY AND THE FUTURE OF CRITICAL RACE THEORY 96 Iowa Law Review 1247 (May, 2011) I. Introduction: In Which Rodrigo Announces Himself in a Novel Manner. 1248 II. In Which Rodrigo Explains His New Thesis and the Meaning of His Message (Are You a Crit?). 1250 III. Rodrigo's Critique--How a Radical Movement Has Begun To Lose Its Way. 1254 A. Three Core Critical-Race-Theory Ideas. 1256 1. Narrative Jurisprudence. 1257 2.... 2011  
Darrell D. Jackson SANDER, THE MISMATCH THEORY, AND AFFIRMATIVE ACTION: CRITIQUING THE ABSENCE OF PRAXIS IN POLICY 89 Denver University Law Review 245 (2011) This Article provides an efficient synthesis of the research to date on a controversial topic, Professor Richard Sander's mismatch theory, and the traction it continues to gain through litigation and political posturing. It is also the point of embarkation on a forthcoming exploration of the appropriate place for African American law students.... 2011  
Andrea B. Korb SEPTA, PHILADELPHIA, AND TRANSPORTATION EQUITY IN AMERICA 3 Georgetown Journal of Law & Modern Critical Race Perspectives 119 (Spring, 2011) Transportation played a pivotal role in the history of racism and civil rights in America. Today, a spatial mismatch between housing and jobs, and continuing residential segregation between America's cities and suburbs, has put low-income minority populations living in urban communities and without access to cars at a marked disadvantage. As a... 2011  
Mary Helen McNeal SLOW DOWN, PEOPLE BREATHING : LAWYERING, CULTURE AND PLACE 18 Clinical Law Review 183 (Fall 2011) This article examines the role of culture in lawyering, evolving from my experience relocating from the East Coast to become Clinic Director at the University of Montana School of Law. When I moved to Missoula, Montana in 1996, I realized that life would be very different from my previous experience living predominately on the East Coast. However,... 2011  
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  
23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40