AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearKey Terms in Title or Summary
Dorothy A. Brown FIGHTING RACISM IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY 61 Washington and Lee Law Review 1485 (Fall, 2004) [F]or several hundred years Negroes have been discriminated against, not as individuals, but rather solely because of the color of their skins. It is unnecessary in twentieth-century America to have individual Negroes demonstrate that they have been victims of racial discrimination; the racism of our society has been so pervasive that none,... 2004  
John Hayakawa Török FREEDOM NOW!--RACE CONSCIOUSNESS AND THE WORK OF DE-COLONIZATION TODAY 48 Howard Law Journal 351 (Fall 2004) We saw neither the end of racism nor the end of history in the last decade of the twentieth century. Conditions in American law and society clearly differ now from a century ago when W.E.B. Du Bois declared that the problem of the twentieth century was the problem of the color line. They differ from when Charles Hamilton Houston and William Henry... 2004  
Harvey Gee FROM BAKKE TO GRUTTER AND BEYOND: ASIAN AMERICANS AND DIVERSITY IN AMERICA 9 Texas Journal on Civil Liberties & Civil Rights 129 (Spring 2004) At a recent speech to a group of Chicago lawyers delivered at a luncheon held in his honor, United States Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens spoke about his thoughts on the recent Court decisions concerning the University of Michigan law school's race-conscious admissions policies. In a rare moment, Justice Stevens spoke about the internal... 2004  
Steven A. Ramirez GAMES CEOS PLAY AND INTEREST CONVERGENCE THEORY: WHY DIVERSITY LAGS IN AMERICA'S BOARDROOMS AND WHAT TO DO ABOUT IT 61 Washington and Lee Law Review 1583 (Fall, 2004) C1-3Table of Contents I. Introduction. 1583 II. Diversity in the Boardroom and the Games CEOs Play. 1587 III. Disrupting the Homosocial Reproduction Game and Converging Interests. 1600 IV. Conclusion. 1612 2004  
Roy L. Brooks GETTING REPARATIONS FOR SLAVERY RIGHT--A RESPONSE TO POSNER AND VERMEULE 80 Notre Dame Law Review 251 (November, 2004) In their essay, Reparations for Slavery and Other Historical Injustices, Eric Posner and Adrian Vermeule (hereinafter referred to as the authors) set out to provide an overview of the conceptual, legal, and moral issues surrounding reparations. Their main critical thrust is to fill what they perceive to be large gaps in the literature on... 2004  
Kelli Lane GROUNDING MOTHER AND CHILD IN THEIR INTRINSIC RELATIONAL UNIT: AN ANALYSIS OF MOTHERHOOD AND THE PARENT-CHILD RELATIONSHIP WITHIN THE CHILD WELFARE SYSTEM 25 Women's Rights Law Reporter 145 (Spring-Summer 2004) In 2002, there were more than half a million children in foster care in the United States, and during that same year, the parental rights for 79,000 of those children were terminated. Most significantly, African-American children make up a disproportionate number of children in the foster care system. In addition, African-American children are more... 2004  
Elbert Lin IDENTIFYING ASIAN AMERICA 33 Southwestern University Law Review 217 (2004) I. Introduction. 218 II. Asian American Race Scholarship (or Deconstruction). 220 A. Coalitions (or What's Wrong with Identity?). 220 B. Why Not Identity? (or The Case for Racial Identity). 222 1. Recognition Is Not a Goal (or The Importance of Racial Identity). 223 2. Identity Has Run Its Course (or Asian American Identity Is Not Yet Established).... 2004  
Henry J. Richardson III IMPERATIVES OF CULTURE AND RACE FOR UNDERSTANDING HUMAN RIGHTS LAW: HUMAN RIGHTS: A POLITICAL AND CULTURAL CRITIQUE MAKAU MUTUA 52 Buffalo Law Review 511 (Spring 2004) It has been nearly three decades that a school of legal scholars, mostly of color in the United States, began to write that the struggle for racial justice had never been divorced from good legal theory and jurisprudence. This struggle always had encompassed the necessity of peoples of color becoming jurisprudential producers of the law governing... 2004  
Kevin R. Johnson INTEGRATING RACIAL JUSTICE INTO THE CIVIL PROCEDURE SURVEY COURSE 54 Journal of Legal Education 242 (June, 2004) Although I fear that the average law student might disagree, civil procedure is not simply a boring set of technical rules governing the litigation process. True, it can be taught that way, but any proceduralist knows that civil procedure can be much more. Indeed, it touches on some of the nation's most pressing social justice issues, ranging from... 2004  
Bernie D. Jones INTERNATIONAL AND TRANSRACIAL ADOPTIONS: TOWARD A GLOBAL CRITICAL RACE FEMINIST PRACTICE? 10 Washington and Lee Race and Ethnic Ancestry Law Journal 43 (Spring, 2004) The practice of international adoption places feminist legal scholars of family law in a quandary. Adopted orphaned and abandoned children in impoverished developing countries immigrate to the United States and Europe, gaining families and a higher standard of living. But these improved circumstances come at a cost. Their mothers suffer the effects... 2004  
Daniel Castro, Marc-Tizoc González, Co-Editors-in-Chief, 2004 — 2005 INTRODUCTION 15 Berkeley La Raza Law Journal v (Fall, 2004) We seize this Introduction as an opportunity to express our understanding of the contemporary situation of Latina/o students at the University of California, Berkeley School of Law (Boalt Hall). We characterize the current moment as a new chapter of insurgent Raza activism. After explaining why we believe that our historical moment is different in... 2004  
Ronald C. Griffin JUBILEE 43 Washburn Law Journal 353 (Winter 2004) Keeping faith With Mom and Dad The people on the fringe And countless family memories This essay chronicles the work and celebrates the achievements of blacks and others who lived in and escaped the thralldom of white supremacy. The work runs down parallel tracks. One is broader than the other. The first track is about tenacious dominant and... 2004  
Girardeau A. Spann JUST DO IT 67-SUM Law and Contemporary Problems 11 (Summer 2004) Racial injustice has always been a problem in the United States. The most salient victims of the Nation's discrimination against racial minorities have included indigenous Indians, Chinese immigrants, Japanese-American citizens, Latinos, and of course blacks. But as the current war on terrorism illustrates, under the right conditions, almost any... 2004  
Alexander Tsesis JUSTICE AT WAR AND BROWN V. BOARD OF EDUCATION 47 Howard Law Journal 361 (Winter 2004) Justice at War: Civil Liberties and Civil Rights During Times of Crisis, by Richard Delgado. New York University Press (2003). My first exposure to the law came through novels. As a child, Fyodor Dostoyevsky's accounts about the legal ordeals of Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov, in Crime and Punishment, and Dmitri Fyodorovitch Karamazov, in the... 2004  
Catherine F. Halvorsen , Diana C. Jaque KEEPING UP WITH NEW LEGAL TITLES 96 Law Library Journal 531 (Summer, 2004) ¶1 The events of September 11, 2001, that led to the destruction of American lives and property were horrific and incited an immediate response by the United States government. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security was created and a proliferation of federal legislation resulted. Newly enacted legislation in the areas of domestic security,... 2004  
Francisco Valdes KEYNOTE ADDRESS: RECALLING RACE, GENDER AND SEXUALITY: OUTCRIT REFLECTIONS ON LEGAL EDUCATION, SOCIAL IDENTITIES AND THE "RULE OF LAW"-A CALL TOWARD COLLECTIVE INSURRECTIONS 5 Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law 881 (Fall, 2004) Gretchen Rohr: Welcome back. Next we are moving into the exciting event of our keynote address for the Sixth Annual Symposium on Gender and Sexuality in the Law. We welcome Francisco Valdes who has come all the way up here from Miami. But we also have joining us this afternoon Professor Darren Hutchinson, who has agreed to introduce Professor... 2004  
Kevin R. Johnson LATCRIT GOES INTERNATIONAL 16 Florida Journal of International Law x (September, 2004) This LatCrit Theory Colloquium on International and Comparative Law is comprised of papers presented at the Facultad de Derecho de la Universidad de Buenos Aires in Buenos Aires, Argentina in August 2003. Titled The Role of Constitutional and Legal Systems in Maintaining or Reforming Political, Social, Economic and Legal Arrangements, the... 2004  
Richard Delgado LOCATING LATINOS IN THE FIELD OF CIVIL RIGHTS: ASSESSING THE NEOLIBERAL CASE FOR RADICAL EXCLUSION 83 Texas Law Review 489 (December, 2004) Poor Latinos! Nobody loves them. Think-tank conservatives like Peter Brimelow, joined by a few liberals and a host of white supremacist websites, have been warning against the Latino threat: Because our dark-haired friends from south of the border insist on preserving their peculiar language and ways, they endanger the integrity of our Anglocentric... 2004  
Daria Roithmayr LOCKED IN SEGREGATION 12 Virginia Journal of Social Policy and the Law 197 (Winter 2004) In earlier work, I have developed the lock-in model of inequality, which compares persistent racial inequality to persistent market monopoly power. In this article, I explore the implications of applying the lock-in model to the problem of residential segregation. Here, I put forward two central arguments. First, I argue that residential... 2004  
Maurice R. Dyson MULTIRACIAL IDENTITY, MONORACIAL AUTHENTICITY & RACIAL PRIVACY: TOWARDS AN ADEQUATE THEORY OF MULTIRACIAL RESISTANCE 9 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 387 (Spring 2004) INTRODUCTION. 387 I. Twenty-Five Years Left of Race Consciousness?. 390 II. The Racial Privacy Initiative. 391 III. Multiracial Classification and Racial Hierarchy. 399 IV. Racial Identity Formation and the Mixed-Raced Paradigm. 405 VI. Multiracial Identity: The Dilemma of Classification and Racial Resistance. 412 A. The Dilemma of Classification... 2004  
Janet L. Hiebert NEW CONSTITUTIONAL IDEAS: CAN NEW PARLIAMENTARY MODELS RESIST JUDICIAL DOMINANCE WHEN INTERPRETING RIGHTS? 82 Texas Law Review 1963 (June, 2004) A handful of parliamentary systems have overcome their historic reluctance to adopt a bill of rights. Yet in changing governing principles to ensure that individual rights become more explicit norms in legislative decision making, they have contributed to the emergence of a new paradigm for rights protection, which I depict as a parliamentary... 2004  
Donald C. Langevoort OVERCOMING RESISTANCE TO DIVERSITY IN THE EXECUTIVE SUITE: GREASE, GRIT, AND THE CORPORATE PROMOTION TOURNAMENT 61 Washington and Lee Law Review 1615 (Fall, 2004) C1-3Table of Contents I. Interdisciplinary Prospects. 1615 II. Diversity and the Corporate Promotion Tournament. 1622 III. Firm-Wide Efficiency. 1632 IV. Self-Serving Resistance. 1633 V. Constructive Intervention. 1635 2004  
Panelists: Johanna Bond, Jean Bruggeman, Sonia Katyal, Layli Miller-Muro, Moderator: Gretchen Rohr PANEL THREE: INTERSECTIONAL INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS 5 Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law 857 (Fall, 2004) Gretchen Rohr: Welcome to the final panel of the Sixth Annual Symposium on Gender, Sexuality and the Law sponsored by the Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law. This panel focuses on intersectional international human rights. We have four amazing activists, scholars and thinkers to speak to us on that specific issue and address how they are... 2004  
Dorothy A. Brown PENSIONS, RISK, AND RACE 61 Washington and Lee Law Review 1501 (Fall, 2004) Foregone revenues as a result of the tax advantages associated with employer-provided pension plans are estimated to be almost $95 billion in 2004. An analysis of those workers who are eligible to receive the benefits and those that are not is warranted. This Article provides such an analysis and identifies two distinct problems. First, even though... 2004  
Maurice R. Dyson PLAYING GAMES WITH EQUALITY: A GAME THEORETIC CRITIQUE OF EDUCATIONAL SANCTIONS, REMEDIES, AND STRATEGIC NONCOMPLIANCE 77 Temple Law Review 577 (Fall 2004) In this article, Professor Dyson offers a game theoretic analysis of the strategic effect of coalition formation and coercive commitment on bargaining outcomes within contemporary educational policy. The author suggests, however, that the increasing strategic dimension of educational policymaking is not a favorable development for equity advocates.... 2004  
Kim Brooks , Debra Parkes QUEERING LEGAL EDUCATION: A PROJECT OF THEORETICAL DISCOVERY 27 Harvard Women's Law Journal 89 (Spring, 2004) By midterm exams in my first year of law school I felt that my life had been taken over by the law--that my real life was being lived out in short moments between Contracts and Property. And that what was real in my life was far less real than the next case I was preparing to conquer. I was, to borrow from Karl Llewellyn, truly pickled in law,... 2004  
Berta E. Hernández-Truyol QUERYING LAWRENCE 65 Ohio State Law Journal 1151 (2004) In 2003, the Supreme Court in the landmark decision Lawrence v. Texas found a Texas law, banning homosexual, but not heterosexual, sodomy to be unconstitutional. Thus, Lawrence ended the Bowers era in which morality was deemed to be a justification for discrimination against gays and lesbians. While the decision did bring to United States... 2004  
David A. Brennen RACE AND EQUALITY ACROSS THE LAW SCHOOL CURRICULUM: THE LAW OF TAX EXEMPTION 54 Journal of Legal Education 336 (September, 2004) What is the relevance of race to tax law? The race issues are apparent when one studies a subject like constitutional law. The Constitution concerns itself explicitly with such matters as defining rights of citizenship, allocating powers of government, and determining rights with respect to property. Given the history of our countrywith slavery... 2004  
A. Mechele Dickerson RACE MATTERS IN BANKRUPTCY 61 Washington and Lee Law Review 1725 (Fall, 2004) C1-6Table of Contents I. L2-5,T5Introduction 1726 II. L2-5,T5Bankruptcy Relief 1727 A. L3-5,T5Goals 1727 B. L3-5,T5Structure 1731 1. L4-5,T5Treatment of Debts 1731. 2. L4-5,T5Treatment of Assets 1735. C. L3-5,T5Criticisms and Uses of Existing Bankruptcy Laws 1738 D. L3-5,T5Costs 1741 III. L2-5,T5Racial Impact of Bankruptcy Relief 1743 A.... 2004  
Devon W. Carbado , Mitu Gulati RACE TO THE TOP OF THE CORPORATE LADDER: WHAT MINORITIES DO WHEN THEY GET THERE 61 Washington and Lee Law Review 1645 (Fall, 2004) Racing to the top of the corporate hierarchy is difficult, no matter how qualified or capable the candidate. Producing more widgets than one's competitors is not enough. Negotiating the political landscape of the institution is also required. More specifically, individual corporate officers have to be appeased, powerful interest groups have to be... 2004  
David A. Skeel, Jr. RACIAL DIMENSIONS OF CREDIT AND BANKRUPTCY 61 Washington and Lee Law Review 1695 (Fall, 2004) C1-4Table of Contents I. L2-3,T3Introduction 1695. II. L2-3,T3The Mystery of the Missing Bankruptcy Practice: Credit and Race in the Middle Decades 1698. A. A Brief Overview of a Prominent Black Philadelphia Law Firm. 1699 B. Explaining the Absence of Bankruptcy. 1700 III. L2-3,T3Credit Cards, Bankruptcy, and Consumer Protection in the 1970s 1706.... 2004  
Rhonda V. Magee Andrews RACIAL SUFFERING AS HUMAN SUFFERING: AN EXISTENTIALLY-GROUNDED HUMANITY CONSCIOUSNESS AS A GUIDE TO A FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT REBORN 13 Temple Political & Civil Rights Law Review 891 (Spring 2004) Liberation is thus a childbirth, and a painful one. Paulo Freire Brazilian philosopher of education On the occasion of my elevation to the status of tenured Professor, the Dean of my law school was kind enough to send flowers. When they arrived at my home in an over-priced and almost exclusively white neighborhood, I opened the door to a tall,... 2004  
Benjamin Kohler RACIAL VOICE IDENTIFICATION: JUDICIALLY CONDONING THE BOGUS SCIENCE OF 'HEARING COLOR' 77 Temple Law Review 757 (Fall 2004) The quality of a particular voice is sensed by hearing, just as the appearance of a person is sensed by sight. It is simply not possible to perceive appearance using the sense of hearing. One might presume that a particular voice or accent would be indicative of how the speaker might look. However, that presumption would be based solely on... 2004  
George H. Taylor RACISM AS "THE NATION'S CRUCIAL SIN" : THEOLOGY AND DERRICK BELL 9 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 269 (Spring 2004) INTRODUCTION. 269 I. The Problem: Racism's Permanence. 272 A. Bell's Thesis. 272 B. The Evidence. 275 II. The Possibilities of Action. 282 A. The Virtues of Necessity. 282 B. Action as Protest. 284 C. Action as Racial Realism. 285 D. Action as Writing. 287 E. Action: Not By Morality Alone. 290 III. Niebuhr's Theology. 291 A. A Political Theology.... 2004  
Otis B. Grant RATIONAL CHOICE OR WRONGFUL DISCRIMINATION? THE LAW AND ECONOMICS OF JURY NULLIFICATION 14 George Mason University Civil Rights Law Journal 145 (Spring 2004) In 1995 Professor Paul Butler shocked the conscience of American legal dogma by brilliantly arguing that African Americans should engage in jury nullification in an effort to redress rampant discrimination in American society. Although there was much hue and cry over Professor Butler's thesis, both his inclination and rationale continue to be... 2004  
Carole J. Buckner REALIZING GRUTTER v. BOLLINGER'S "COMPELLING EDUCATIONAL BENEFITS OF DIVERSITY" - TRANSFORMING ASPIRATIONAL RHETORIC INTO EXPERIENCE 72 UMKC Law Review 877 (Summer, 2004) A commitment to diversity in the legal profession requires far more than expansion of access to legal education. The United States Supreme Court held in Grutter v. Bollinger that obtaining the educational benefits of diversity constitutes a compelling state interest sufficient to permit admissions based on a holistic consideration of the... 2004  
Reginald Oh RE-MAPPING EQUAL PROTECTION JURISPRUDENCE: A LEGAL GEOGRAPHY OF RACE AND AFFIRMATIVE ACTION 53 American University Law Review 1305 (August, 2004) Introduction. 1307 I. Law as Narrative: Judicial Opinions and the Narrative Construction of Social Reality. 1311 A.Legal Narratives Reinforce and Reproduce Dominant Cultural, Political, and Social Beliefs. 1313 B.Critiquing Dominant Legal Narrative Constructions of Social Reality. 1314 C.Space, Not Time, Hides Consequences From Us: Examining... 2004  
Alfred L. Brophy REPARATIONS TALK: REPARATIONS FOR SLAVERY AND THE TORT LAW ANALOGY 24 Boston College Third World Law Journal 81 (Winter, 2004) Abstract: This Article examines the current landscape of reparations for slavery, identifying the contours of reparations lawsuits and exploring the ability of tort law to help apportion moral culpability in the reparations context. It first examines several possibilities for lawsuits for Jim Crow, discussing constitutional requirements and... 2004  
Robert P. Wasson, Jr. RESOLVING SEPARATION OF POWERS AND FEDERALISM PROBLEMS RAISED BY ERIE, THE RULES OF DECISION ACT, AND THE RULES ENABLING ACT: A PROPOSED SOLUTION 32 Capital University Law Review 519 (Spring, 2004) C1-5Table of Contents I. L2-4,T4Introduction 523 II. L2-4,T4How and Why Swift Failed to Adequately Address Separation of Powers and Federalism Problems Raised by the Rules of Decision Act and the Superiority of the Proposed Irresistible Incentive Test as a Means of Determining Both the Existence and Identity of Substantive State Rights 533 III.... 2004  
Matthew M. Kavanagh REWRITING THE LEGAL FAMILY: BEYOND EXCLUSIVITY TO A CARE-BASED STANDARD 16 Yale Journal of Law & Feminism 83 (2004) Introduction: Negotiating the Post-Modern Family. 84 I. Writing the Family in Law and Politics. 87 A. Current Constructions of Family. 87 B. Insider Families: The Right Side of the Law. 91 C. Learning from Outsider Families. 96 II. Exclusivity in Case Law. 99 A. Writing Out Stepparents. 99 B. Writing Out Lesbian and Gay Parents and Sperm Donors.... 2004  
Michael Ashley Stein SAME STRUGGLE, DIFFERENT DIFFERENCE: ADA ACCOMMODATIONS AS ANTIDISCRIMINATION 153 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 579 (December, 2004) The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) was heralded as an emancipation proclamation for people with disabilities, one that would achieve their equality primarily through its reasonable accommodation requirements. Nevertheless, both legal commentators and Supreme Court Justices assert that the ADA's employment mandates distinguish the ADA from... 2004  
Peter Goodrich SATIRICAL LEGAL STUDIES: FROM THE LEGISTS TO THE LIZARD 103 Michigan Law Review 397 (December, 2004) Introduction. 399 I. Fragmenta Antiquitatis (The Enduring Tradition). 415 A. The Civilian Tradition. 416 B. The Sermon on the Laws. 419 C. Satirical Themes. 422 1. Personification. 422 2. Novelty. 423 3. Ridicule. 425 4. Criticism. 426 II. Satura Resartus (The Revival of Satire). 429 A. Allegory and Theater. 429 B. Ad Hominem Arguments. 432 C.... 2004  
Chris K. Iijima SHOOTING JUSTICE JACKSON'S "LOADED WEAPON" AT YSAR HAMDI: JUDICIAL ABDICATION AT THE CONVERGENCE OF KOREMATSU AND MCCARTHY 54 Syracuse Law Review 109 (2004) Prologue. 110 Introduction. 111 I. Hamdi v. Rumsfeld: When Judicial Review Is a Cover For Governmental Impunity. 117 II. Korematsu v. United States: When Military Necessity Is a Cover for Governmental Impunity. 123 III. The Racial Underpinnings of Korematsu. 126 IV. The Racial Underpinnings of Hamdi. 128 V. Padilla v. Bush: When In a World of... 2004  
Paul Butler SHOULD RADICALS BE JUDGES? 32 Hofstra Law Review 1203 (Summer 2004) Should people who seek fundamental changes in the United States' political and economic systems become judges? I want to consider this question from the perspective of those persons--whom I will call radicals--and from ethics. The first issue requires an understanding of legal radicalism, especially its analysis of judicial power. The radical... 2004  
John O. Calmore SOCIAL JUSTICE ADVOCACY IN THE THIRD DIMENSION: ADDRESSING THE PROBLEM OF "PRESERVATION-THROUGH-TRANSFORMATION" 16 Florida Journal of International Law 615 (September, 2004) The ways in which the legal system enforces social stratification are various and evolve over time. Efforts to reform a status regime bring about changes in its rule structure and justificatory rhetoric - a dynamic I have called . . . preservation-through-transformation. - Reva Siegel [T]hird-dimensional lawyering involves helping a group learn... 2004  
Brett G. Scharffs THE CHARACTER OF LEGAL REASONING 61 Washington and Lee Law Review 733 (Spring, 2004) C1-3Table of Contents I. Introduction. 734 A. The Distinctive Character of Legal Reasoning. 734 B. Thesis. 740 II. The Character and Relationship of Practical Wisdom, Craft, and Rhetoric. 743 A. The Concerns or Ends. 743 B. Components. 747 C. Distinctive Characteristics. 757 D. Success. 759 III. The Dark Side of Practical Wisdom, Craft, and... 2004  
Alfred L. Brophy THE CULTURAL WAR OVER REPARATIONS FOR SLAVERY 53 DePaul Law Review 1181 (Spring 2004) American democracy is a most dramatic form of social organization, and in that drama each of us enacts his role by asserting his own and his group's values and traditions against those of his fellow citizens. Indeed, a battle-royal conflict of interests appears to be basic to our conception of freedom, and the drama of democracy proceeds through a... 2004  
Gregory P. Magarian THE FIRST AMENDMENT, THE PUBLIC-PRIVATE DISTINCTION, AND NONGOVERNMENTAL SUPPRESSION OF WARTIME POLITICAL DEBATE 73 George Washington Law Review 101 (November, 2004) Introduction. 102 I. Confronting Nongovernmental Censorship of Political Debate in Wartime. 105 A. The Value and Vulnerability of Wartime Political Debate. 105 1. The Historical Vulnerability of Wartime Political Debate to Nongovernmental Suppression. 105 2. The Public Rights Theory of Expressive Freedom and the Necessity of Robust Political Debate... 2004  
Barbara Stark THE FUTURE OF THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT AND INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW: THE BLACK HERITAGE TRAIL 13 Temple Political & Civil Rights Law Review 557 (Spring 2004) [T]he Amendment was framed by men who possessed differieng views on the great question of the suffrage and who, partly in order to formulate some program of government and partly out of political expediency, papered over the differences with the broad, elastic language of § 1 and left to future interpreters of their Amendment the task of resolving... 2004  
Margot Mendelson THE LEGAL PRODUCTION OF IDENTITIES: A NARRATIVE ANALYSIS OF CONVERSATIONS WITH BATTERED UNDOCUMENTED WOMEN 19 Berkeley Women's Law Journal 138 (2004) Introduction. 139 Chapter 1: The Social Networks Discourse, Its Critics, and the Problem of Essentialization. 150 Chapter 2: The Battered Women's Movement: Incorporating Institutional Critique. 170 Chapter 3: In Their Own Words: Driver's Licenses and Safety as Lenses. 189 Chapter 4: The Legal Construction of the Undocumented Immigrant. 202... 2004  
34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51