Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year | Key Terms in Title or Summary |
Marjorie A. Silver |
EMOTIONAL COMPETENCE, MULTICULTURAL LAWYERING AND RACE |
3 Florida Coastal Law Journal 219 (Spring, 2002) |
This is difficult work, and it is difficult for white people to discuss. It hurts emotionally for us white folks to be personally challenged on issues of race . . . and in this work, one gets challenged a lot - but that hurt cannot be even a fraction of the psychic pain of those who must face racism, sexism, and homophobia on a daily basis. So I... |
2002 |
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Christian Sundquist |
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY, INDIVIDUAL LIBERTY, AND MERITOCRACY IN EDUCATION: REINFORCING STRUCTURES OF PRIVILEGE AND INEQUALITY |
9 Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy 227 (Winter, 2002) |
Deep in the South Side of Chicago, in a set of black communities lovingly and infamously referred to as the wild, wild 100s, I spent my childhood never fully understanding how being poor and black would affect future opportunities and success. Though accustomed to receiving my allowance in food stamps, wearing secondhand clothes a few sizes too... |
2002 |
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Anthony V. Alfieri |
ETHICS, RACE, AND REFORM |
54 Stanford Law Review 1389 (June, 2002) |
Deborah Rhode is a highly acclaimed scholar and a distinguished public servant. Prolific in both academic scholarship and popular commentary, she is the author of numerous books, articles, and essays on the law and the legal profession. In an important convergence of her roles as a scholar and a public intellectual, Rhode recently returned to the... |
2002 |
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Richard Delgado |
EXPLAINING THE RISE AND FALL OF AFRICAN AMERICAN FORTUNES-INTEREST CONVERGENCE AND CIVIL RIGHTS GAINS |
37 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 369 (Summer, 2002) |
In 1958, an Alabama court sentenced Jimmy Wilson, a black handyman, to death for the crime of stealing less than two dollars in change. When the world press trumpeted the story, an embarrassed Secretary of State John Foster Dulles intervened and helped overturn Wilson's sentence. A new book by University of Southern California Law Center legal... |
2002 |
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Catherine Albiston , Tonya Brito , Jane E. Larson |
FEMINISM IN RELATION |
17 Wisconsin Women's Law Journal 1 (Spring 2002) |
Why does a gender hierarchy persist in the face of declarations of gender equality before the law? This is the question with which the Interdisciplinary Feminism Project began in organizing Feminist Theories of Relation in the Shadow of the Law: An Interdisciplinary Critical Dialogue on Theory. The day-long event brought together feminist scholars... |
2002 |
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Harold A. Mcdougall |
FOR CRITICAL RACE PRACTITIONERS: RACE, RACISM AND AMERICAN LAW (4TH ED.) BY DERRICK A. BELL, JR. |
46 Howard Law Journal 1 (Fall 2002) |
Blacks need to acknowledge the permanence of their subordinate status [permitting them to avoid] unrealistic strategies [and adopt more promising ones] that can bring personal fulfillment and, on occasion, even triumph.-- Derrick Bell Reflecting on what I read in Chapters One and Two [of Race, Racism and American Law] stirs an intense dislike for... |
2002 |
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J. Angelo Corlett , Robert Francescotti |
FOUNDATIONS OF A THEORY OF HATE SPEECH |
48 Wayne Law Review 1071 (Fall, 2002) |
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or of the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances. All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the... |
2002 |
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Douglas E. Litowitz |
FRANZ KAFKA'S OUTSIDER JURISPRUDENCE |
27 Law and Social Inquiry 103 (Winter 2002) |
Kafka was the rage, proclaimed literary critic Anatole Broyard (1993) in his memoir of Greenwich Village during the 1950s. But perhaps Broyard was mistaken to speak in the past tense, considering that Kafka is more popular than ever. Over the last decade, an international collection of scholars has produced new translations of Kafka's writings... |
2002 |
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Michael Selmi |
GETTING BEYOND AFFIRMATIVE ACTION: THINKING ABOUT RACIAL INEQUALITY IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY |
55 Stanford Law Review 1013 (December, 2002) |
The Miner's Canary: Enlisting Race, Resisting Power, Transforming Democracy. By Lani Guinier & Gerald Torres. Harvard University Press 2002. 302 pp. The Anatomy of Racial Inequality. By Glenn C. Loury. Harvard University Press 2001. 169 pp. Introduction. 1013 I. Glenn Loury on Stereotpying and Stigma. 1016 II. Guinier and Torres: Political Race and... |
2002 |
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William C. Kidder , Jay Rosner |
HOW THE SAT CREATES "BUILT-IN HEADWINDS": AN EDUCATIONAL AND LEGAL ANALYSIS OF DISPARATE IMPACT |
43 Santa Clara Law Review 131 (2002) |
With the end of affirmative action, it is more apparent than ever that the old-time preferences for folks who are privileged by race and class have never died. -- Charles R. Lawrence III I. Introduction. 133 A. The SAT and Affirmative Action. 135 B. Does the SAT Accentuate or Reflect Racial and Ethnic Differences?. 141 II. Methodology and Result.... |
2002 |
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Francisco Valdes |
IDENTITY MANEUVERS IN LAW AND SOCIETY: VIGNETTES OF A EURO-AMERICAN HETEROPATRIARCHY |
71 UMKC Law Review 377 (Winter 2002) |
With this incisive article on subordination and symbiosis, Professor Nancy Ehrenreich expands the intellectual and political arsenal of conceptual tools to combat multidimensional forms and systems of subordination. Focusing on the interconnection of and among forms of subordination, Professor Ehrenreich urges at the outset that, (r)ecognition... |
2002 |
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Nancy Levit |
INTRODUCTION: THEORIZING THE CONNECTIONS AMONG SYSTEMS OF SUBORDINATION |
71 UMKC Law Review 227 (Winter 2002) |
Identity theory is a relative newcomer to jurisprudence. In part as a theoretical legacy of the civil rights movement--and in part as a reaction to its retrenchment --early critical legal theorists focused on facets of personal identity, such as race, gender, sexual orientation, and class. The first anti-subordination writings simply tried to... |
2002 |
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Guadalupe T. Luna |
LATCRIT VI, AMERICA LATINA AND JURISPRUDENTIAL ASSOCIATIONS |
54 Rutgers Law Review 803 (Summer 2002) |
During the past few years, a group of innovative thinkers and scholarly investigations have sought to introduce a more precise legal engagement into the realm of race relations. The LatCrit journey, an important example of intellectual inquiry, surfaced in formalized settings only five years prior. As an offset, LatCrit theorists not only advance,... |
2002 |
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Ediberto Román |
LATCRIT VI, OUTSIDER JURISPRUDENCE AND LOOKING BEYOND IMAGINED BORDERS |
54 Rutgers Law Review 1155 (Summer 2002) |
The white man . . . desires the world and wants it for himself alone. He considers himself predestined to rule the world. He has made it useful to himself. But there are values which do not submit to his rule. -Frantz Fanon If God were black my friend, everything would change, it would be our race, my friend, which would have the power. The... |
2002 |
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Kellye Y. Testy |
LINKING PROGRESSIVE CORPORATE LAW WITH PROGRESSIVE SOCIAL MOVEMENTS |
76 Tulane Law Review 1227 (June, 2002) |
In Linking Progressive Corporate Law with Progressive Social Movements, Professor Testy critically assesses what has been termed a new corporate social responsibility project. After noting the hegemony of shareholder primacy in corporate law, she critiques four major counter-hegemonic discourses: team production theory, corporate social... |
2002 |
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Leroy D. Clark |
MOVEMENTS IN CRISIS: EMPLOYEE-OWNED BUSINESSES--A STRATEGY FOR COALITION BETWEEN UNIONS AND CIVIL RIGHTS ORGANIZATIONS |
46 Howard Law Journal 49 (Fall 2002) |
Our country has seen two great movements for justice: one led by labor unions to protect workers, and the other led by civil rights organizations to end racial segregation and discrimination. The two movements have had much in common in terms of the tasks that they confronted and the tactics used. Both built organizations based on a growing... |
2002 |
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Tanya Katerí Hernández |
MULTIRACIAL MATRIX: THE ROLE OF RACE IDEOLOGY IN THE ENFORCEMENT OF ANTIDISCRIMINATION LAWS, A UNITED STATES-LATIN AMERICA COMPARISON |
87 Cornell Law Review 1093 (July, 2002) |
This Article examines the role of race ideology in the enforcement of antidiscrimination laws. Professor Hernández demonstrates the ways in which the U.S. race ideology is slowly starting to resemble the race ideology of much of Latin America. The evolving U.S. race ideology is a multiracial matrix made up of four precepts: (1) racial mixture and... |
2002 |
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Benjamin Fleury-Steiner |
NARRATIVES OF THE DEATH SENTENCE: TOWARD A THEORY OF LEGAL NARRATIVITY |
36 Law and Society Review 549 (2002) |
This article investigates how the consciousness of ordinary citizens enlisted as jurors in death penalty trials is racialized. The study draws on post-trial interviews with some 66 white and black jurors who served on 24 capital trials in which either a white or black defendant received the death sentence. Findings among white jurors reveal a... |
2002 |
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Ruben J. Garcia |
NEW VOICES AT WORK: RACE AND GENDER IDENTITY CAUCUSES IN THE U.S. LABOR MOVEMENT |
54 Hastings Law Journal 79 (November, 2002) |
Introduction. 81 I. A Brief History of Minority Voice in the Labor Movement--The Historical and Contextual Need for Identity Caucuses in Unions. 92 A. Racism, Sexism, and Anti-Immigrant Sentiment in the Labor Movement. 92 B. Black Caucuses, 1964-1975. 94 C. Rank-and-File Protest Outside the Auto Industry. 97 D. Chicano/Chicana Insurgency. 100 E.... |
2002 |
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Suzanne B. Goldberg |
ON MAKING ANTI-ESSENTIALIST AND SOCIAL CONSTRUCTIONIST ARGUMENTS IN COURT |
81 Oregon Law Review 629 (Fall 2002) |
One of my most intense disagreements with another lawyer during nearly a decade of lesbian and gay rights litigation concerned social constructionism. The lawyer (a law professor, if truth be told) wanted to argue in an amicus brief to the United States Supreme Court that sexual orientation, like race, was a social constructed category. He reasoned... |
2002 |
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Khiara M. Bridges |
ON THE COMMODIFICATION OF THE BLACK FEMALE BODY: THE CRITICAL IMPLICATIONS OF THE ALIENABILITY OF FETAL TISSUE |
102 Columbia Law Review 123 (January, 2002) |
Recent scientific experimentation has revealed that fetal tissue yielded from abortions has remarkable therapeutic value. This Note posits that the demand for fetal tissue likely will expand to the point where the current supply no longer satisfies it. Therefore, in order to obtain tissue from women who would not otherwise donate their abortuses,... |
2002 |
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Berta Esperanza Hernández-Truyol |
OUT OF THE SHADOWS: TRAVERSING THE IMAGINARY OF SAMENESS, DIFFERENCE, AND RELATIONALISM - A HUMAN RIGHTS PROPOSAL |
17 Wisconsin Women's Law Journal 111 (Spring 2002) |
Throughout history different visions of men and women have evolved; from Aristotle to Aquinas, they have been deemed to exist in separate spheres. These different images are deeply embedded in our psychology. They define our expectations about appropriate behavior of and locations for men and women in law and civil society. One author captures... |
2002 |
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Thorne Clark |
PROTECTION FROM PROTECTION: SECTION 1983 AND THE ADA'S IMPLICATIONS FOR DEVISING A RACE-CONSCIOUS POLICE MISCONDUCT STATUTE |
150 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 1585 (May, 2002) |
In the dome the prisoner waited . . . shackled to inertia by a great chain of years. -- Henry Dumas, black-American author slain bya police officer in a case of mistaken identity Henry Dumas was no prophet; he merely illustrated what was and is readily apparent to those inclined or forced to consider the extent and the impact of racism in daily... |
2002 |
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Laura E. Gómez |
RACE MATTERED: RACIAL FORMATION AND THE POLITICS OF CRIME IN TERRITORIAL NEW MEXICO |
49 UCLA Law Review 1395 (June, 2002) |
In this Article, Professor Gómez elaborates on Michael Omi and Howard Winant's theory of racial formation. First, she provides an empirical application of the theory to a particular legal context: criminal litigation in late-nineteenth-century New Mexico. Second, while Omi and Winant emphasize the theory's fit with mid- and late-twentieth-century... |
2002 |
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Rachel F. Moran |
RACE, REPRESENTATION, AND REMEMBERING |
49 UCLA Law Review 1513 (June, 2002) |
Both law and history have played important roles in consolidating the identity of the modern nation-state. Although each discipline relies on similar fact-finding techniques, the two fields diverged as historians pursued grand narratives and legal scholars sought a rationalized and perfected system of laws. Today, the intellectual traditions in... |
2002 |
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Cheryl L. Wade |
RACIAL DISCRIMINATION AND THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE DIRECTORIAL DUTY OF CARE AND CORPORATE DISCLOSURE |
63 University of Pittsburgh Law Review 389 (Winter, 2002) |
Two corporate employers paid settlements of seismic proportions to minority employees alleging race discrimination in recent years. In 1996, Texaco settled a class action alleging race discrimination for $176 million, and in 2000, Coca-Cola settled race discrimination litigation for $192.5 million. The terms of both settlements required the... |
2002 |
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Spencer Overton |
RACIAL DISPARITIES AND THE POLITICAL FUNCTION OF PROPERTY |
49 UCLA Law Review 1553 (June, 2002) |
Race theorists note that racial discrimination has shaped the existing distribution of economic resources, and use this observation to justify reparations, to defend affirmative action, and to call for other legal changes that would improve the socioeconomic status of people of color. This Article takes the theorists' observation further. Property... |
2002 |
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Robert Westley |
REPARATIONS AND SYMBIOSIS: RECLAIMING THE REMEDIAL FOCUS |
71 UMKC Law Review 419 (Winter 2002) |
The metaphors that a society uses to describe injustice matter to the extent that they inform remedial responses to the unjust, motivate political resistance, and construct identity narratives for actors caught up in the web of social relations. Racism is a powerful metaphor of injustice that crosses multiple social boundaries. Sexism is another... |
2002 |
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Pedro A. Malavet |
REPARATIONS THEORY AND POSTCOLONIAL PUERTO RICO: SOME PRELIMINARY THOUGHTS |
13 Berkeley La Raza Law Journal 387 (Fall 2002) |
Introduction: Why Are You Here?. 387 I. Rotating Centers in the Reparations Discourse: The Sensitive Matter of Race. 393 II. Reparations Theory Through a LatCrit Lens. 399 A. The Legislation-Litigation Paradox for Reparations. 399 B. Constructing a LatCritical Meaning for Reparations. 404 C. Re/Creating Citizenship for Oppressed Groups Through... |
2002 |
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Maria Grahn-Farley |
RESPONSIBLE SELVES: WOMEN IN THE NORDIC LEGAL CULTURES. (KEVÄT NOUSIAINEN, ASA GUNNARSSON, KARIN LUNDSTRÖM, & JOHANNA NIEMI-KIESILÄINEN EDS.). BURLINGTON, VERMONT: ASHGATE DARTMOUTH, 2001. IX + 373. |
24 Michigan Journal of International Law 169 (Fall 2002) |
A ghost is haunting Europe today, the ghost of fascism. The European elections have been haunted by fascist political success. Fascism in Europe is as alive today as it was in the 1930s. Neo-nazi and fascist activities haunt Europe and threaten its future. The recent French presidential election is but one example of the ghost of fascism haunting... |
2002 |
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Cheryl Lynn Wofford Hill |
RESTATING INTERNATIONAL JURISPRUDENCE IN INCLUSIVE TERMS: LANGUAGE AS METHOD IN CREATING A HOSPITABLE WORLDVIEW |
27 Oklahoma City University Law Review 297 (Spring 2002) |
L1-3Introduction L1-3I. Worldviews L2-3A. The Masculine Worldview as Patriarchy 1. Understanding Patriarchy from a Hospitable Perspective 2. The Language of Patriarchy a. Masculine Norms and Bias b. The Self and the Other 3. Masculine Jurisprudence: Traditional Categorization L2-3B. An Inclusive Worldview as Feminism 1. Understanding Feminism from... |
2002 |
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Steven W. Bender , Keith Aoki |
SEEKIN' THE CAUSE: SOCIAL JUSTICE MOVEMENTS AND LATCRIT COMMUNITY |
81 Oregon Law Review 595 (Fall 2002) |
These are revolutionary times. All over the globe men are revolting against old systems of exploitation and oppression, and out of the wounds of a frail world, new systems of justice and equality are being born. The shirtless and barefoot people of the land are rising up as never before. The people who sat in darkness have seen a great light. We in... |
2002 |
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Susan W. Tiefenbrun |
SEX SELLS BUT DRUGS DON'T TALK: TRAFFICKING OF WOMEN SEX WORKERS AND AN ECONOMIC SOLUTION |
24 Thomas Jefferson Law Review 161 (Spring 2002) |
Sex trafficking is a lucrative international business, second only in profits to the drug and weapons trade. More than 2,000,000 women around the world are bought and sold each year for the purpose of sexual exploitation, and 50,000 of these women are trafficked into the United States in a modern-day form of slavery called non-consensual sex work.... |
2002 |
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Deborah Zalesne |
SEXUAL HARASSMENT LAW IN THE UNITED STATES AND SOUTH AFRICA: FACILITATING THE TRANSITION FROM LEGAL STANDARDS TO SOCIAL NORMS |
25 Harvard Women's Law Journal 143 (Spring, 2002) |
I. L2-5,T5Attempts at Legislating Personal Relationships in the Workplace: Sexual Harassment Legislation in South Africa and the United States 151 A. L3-5,T5South African Sexual Harassment Law: Low Priority Status 151 1. L4-5,T5The Root of the Problem 151 2. L4-5,T5Fixing the Problem: Legal Reform 156 a. The Law Before 1998: History of Sexual... |
2002 |
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William N. Eskridge, Jr |
SOME EFFECTS OF IDENTITY-BASED SOCIAL MOVEMENTS ON CONSTITUTIONAL LAW IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY |
100 Michigan Law Review 2062 (August, 2002) |
I. Constitutional Arguments and Strategies Deployed by Three Twentieth Century Identity-Based Social Movements. 2069 A. The Civil Rights Movement. 2072 1. The Politics of Protection, 1913-40. 2073 2. The Politics of Recognition and Some Remediation, 1940-72. 2082 3. The Politics of Remediation and the New Politics of Preservation, 1972-Present.... |
2002 |
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Pierre Schlag |
THE AESTHETICS OF AMERICAN LAW |
115 Harvard Law Review 1047 (February, 2002) |
I. The Aesthetic of the Grid. 1055 A. Grids. 1055 B. Drawing the Line. 1055 C. Applying the Law. 1058 D. Policing the Law. 1059 E. Seduction. 1059 F. Alienation. 1061 G. Classification Mania. 1062 H. Legal Change. 1065 I. Restraint Anxiety. 1066 II. The Energy Aesthetic. 1070 A. Moving Transformations. 1070 B. Law Is on a Mission. 1071 C. Let's... |
2002 |
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Kevin R. Johnson |
THE END OF "CIVIL RIGHTS" AS WE KNOW IT?: IMMIGRATION AND CIVIL RIGHTS IN THE NEW MILLENNIUM |
49 UCLA Law Review 1481 (June, 2002) |
This Article considers how emerging critical scholarship contributes to our understanding of the civil rights implications of immigration law and its enforcement. It further analyzes how immigration generates, and will continue to generate, new civil rights controversies in the United States for the foreseeable future. The nation has only begun to... |
2002 |
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Victor M. Hwang |
THE HMONG CAMPAIGN FOR JUSTICE: A PRACTITIONER'S PERSPECTIVE |
9 Asian Law Journal 83 (May, 2002) |
In the post-civil rights era, a chasm has evolved between progressive race scholars and civil rights practitioners with respect to preserving the civil rights of communities of color. Focusing on the Hmong campaign against welfare reform, the author argues that political and rebellious lawyering can bypass the disjuncture between practitioners and... |
2002 |
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Sylvia R. Lazos Vargas |
THE LATINA/O AND APIA VOTE POST-2000: WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO MOVE BEYOND "BLACK AND WHITE" POLITICS? |
81 Oregon Law Review 783 (Winter 2002) |
LatCrit 2002 took place at an auspicious political juncture, a year and a half after the fateful Bush v. Gore decision, which broke a virtual electoral tie in favor of the Republican presidential candidate, and six months prior to the 2002 November midterm elections, in which Republicans swept into power in both houses of Congress, breaking... |
2002 |
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John O. Calmore |
THE LAW AND CULTURE-SHIFT: RACE AND THE WARREN COURT LEGACY |
59 Washington and Lee Law Review 1095 (Fall, 2002) |
I. L2-3,T3Introduction 1096. II. L2-3,T3Race Law: The View from Culture 1104. III. L2-3,T3City of Memphis v. Greene: The Legal Construction of Unwanted Traffic 1112. IV. L2-3,T3The Expanding Regulation of Unwanted Traffic: Vignettes Beyond the Bench 1120. A. Public Accommodations at the Adam's Mark Hotel Chain. 1122 B. Dubuque, Iowa, and the... |
2002 |
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Duncan Kennedy |
THE LIMITED EQUITY COOP AS A VEHICLE FOR AFFORDABLE HOUSING IN A RACE AND CLASS DIVIDED SOCIETY |
46 Howard Law Journal 85 (Fall 2002) |
The limited equity cooperative is a form of housing tenure in which shareholder residents manage their buildings, within limits imposed by a charter, and have the right to get back what they have paid for their shares plus an allowance for improvements, if and when they decide to leave. The limited equity cooperative (hereinafter LEC) is neither... |
2002 |
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Adrien Katherine Wing , Mark Richard Johnson |
THE PROMISE OF A POST-GENOCIDE CONSTITUTION: HEALING RWANDAN SPIRIT INJURIES |
7 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 247 (Spring 2002) |
I. INTRODUCTION. 249 II. A Historical Background. 253 A. Pre-Colonial Accounts of Rwandan History and the Struggle to Define the Conflict. 253 B. The Colonial Period. 258 1. The Traditional Account's Reliance on Ethnicity Alone. 258 2. The Social Construction of Race: Colonial Racialization of the Tutsi. 259 3. The End of Colonialism. 260 C. The... |
2002 |
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John Hayakawa Török |
THE STORY OF "TOWARDS ASIAN AMERICAN JURISPRUDENCE" AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR LATINAS/OS IN AMERICAN LAW SCHOOLS |
13 Berkeley La Raza Law Journal 271 (Fall 2002) |
History is important. You choose who you are by choosing which tradition you belong to. Aung San Suu Kyi seeks to call attention to what she sees as the best aspects of the national and cultural heritage and to identify herself with them. Such profound knowledge and such a deep sense of identity are an irresistible force in the political struggle.... |
2002 |
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Theresa Glennon |
THE STUART ROME LECTURE KNOCKING AGAINST THE ROCKS: EVALUATING INSTITUTIONAL PRACTICES AND THE AFRICAN AMERICAN BOY |
5 Journal of Health Care Law and Policy 10 (2002) |
A Frisky Child Knocks His Face Against the Rocks. The media portrays young black men as dangerous, hostile and out of control. While many African American boys do succeed, statistics about black youth reveal serious achievement gaps between them and their Caucasian counterparts in school and high rates of arrest and referral to juvenile court.... |
2002 |
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Frank Rudy Cooper |
THE UN-BALANCED FOURTH AMENDMENT: A CULTURAL STUDY OF THE DRUG WAR, RACIAL PROFILING AND ARVIZU |
47 Villanova Law Review 851 (2002) |
THE drug war is the United States' attempt to eradicate illegal drug use by means of investigation and punishment of drug users and drug suppliers. In its current form, the drug war emanates from then newly elected President Ronald Reagan's declaration of a war on drugs. This Article seeks to elucidate how law enforcement interests aimed... |
2002 |
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José E. Alvarez |
THE WTO AS LINKAGE MACHINE |
96 American Journal of International Law 146 (January, 2002) |
The contributors to this symposium, both principal authors and commentators, ably demonstrate that there are indeed overarching constructs linking the subdisciplines of international law. All of the writers here assume that linkage issues arise for the World Trade Organization, as they have with respect to a number of other intergovernmental... |
2002 |
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Beverly I. Moran |
TRAPPED BY A PARADOX: SPECULATIONS ON WHY FEMALE LAW PROFESSORS FIND IT HARD TO FIT INTO LAW SCHOOL CULTURES |
11 Southern California Review of Law and Women's Studies 283 (Spring 2002) |
In October of 1999, the Association of American Law Schools (AALS) hosted a workshop for female law professors, entitled Getting Unstuck Without Coming Unglued. The point of the workshop was to bring women together from across the country to discuss a common problem: no matter how good it looks from the outside, many women find law teaching... |
2002 |
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Marion Crain |
WHITEWASHED LABOR LAW, SKINWALKING UNIONS |
23 Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law 211 (2002) |
I. Introduction. 212 II. Class Solidarity Means White Solidarity: Race-Neutral Organizing. 216 A. Slavery's Legacy. 217 B. White Privilege. 219 C. Colorblind Organizing Ideology. 221 III. An Alternative Ideology: Civil Rights Unionism. 223 A. Struggles for Racial/Economic Justice. 224 B. Immigrant Organizing. 228 IV. Colorblind Organizing... |
2002 |
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William Brewbaker |
WHO CARES? WHY BOTHER?: WHAT JEFF POWELL AND MARK TUSHNET HAVE TO SAY TO EACH OTHER |
55 Oklahoma Law Review 533 (Fall, 2002) |
In 1993, H. Jefferson Powell wrote a book entitled The Moral Tradition of American Constitutionalism. Powell's book offers, among other things, a Christian theological perspective on the conceptual and moral quagmire into which the American constitutional tradition has worked itself. Mark Tushnet eventually reviewed the book for the Journal... |
2002 |
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Lorraine Schmall |
WOMEN AND PENSION REFORM: ECONOMIC INSECURITY AND OLD AGE |
35 John Marshall Law Review 673 (Summer 2002) |
One measure of economic security is participation in a pension plan. Despite all the talk about Social Security insolvency and fears of aged poverty, over the last fifteen years, the private supplemental pension coverage rates have remained fairly stable; just short of 50% for all workers. However, alleging that one-half of all American employees... |
2002 |
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