AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearKey Terms in Title or Summary
Arvin Lugay "IN DEFENSE OF INTERNMENT": WHY SOME AMERICANS ARE MORE "EQUAL" THAN OTHERS 12 Asian Law Journal 209 (April, 2005) At what point do the civil liberties protections of the Constitution cease to matter? The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 have sparked a national debate over balancing the pursuit of national security with the protection of civil rights. This debate, however, misses the more pertinent question regarding the state of civil rights today. The... 2005  
Sylvia R. Lazos Vargas "KULTURKAMPF[S]" OR "FIT[S] OF SPITE"?: TAKING THE ACADEMIC CULTURE WARS SERIOUSLY 35 Seton Hall Law Review 1309 (2005) Polarization and heated debate within legal academia are nothing new. Some might argue that vigorous contentiousness, even if not always civil, is essential to a healthy intellectual culture. Others would note that lawyers, legal academics especially, are a highly contentious bunch with a reputation for aggressive behavior. Heated debates between... 2005  
Francisco Valdes "WE ARE NOW OF THE VIEW" : BACKLASH ACTIVISM, CULTURAL CLEANSING, AND THE KULTURKAMPF TO RESURRECT THE OLD DEAL 35 Seton Hall Law Review 1407 (2005) For the ninth time in as many years, LatCritters met in 2004 during the Cinco de Mayo weekend not only to help recall the unjust events of that day a century and a half ago, but also to center and challenge its continuing legacies in law and society. These legacies live on in many forms and many ways, of course, and this year, the LatCrit IX... 2005  
Nicholas Espiritu (E)RACING YOUTH: THE RACIALIZED CONSTRUCTION OF CALIFORNIA'S PROPOSITION 21 AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF ALTERNATE CONTESTATIONS 52 Cleveland State Law Review 189 (2005) Niggaz with knowledge is more dangerous than niggaz with guns They make the guns easy to get and try to keep niggaz dumb Target the gangs and graffiti with the Prop 21 . I already know the deal but what the fuck do I tell my son? Talib Kweli I. Introduction. 189 II. Ideological Foundations and Critical Analysis of Direct Democracy. 192 III.... 2005  
Annalisa Jabaily 1967: HOW ESTRANGEMENT AND ALLIANCES BETWEEN BLACKS, JEWS, AND ARABS SHAPED A GENERATION OF CIVIL RIGHTS FAMILY VALUES 23 Law & Inequality: A Journal of Theory and Practice 197 (Winter 2005) The entire civil rights struggle needs a new interpretation, a broader interpretation. We need to look at this civil rights thing from another angle--from the inside as well as from the outside. To those of us whose philosophy is black nationalism, the only way you can get involved in the civil rights struggle is give it a new interpretation. That... 2005  
Daria Roithmayr A DANGEROUS SUPPLEMENT 55 Journal of Legal Education 80 (March/June, 2005) The supplement supplements. It adds only to replace. --Jacques Derrida, Of Grammatology I've reached that point in my teaching career where my age approaches twice that of the average student in my class. I find myself wondering, as time passes, how salient my own law school experiences and views of the world have remained for my students. Despite... 2005  
Anthony C. Infanti A TAX CRIT IDENTITY CRISIS? OR TAX EXPENDITURE ANALYSIS, DECONSTRUCTION, AND THE RETHINKING OF A COLLECTIVE IDENTITY 26 Whittier Law Review 707 (Spring 2005) There is nothing unusual about the appearance of deconstructive arguments in the texts of non-deconstructionists . . . . - J. M. Balkin How to begin? A story to set the tone seems to work well, but my usual story line simply won't do the job this time. You see, I've recently begun my articles by tracing the thought process that led me to the... 2005  
Margaret E. Johnson AN EXPERIMENT IN INTEGRATING CRITICAL THEORY AND CLINICAL EDUCATION 13 American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy and the Law 161 (2005) Introduction. 162 I. Clinical Legal Education. 164 II. Clinical Education Through Feminist Legal Theory and Other Critical Legal Theories. 167 III. Integrating Critical Legal Theory and Clinical Legal Education. 171 A. The Women and the Law Clinic and the Domestic Violence Clinic. 171 B. Reconfiguring the Clinics' Seminar Curriculum. 172 C.... 2005  
John Hayakawa Torok ASIAN AMERICAN JURISPRUDENCE: ON CURRICULUM 2005 Michigan State Law Review 635 (Summer 2005) Introduction. 636 I. Some Background for Early Asian American Jurisprudence. 642 II. Preliminary Questions. 649 A. What Is Asian American?. 649 B. Does Asian American Jurisprudence Differ from Asian American Studies?. 657 C. What Makes it Jurisprudence?. 660 III. Columbia Asian American Jurisprudence Classes--1997-1999. 662 A. Antecedents of... 2005  
Michele Goodwin ASSISTED REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY AND THE DOUBLE BIND: THE ILLUSORY CHOICE OF MOTHERHOOD 9 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice Just. 1 (Fall 2005) I. Introduction. 2 II. Double Bind Defined: Hierarchical Paradigms and Eclipsed Social Status of Motherhood. 7 A. The Heightened Catch-22 . 7 B. Double Bind Applied: A Critical Legal Theory Analysis. 12 III. The Illusory Notion of Choice: The Compatibility of Motherhood & Technology Reconsidered. 16 A. Infertility and ART Usage: A Statistical... 2005  
Mary Romero BROWN IS BEAUTIFUL 39 Law and Society Review 211 (March, 2005) In one of his most compelling speeches Malcolm X cried out, We want freedom by any means necessary. We want justice by any means necessary. We want equality by any means necessary (Malcolm X 1970:37). In this conservative era, it feels a bit odd to recall how fervently students, activists, parents, and even a few parish priests debated the range... 2005  
Angela Onwuachi-Willig , Mario L. Barnes BY ANY OTHER NAME?: ON BEING "REGARDED AS" BLACK, AND WHY TITLE VII SHOULD APPLY EVEN IF LAKISHA AND JAMAL ARE WHITE 2005 Wisconsin Law Review 1283 (2005) Forty years after the passage of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, scholars Marianne Bertrand and Sendhil Mullainathan reported the results of their groundbreaking study, Are Emily and Greg More Employable Than Lakisha and Jamal? A Field Experiment on Labor Market Discrimination. Their study revealed that simply having an African American... 2005  
Michael Eric Dyson CAN YOU HEAR ME NOW? 7 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law 621 (February, 2005) Thank you so much, Sister Tristan, for that very gracious introduction and to the dean for his eloquent remarks about the tone and tenor of the debate in this nation around race as well as Brother Carlos's insightful remarks about the struggle over race and jurisprudential rationality to define where we are in the nation. It's just good to be over... 2005  
Michael Boucai CAUGHT IN A WEB OF IGNORANCES: HOW BLACK AMERICANS ARE DENIED EQUAL PROTECTION OF THE LAWS 18 National Black Law Journal 239 (2004-2005) Introduction. 240 A. The Defective Doctrines of Equal Protection Law. 240 B. Willful Ignorance. 241 C. Thesis: Willful Ignorance, Racism, and Unequal Protection. 245 I. Blissful Ignorance and the Unintentional Discriminator. 249 A. Intent Doctrine and Willful Ignorance of History. 250 B. Intent Doctrine and the Privileging of Ignorance. 251 II.... 2005  
Francisco Valdes CITY AND CITIZEN: COMMUNITY-MAKING AS LEGAL THEORY AND SOCIAL STRUGGLE 52 Cleveland State Law Review 1 (2005) I. Introduction. 1 II. Operations of Power: Expanding the Critiques of Identity in Law and Culture. 3 A. City and Citizenship: Between and Beyond the Nation-State. 7 B. Race, Ethnicity and Gender: Identity Ideologies in Law and Culture. 14 C. Identity, Discourse and Society: Mapping the Lines of Critical Inquiry. 22 D. Migration, Land and Labor:... 2005  
Harvey Gee CIVIL LIBERTIES, NATIONAL SECURITY, AND THE JAPANESE AMERICAN INTERNMENT 45 Santa Clara Law Review 771 (2005) I don't want any of them (persons of Japanese ancestry) here. They are a dangerous element. There is no way to determine their loyalty. . . . It makes no difference whether he is an American citizen, he is still a Japanese. American citizenship does not necessarily determine loyalty. . . . [W]e must worry about the Japanese all the time until he is... 2005  
Guy-Uriel E. Charles COLORED SPEECH: CROSS BURNINGS, EPISTEMICS, AND THE TRIUMPH OF THE CRITS? 93 Georgetown Law Journal 575 (January, 2005) Virginia v. Black represents a complete reversal in the Court's approach to the constitutionality of anti-cross-burning statutes. In R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul, a unanimous Supreme Court held that St. Paul's ordinance regulating cross burnings violated the First Amendment. Writing for the Court, Justice Scalia explained that the purpose of the... 2005  
Eli J. Kay-Oliphant CONSIDERING RACE IN AMERICAN IMMIGRATION JURISPRUDENCE 54 Emory Law Journal 681 (Winter 2005) Imagine that you are President, fifteen years from now. You have been sitting in the Oval Office, thinking to yourself for over an hour. The silence is uncommon, considering your hectic schedule, and reflects the gravity of the situation and importance of the decision you must make. Time is moving slowly. Your mind races from one impossible... 2005  
Heidi Kitrosser CONTAINING UNPROTECTED SPEECH 57 Florida Law Review 843 (September, 2005) The Supreme Court long has deemed a few categories of speech so harmful and so lacking in value as to be unworthy of First Amendment protection. Under this approach, which this Article calls categorization doctrine, legislatures may regulate-even ban-unprotected speech categories in their entirety. Specifically, legislatures may pass laws punishing... 2005  
Charles R. Venator Santiago COUNTERING KULTURKAMPF POLITICS THROUGH CRITIQUE AND JUSTICE PEDAGOGY 50 Villanova Law Review 749 (2005) THE Ninth Annual Latina and Latino Critical Theory Conference (LatCrit IX) was held in Malvern, Pennsylvania between April 29 and May 1, 2004. This year's conference theme, Countering Kulturkampf Politics Through Critique and Justice Pedagogy, brought together a wide array of scholars, academics and activists from diverse backgrounds and... 2005  
Emily M.S. Houh CRITICAL RACE REALISM: RE-CLAIMING THE ANTIDISCRIMINATION PRINCIPLE THROUGH THE DOCTRINE OF GOOD FAITH IN CONTRACT LAW 66 University of Pittsburgh Law Review 455 (Spring, 2005) This Article comprises the last leg of a larger project I have undertaken on the implied obligation of good faith in contract law. I have argued elsewhere that, as a descriptive matter, the doctrine of good faith and fair dealing in contract law, despite some theoretical controversy in the established scholarship on the doctrine, functions in... 2005  
Margaret L. Satterthwaite CROSSING BORDERS, CLAIMING RIGHTS: USING HUMAN RIGHTS LAW TO EMPOWER WOMEN MIGRANT WORKERS 8 Yale Human Rights and Development Law Journal 1 (2005) This Article considers the impact of the Migrant Workers Convention on the human rights of women migrants. While the adoption of a convention targeting abuses against migrant workers is a significant development in international human rights law, the author cautions that its specialized nature might be perceived as a limitation on the obligations... 2005  
Kevin R. Johnson , Angela Onwuachi-Willig CRY ME A RIVER: THE LIMITS OF "A SYSTEMIC ANALYSIS OF AFFIRMATIVE ACTION IN AMERICAN LAW SCHOOLS" 7 African-American Law and Policy Report 1 (2005) Richard Sander's article on affirmative action in the Stanford Law Review has generated nothing less than an academic firestorm. To its credit, A Systemic Analysis of Affirmative Action in American Law Schools has energized serious discussion of the costs and benefits of affirmative action. In no small part, this results from the counterintuitive... 2005  
Francisco Valdes CULTURE BY LAW: BACKLASH AS JURISPRUDENCE 50 Villanova Law Review 1135 (2005) FOR the ninth time in as many years, LatCritters met in 2004 during the Cinco de Mayo weekend. We met not only to help recall the unjust events of that day a century and a half ago, but also to center and challenge its unjust legacies in law and society. These legacies live on in many forms and many ways, of course. Against this backdrop, the... 2005  
Kathryn M. Stanchi DEALING WITH HATE IN THE FEMINIST CLASSROOM: RE-THINKING THE BALANCE 11 Michigan Journal of Gender & Law 173 (2005) I. Introduction 173 II. The Facts 176 III. The Problem with Student Hate Speech in the Law School Classroom 182 A. The Problem Is Not the Principle 184 B. The Uneven Application of Free Speech and Academic Freedom Principles in the Legal Academy 188 C. What About Time, Place, and Manner Regulation? 199 D. The Devaluation of the Impact... 2005  
Larry Catá Backer DIRECTOR INDEPENDENCE AND THE DUTY OF LOYALTY: RACE, GENDER, CLASS, AND THE DISNEY-OVITZ LITIGATION 79 Saint John's Law Review 1011 (Fall 2005) Just as the 85,000-ton cruise ships Disney Magic and Disney Wonder are forced by science to obey the same laws of buoyancy as Disneyland's significantly smaller Jungle Cruise ships, so is a corporate board's extraordinary decision to award a $140 million severance package governed by the same corporate law principles as its everyday decision to... 2005  
Luis Ernesto Rivera II EDITOR'S NOTE 11 Washington and Lee Race and Ethnic Ancestry Law Journal v (Winter, 2005) I am very proud to present the Eleventh volume of the Washington and Lee Race and Ethnic Ancestry Law Journal. I would like to thank the entire Editorial Board for their efforts throughout the year. This has been a ground-breaking year for the R.E.A.L. Journal, and you should all be proud. This would not be possible, however, without the ground... 2005  
Adrien Katherine Wing EXAMINING THE CORRELATION BETWEEN DISABILITY AND POVERTY: A COMMENT FROM A CRITICAL RACE FEMINIST PERSPECTIVE--HELPING THE JONESES TO KEEP UP! 8 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 655 (Winter 2005) The Symposium on Justice for All? Exploring Gender, Race and Sexual Orientation within Disability Law sponsored by the University of Iowa College of Law Journal of Gender, Race & Justice delved into cutting edge issues in the field. Panels on the Intersection of Race and Disability from the Post Civil War Period to the Present, Disability and... 2005  
Charles R. Lawrence III FORBIDDEN CONVERSATIONS: ON RACE, PRIVACY, AND COMMUNITY (A CONTINUING CONVERSATION WITH JOHN ELY ON RACISM AND DEMOCRACY) 114 Yale Law Journal 1353 (April, 2005) Introduction. 1355 I. A Story About Trying To Talk to Neighbors About School Integration. 1361 A. An Integrated Neighborhood, a Segregated School. 1361 B. A Dream and a Plan. 1363 C. Nobody's Business but My Own: Talking with Friends and Neighbors and the Unspoken Subtext of Race. 1365 D. Who Said It Would Be Easy?. 1368 II. What Are We Afraid... 2005  
Varun Soni FREEDOM FROM SUBORDINATION: RACE, RELIGION, AND THE STRUGGLE FOR SACRAMENT 15 Temple Political & Civil Rights Law Review 33 (Fall 2005) Legal scholars often distinguish tribal Indian law from American law, insisting that tribal law is inherently religious whereas American law is completely secular. However, when looking at the history of peyote law in the United States, it becomes apparent that this distinction between tribal law and American jurisprudence is a fabrication. The... 2005  
Jonathan Kahn FROM DISPARITY TO DIFFERENCE: HOW RACE-SPECIFIC MEDICINES MAY UNDERMINE POLICIES TO ADDRESS INEQUALITIES IN HEALTH CARE 15 Southern California Interdisciplinary Law Journal 105 (Fall 2005) On June 23, 2005, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) formally approved the heart failure drug BiDil to treat heart failure in self-identified black patients. The drug itself is not actually new; it is merely a combination of two generic drugs that have been used to treat heart failure for over a decade. BiDil's newness derives... 2005  
Sumi Cho FROM MASSIVE RESISTANCE, TO PASSIVE RESISTANCE, TO RIGHTEOUS RESISTANCE: UNDERSTANDING THE CULTURE WARS FROM BROWN TO GRUTTER 7 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law 809 (February, 2005) On this fiftieth anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education, arriving on the heels of the recent University of Michigan affirmative action cases, I propose taking an extra-doctrinal moment to contemplate how the cultural politics of race have likely shaped dominant legal framings regarding society's regulation of access to quality education. This... 2005  
Gila Stopler GENDER CONSTRUCTION AND THE LIMITS OF LIBERAL EQUALITY 15 Texas Journal of Women and the Law 43 (Fall 2005) I. Introduction. 44 II. Eve, Lilith and the Image of Woman in Western Civilization. 48 A. Adam & Eve. 48 B. The Suppression and Demonization of Lilith. 49 C. The Eve & Lilith Duo as a Control Mechanism. 52 D. Liberal Theory as Predicated on Eve. 53 III. Self, Community, and Gender Construction. 54 A. The Formation of the Self. 54 B. The Work of... 2005  
Ronald Turner GRUTTER AND THE PASSION OF JUSTICE THOMAS: A RESPONSE TO PROFESSOR KEARNEY 13 William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal 821 (February, 2005) In an April 1996 speech delivered at the University of Kansas School of Law, Justice Clarence Thomas discussed his views on judging. Declaring that judges are bound by the will of the people as expressed by the Constitution and federal statutes, Thomas stated that [t]he popular idea that Justices and judges somehow make the law, or represent... 2005  
Rachel Saloom I KNOW YOU ARE, BUT WHAT AM I? ARAB-AMERICAN EXPERIENCES THROUGH THE CRITICAL RACE THEORY LENS 27 Hamline Journal of Public Law and Policy 55 (Fall 2005) My friend who is black calls me a woman of color. My mother who is white says I am Caucasian. My friend who is Hispanic/Mexican-American understands my dilemma. My country that is a democratic melting pot does not. --Laila Halaby In a post 9/11 world, Arab-Americans have gained more attention from the media, the government, and the American public... 2005  
Jonathan K. Stubbs IMPLICATIONS OF A UNIRACIAL WORLDVIEW: RACE AND RIGHTS IN A NEW ERA 5 Barry Law Review 1 (Spring 2005) Race is a human puzzle. This work analyzes how the puzzle fits together, preliminarily suggests a way to rethink what we mean by race, and briefly explores some implications of re-visioning race. As we enter a new millennium, the prophetic words of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. remind us that rethinking race is not optional. It is imperative: (I)f we... 2005  
Kristina Brittenham IN PURSUIT OF THE GOLD STAR: DIARY OF A LAW STUDENT 1 Unbound: Harvard Journal of the Legal Left 15 (2005) Towards the end of my 2L year, I mentioned to a friend of mine that I was planning to turn a paper I wrote for a class into an article for publication. The topic encompasses--rather roughly--outlaw emotions, Brown v. Board of Education, and the things about law school that make me crazy. He was intrigued and wanted to read it. I let him, and he... 2005  
Alfred L. Brophy INTEGRATING SPACES: NEW PERSPECTIVES ON RACE IN THE PROPERTY CURRICULUM 55 Journal of Legal Education 319 (September, 2005) Many property classes begin with a statement from William Blackstone about the seemingly absolute rights associated with property: This is nothing which so generally strikes the imagination, and engages the affections of mankind, as the right of property; or that sole and despotic dominion which one man exercises over the external things of the... 2005  
Pamela Bridgewater INTRODUCTION TO A SYMPOSIUM CELEBRATING THE TWENTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF THE FEMINISM AND LEGAL THEORY PROJECT 13 American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy and the Law 1 (2005) As chair of the Feminism and Legal Theory Twentieth Anniversary Celebration Committee, I want to first publicly thank all of the members of the committee, the members of the American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy & the Law, the symposium participants and the administration of the Washington College of Law. From the beginning, every... 2005  
Cheryl L. Wade INTRODUCTION TO SYMPOSIUM ON PEOPLE OF COLOR, WOMEN, AND THE PUBLIC CORPORATION: THE SOPHISTICATION OF DISCRIMINATION 79 Saint John's Law Review 887 (Fall 2005) Justice O'Connor[] . . . fully understood the real world of discrimination. . . . [O'Connor] graduated number two in her class from Stanford, . . . couldn't get a job because she was a woman; they'd offer her a job as a secretary. . . . [S]he understood . . . that discrimination has become very sophisticated. . . [and] very much more subtle than it... 2005  
Rhonda V. Magee INVITING NEW WORLDS, TUNING TO NEW VOICES: A POST-9/11 MEDITATION ON "WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?" 3 Seattle Journal for Social Justice 587 (Spring/Summer, 2005) As ink strikes letters to this page, young Americans--mostly men--lurk in the streets of towns with names like Mosul and Fallujah in a place called Iraq, guns nervously poised to deliver death. Five years ago, neither the young coalition soldiers scanning the apartments and school buildings in desert fatigues, nor the insurgents who would do them... 2005  
Clayborne Carson JIM CROW'S ENDURING LEGACY 57 Stanford Law Review 1243 (March, 2005) Scholars writing about black-white relations in the United States typically offer either optimistic or pessimistic narratives. The former emphasize racial progress--the gradual realization of American egalitarian and democratic ideals, which is variously attributed to the heroic efforts of idealistic reformers, mass protest movements, foreign... 2005  
Mary L. Clark KEEP YOUR HANDS OFF MY (DEAD) BODY: A CRITIQUE OF THE WAYS IN WHICH THE STATE DISRUPTS THE PERSONHOOD INTERESTS OF THE DECEASED AND HIS OR HER KIN IN DISPOSING OF THE DEAD AND ASSIGNING IDENTITY IN DEATH 58 Rutgers Law Review 45 (Fall 2005) This Article introduces a critique of the ways in which the state's exercise of authority to govern the disposition of the dead can disrupt fundamental personhood interests of the deceased and his or her kin in burying the dead and assigning identity in death. In Part I, I focus on the state's use of power to shape (or constrain) ideas of honor and... 2005  
Wendy Nicole Duong LAW IS LAW AND ART IS ART AND SHALL THE TWO EVER MEET? LAW AND LITERATURE: THE COMPARATIVE CREATIVE PROCESSES 15 Southern California Interdisciplinary Law Journal 1 (Fall 2005) On a limited scope, this Article provides a reassessment of the Law and Literature movement in legal academic discourse. On a much broader scope, the Article attempts to join the ongoing dialogue among authors who have written on jurisprudence and philosophy, as well as on the esoteric field called the philosophy of legal language. This... 2005  
Kitty Calavita LAW, CITIZENSHIP, AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF (SOME) IMMIGRANT "OTHERS" 30 Law and Social Inquiry 401 (Spring 2005) Rhael Salazar Parrenas. Servants of Globalization: Women, Migration, and Domestic Work. Palo Alto, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 2001. Pp. 309. $55.00 cloth; $21.95 paper. Bonnie Honig. Democracy and the Foreigner. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2001. Pp. 204. $39.95 cloth; $19.95 paper. Peter Schuck. Citizens, Strangers, and... 2005  
Robin L. West LAW'S NOBILITY 17 Yale Journal of Law & Feminism 385 (2005) I. Feminism, Modified. 392 II. Feminism, Modified and its Critics. 420 III. Queer Theory, the Critique of Desire, and Feminism, Re-Modified. 444 IV. Some Conclusions. 453 2005  
Kim Forde-Mazrui LEARNING LAW THROUGH THE LENS OF RACE 21 Journal of Law & Politics 1 (Winter 2005) In the spring of 2003, the University of Virginia community was shocked by a racially motivated assault on a prominent student leader. The crime generated an immediate and powerful response from the university community. At the law school, there was an outpouring of not only concern and outrage, but also creative dialogue and proposals for ways to... 2005  
Adam Hime LIFE OR DEATH MISTAKES: CULTURAL STEREOTYPING, CAPITAL PUNISHMENT, AND REGIONAL RACE-BASED TRENDS IN EXONERATION AND WRONGFUL EXECUTION 82 University of Detroit Mercy Law Review 181 (Winter 2005) No flaw in the United States criminal justice system is more serious or has a more sobering impact than that which may send innocent people to their deaths. The system of capital punishment in the United States suffers from structural failures and culture driven human error that results in unfair and racially disproportionate capital sentencing.... 2005  
Tayyab Mahmud LIMIT HORIZONS & CRITIQUE: SEDUCTIONS AND PERILS OF THE NATION 50 Villanova Law Review 939 (2005) Getting its history wrong is part of being a nation. We make up a story to cover the facts we don't know or can't accept. We live in the world, like it or not, in which the national dimension of history haunts us in ways from which we are finding there is no easy escape. [S]ense of words like nation, people, sovereignty . . . community . .... 2005  
Sumayyah Waheed LIMITING OURSELVES: A RESPONSE TO ELBERT LIN'S "IDENTIFYING ASIAN AMERICA" 12 Asian Law Journal 187 (April, 2005) As a child, I was accustomed to being the only South Asian in my class. I automatically identified with other non-Whites in my history books and at my school, knowing that in the past, I would have been considered one of the persecuted savages, and in the present, they were different, as was I. Later, as a teenager, I found that the one... 2005  
29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46