Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year | Key Terms in Title or Summary |
Gitanjali S. Gutierrez |
TAKING ACCOUNT OF ANOTHER RACE: REFRAMING ASIAN-AMERICAN CHALLENGES TO RACE-CONSCIOUS ADMISSIONS IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS |
86 Cornell Law Review 1283 (September, 2001) |
Introduction. 1284 I. Equal Protection Analysis and Race-Neutral Doctrine. 1291 A. The Evolution of Race-Neutral Equal Protection Doctrine. 1291 B. Principal Rationales for Constitutional Colorblindness. 1293 1. Definitional Problems Beyond Judicial Competence: Benign and Invidious Classifications, Minority and Majority Racial Groups. 1293... |
2001 |
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Elvia Rosales Arriola |
TALKING ABOUT POWER AND PEDAGOGY, INTRODUCTION FOR CLUSTER: "LATCRIT THEORY IN NEW CONTEXTS" |
78 Denver University Law Review 507 (2001) |
LatCrit conferences always make me feel like I've come home. I wrote of this sentiment in my foreword to the Second Annual Symposium for LatCrit--on that feeling of familia that was generated by my witnessing a multi-racial/ethnic and gendered spectrum of people having the conversations that would become LatCrit I. I also reflected on how... |
2001 |
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Margalynne Armstrong |
Teaching by the Book |
89 California Law Review 1625 (October, 2001) |
This review of Race and Races presents a pragmatic perspective, discussing how the casebook perfomed in the classroom. I have twice assigned Race and Races as the primary text in three-unit seminars. I first taught the materials while in manuscript form (p. v), and then used the book in its first year of publication. Having taught similar courses... |
2001 |
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Pamela Edwards , Sheilah Vance |
TEACHING SOCIAL JUSTICE THROUGH LEGAL WRITING |
7 Legal Writing: The Journal of the Legal Writing Institute 63 (2001) |
Because the topic of social justice is important to both of the authors, we were pleased to participate in the 2000 Legal Writing Institute Conference, even though neither of the authors is currently a legal writing professor; however, we both were in the past. Incorporating social justice in legal writing assignments provides benefits for... |
2001 |
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Dan Subotnik |
THE CULT OF HOSTILE GENDER CLIMATE: A MALE VOICE PREACHES DIVERSITY TO THE CHOIR |
8 University of Chicago Law School Roundtable 37 (2001) |
There can be no doubt that law schools . . . favor men over women in almost every way imaginable. (I)t can be as destructive to the goal of improving the educational environment and opportunities for women to exaggerate gender differences as to ignore them. . . . (E)xaggerating them perpetuates myths . . . allowing significant achievement by women... |
2001 |
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Richard Schur |
THE DIALOGIC CRITICISM OF RICHARD DELGADO: CHICANO/A LITERATURE, EQUALITY, AND THE RHETORIC OF FORM |
19 Law & Inequality: A Journal of Theory and Practice 129 (Winter 2001) |
cuando lleguemos, cuando lleguemos, ya, la mera verdad estoy cansado de llegar. Es la misma cosa llegar que partir porque apenas llegamos y . . . la mera verdad estoy cansado de llegar. Mejor debería decir, cuando no lleguemos porque esa es la mera verdad. Nunca llegamos. - Tomás Rivera The word discourse derives from the Latin discursus, which... |
2001 |
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Devon W. Carbado , Mitu Gulati |
THE FIFTH BLACK WOMAN |
11 Journal of Contemporary Legal Issues 701 (2001) |
This symposium raises a pointed question about intersectionality: What is its future? The short answer is that the future of intersectionality is promising. In part, this promise derives from the foundation intersectionality has laid for the construction of an entire set of new theories of discrimination. One such theory is identity performance. In... |
2001 |
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Philip C. Kissam |
THE IDEOLOGY OF THE CASE METHOD/FINAL EXAMINATION LAW SCHOOL |
70 University of Cincinnati Law Review 137 (Fall, 2001) |
The case method/final examination system of law schools remains the predominant method of legal education despite dramatic changes in modern legal practices, powerful criticisms of the case method and final examinations, and challenges from new ideas and new forms of legal education such as clinical education and the legal writing movement. The... |
2001 |
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Peter Goodrich , Linda G. Mills |
THE LAW OF WHITE SPACES: RACE, CULTURE, AND LEGAL EDUCATION |
51 Journal of Legal Education 15 (March, 2001) |
The scene, drawn from memory, is a first-year law school classroom. It is the early 1980s and the class is on civil procedure. The teacher is a white woman. She is nervous, and the class is dominated by students who provide standard right answers to formulaic law school questions. Other points of view, particularly those of a critical or feminist... |
2001 |
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Kristi L. Bowman |
THE NEW FACE OF SCHOOL DESEGREGATION |
50 Duke Law Journal 1751 (April, 2001) |
In 1998, the balance tipped: for the first time, Latinos and Latinas comprised a greater percentage of the national school-age population than did African Americans. Within forty years, Whites will become a statistical minority in the United States' school-age population --and in an increasing number of public school districts. In Hawaii, New... |
2001 |
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Harvey Gee |
THE REFUGEE BURDEN: A CLOSER LOOK AT THE REFUGEE ACT OF 1980 |
26 North Carolina Journal of International Law and Commercial Regulation 559 (Spring 2001) |
I. Introduction. 560 II. Immigration, Policymaking, and the Law. 563 A. Citizenship and Community: The Racial and Cultural Politics of Belonging and the Plenary Power and Judicial Review. 563 B. Sharing the Burden of Refugees. 572 III. Reinterpreting Old Laws with New Perspectives. 573 IV. The Refugee Act of 1980 . 577 A. A Critical Theory of the... |
2001 |
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Rebecca R. French |
TIME IN THE LAW |
72 University of Colorado Law Review 663 (Summer 2001) |
. . . the whips and scorns of time . . . the law's delay. William Shakespeare Hamlet, Act 3 Scene 1 Time present and time past Are both perhaps present in time future, And time future contained in time past. If all time is eternally present All time is unredeemable. What might have been is an abstraction. . . . T.S. Eliot Burnt Norton... |
2001 |
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Hope Lewis |
UNIVERSAL MOTHER: TRANSNATIONAL MIGRATION AND THE HUMAN RIGHTS OF BLACK WOMEN IN THE AMERICAS |
5 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 197 (Fall 2001) |
You don't have to be teacher and nurse to be important. Women migrants often embody--literally--the absence, the breakdown, or the inequities of the international legal regime. War, global economic restructuring, human rights abuses, the persistence of gender oppression all over the world each play a role--alone, in combination, or alongside other... |
2001 |
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David Seawell |
WARDLOW'S CASE: A CALL TO BROADEN THE PERSPECTIVE OF AMERICAN CRIMINAL LAW |
78 Denver University Law Review 1119 (2001) |
Sam saw Timothy, turned, and ran. Timothy saw Sam run, followed, and caught him. Timothy frisked Sam and found a gun. Sam went to a suppression hearing, a trial, a sentencing hearing, and finally jail. The events above began shortly after noon on September 9, 1995, at 4035 West Van Buren Street, Chicago, Illinois. Sam is Sam Wardlow, a 44-year-old... |
2001 |
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Benjamin D. Steiner , Victor Argothy |
WHITE ADDICTION: RACIAL INEQUALITY, RACIAL IDEOLOGY, AND THE WAR ON DRUGS |
10 Temple Political & Civil Rights Law Review 443 (Spring 2001) |
[O]pposing whiteness is not the same as opposing white people. White supremacy is an equal opportunity employer; nonwhite people can become active agents of white supremacy as well as passive participants in its hierarchies and rewards. Some of these kids come from beautiful homes, says W.J. Hunt, chairman of the Los Angeles County Narcotics and... |
2001 |
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Enid Trucios-Haynes |
WHY "RACE MATTERS:" LATCRIT THEORY AND LATINA/O RACIAL IDENTITY |
12 La Raza Law Journal 1 (2001) |
Latinas/os are a force to be reckoned with, and we now require our own room in the Master's House. Yet, we must not forget it is the Master's House, and we are constrained by the basic home rule that is White supremacy. Latinas/os are not exempt from the oppression of White supremacy, yet, as a group or individually, we often are seduced into... |
2001 |
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Donna E. Young |
WORKING ACROSS BORDERS: GLOBAL RESTRUCTURING AND WOMEN'S WORK |
2001 Utah Law Review 1 (2001) |
I. Introduction. 2 II. The Critique in Brief. 9 III. The Migration of Two Working Women: Globalism at Work. 12 IV. Regulating Domesticity Within the Home. 19 A. Domestic Work as Women's Work. 22 B. Legal (Mis)Constructions of Unpaid Domestic Work. 23 C. Legal (Mis)Treatment of Paid Domestic Work. 26 1. International and Federal Regulation. 26 2.... |
2001 |
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Reginald Leamon Robinson |
"EXPERT" KNOWLEDGE: INTRODUCTORY COMMENTS ON RACE CONSCIOUSNESS |
20 Boston College Third World Law Journal 145 (Winter, 2000) |
In my view, the central problem of human consciousness depends on this ability to imagine. What we observe is not nature itself, but nature exposed to our method of questioning. The more we experience nonsense, the more clearly we are experiencing the boundaries of our own self-imposed cognitive structures. Nonsense is that which does not fit... |
2000 |
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Carrie Lynn H. Okizaki |
"WHAT ARE YOU?": HAPA-GIRL AND MULTIRACIAL IDENTITY |
71 University of Colorado Law Review 463 (Spring 2000) |
What are you? As the hapa daughter of a Japanese father and a half-German, half-English mother, people have often asked me this question. I have had total strangers ask me Where were you born? After my response of Colorado, I usually get a reply like: Oh, I thought maybe you were from Hawaii--has anyone ever told you that you look Hawaiian?... |
2000 |
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Ediberto Roman |
A RACE APPROACH TO INTERNATIONAL LAW (RAIL): IS THERE A NEED FOR YET ANOTHER CRITIQUE OF INTERNATIONAL LAW? |
33 U.C. Davis Law Review 1519 (Summer, 2000) |
I seek not what his soul desires. He dreads not what my spirit fears. Our Heavens have shown us separate fires. Our dooms have dealt us differing years. Our daysprings and our timeless dead Ordained for us and still control Lives sundered at the fountain-head, And distant, now, as Pole from Pole. Yet, dwelling thus, these worlds apart, When we... |
2000 |
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Kathryn Abrams |
AFTERWORD: CRITICAL STRATEGY AND THE JUDICIAL EVASION OF DIFFERENCE |
85 Cornell Law Review 1426 (July, 2000) |
Every symposium is a feast of sorts, a fabulous array of tastes and textures that offer far more than one can possibly consume at a sitting. Participants enjoy a dizzying period of sampling at will and then settle in for a more extended period of digestion. Viewing the proceedings here in this light, one can only offer compliments to the chefs.... |
2000 |
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Alfredo Mirande Gonzalez |
ALFREDO'S JUNGLE CRUISE: CHRONICLES ON LAW, LAWYERING, AND LOVE |
33 U.C. Davis Law Review 1347 (Summer, 2000) |
No me escribistes, y mis cartas anteriores no se si las recibistes. Tu me olvidastes, y mataron mis amores el silencio que me distes .. Haber si a esta si le das contestacion EUFEMIA! Del amor pa que te escribo. Aqui quedo como amigo. Tu atento y muy seguro servidor. Carta a Eufemia, traditional Mexican song You didn't write to me, and I don't... |
2000 |
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James Thuo Gathii |
ALTERNATIVE AND CRITICAL: THE CONTRIBUTION OF RESEARCH AND SCHOLARSHIP ON DEVELOPING COUNTRIES TO INTERNATIONAL LEGAL THEORY |
41 Harvard International Law Journal 263 (Spring, 2000) |
Welcome to this special symposium Issue on international law and the developing world, which coincides with the recent renewal in interest, research, and publication in this area. The Issue's contributions are thoughtful and critical; the articles explore in important and new ways some of the most urgent themes in international law affecting... |
2000 |
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Deborah W. Post |
APPROPRIATION & TRANSCULTURATION IN THE CREATION OF COMMUNITY |
20 Boston College Third World Law Journal 117 (Winter, 2000) |
I participated in a roundtable discussion at the First National Meeting of the Regional People of Color Conferences entitled Celebrating Our Emerging Voices: People of Color Speak--Coherence or Tower of Babble? With the allusion to the Tower of Babel, the planners invoked a foundational myth, a metaphor within a narrative tradition that equates... |
2000 |
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Deborah Jones Merritt |
ARE WOMEN STUCK ON THE ACADEMIC LADDER? AN EMPIRICAL PERSPECTIVE |
10 UCLA Women's Law Journal 249 (Spring 2000) |
Feeling stuck is subjective; every woman experiences the job market differently. Despite the individuality of experience, this outline attempts to offer a somewhat global view of how men and women have fared in the legal academy. Sections I and II examine the experiences of law teachers who began their first nontenure-track law school position in... |
2000 |
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Daria Roithmayr |
BARRIERS TO ENTRY: A MARKET LOCK-IN MODEL OF DISCRIMINATION |
86 Virginia Law Review 727 (May, 2000) |
Introduction. 729 I. An Increasing Returns Primer. 738 A. Preliminary Assumptions. 738 B. Some Basic Concepts. 742 C. First-Movers, Standardization, and Anticompetitive Conduct. 750 D. Institutional Networks and Increasing Returns. 752 II. Anticompetitive Conduct in Legal Education. 754 A. Formal and Informal Rules: Segregation and Jim Crow. 755 B.... |
2000 |
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Devon W. Carbado |
BLACK RIGHTS, GAY RIGHTS, CIVIL RIGHTS |
47 UCLA Law Review 1467 (August, 2000) |
Over the past few years, an extensive body of literature has questioned the constitutional and political legitimacy of the Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy. Yet, the public discourses about this policy have received virtually no scholarly attention. In this Article, Professor Devon W. Carbado focuses on two such discourses: black antiracist and gay... |
2000 |
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John A. Scanlan |
CALL AND RESPONSE: THE PARTICULAR AND THE GENERAL |
2000 University of Illinois Law Review 639 (2000) |
The year is 1980. The setting is Liberty City, on the western edge of downtown Miami, a few blocks from the Orange Bowl. A few months later, flames ignited by the worst race riot in the city's history will singe the palm trees and storefronts flanking the street where I walk. I enter a building with concrete walls. My host from the INS greets me... |
2000 |
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Antony Anghie |
CIVILIZATION AND COMMERCE: THE CONCEPT OF GOVERNANCE IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE |
45 Villanova Law Review 887 (2000) |
THE broad topic of this conference, the relationship between international law, race and colonialism, raises questions of the first importance to the discipline of international law, and I am very honored to be a part of this event. Perhaps one of the most notable aspects of the complex relationship between race and international law is the extent... |
2000 |
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E. Dana Neacsu |
CLS STANDS FOR CRITICAL LEGAL STUDIES, IF ANYONE REMEMBERS |
8 Journal of Law & Policy 415 (2000) |
Critical Legal Studies (CLS), which started as a Left movement within legal academia, has undergone so many changes, that one may liken it to products of pop culture, such as the television cartoon show, South Park. South Park features a character named Kenny, totally unlike any other cartoon hero, tragic or otherwise. Like Kenny, who is an... |
2000 |
|
Reviewed by Sylvia R. Lazos Vargas |
CRITICAL RACE THEORY AND AUTOBIOGRAPHY: CAN A POPULAR "HYBRID" GENRE REACH ACROSS THE RACIAL DIVIDE? |
18 Law & Inequality: A Journal of Theory and Practice 419 (Summer 2000) |
In recent years, the university presses have increasingly welcomed personal narratives that interweave race topics. Patricia J. Williams's The Alchemy of Race and Rights is among the most successful of such crossover books. Like Williams's book, the three works reviewed herein can be viewed as forming part of the burgeoning corpus of critical... |
2000 |
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Berta Esperanza Hernández-Truyol , Sharon Elizabeth Rush |
CULTURE, NATIONHOOD, AND THE HUMAN RIGHTS IDEAL |
33 University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform 233 (Spring 2000) |
This Symposium on Culture, Nation, and LatCrit Theory continues the exciting work of a very young but productive branch of critical movements. LatCrit is a theoretical movement initiated as a distinct discourse within critical legal theory. Its origins are traceable to the first colloquium organized with the purpose of having Latina/o law... |
2000 |
|
Berta Esperanza Hernández-Truyol , Sharon Elizabeth Rush |
CULTURE, NATIONHOOD, AND THE HUMAN RIGHTS IDEAL |
5 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 817 (Summer 2000) |
This Symposium on Culture, Nation, and LatCrit Theory continues the exciting work of a very young but productive branch of critical movements. LatCrit is a theoretical movement initiated as a distinct discourse within critical legal theory. Its origins are traceable to the first colloquium organized with the purpose of having Latina/o law... |
2000 |
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Eli Denard Oates |
CURETON V. NCAA: THE RECOGNITION OF PROPOSITION 16'S MISPLACED USE OF STANDARDIZED TESTS IN THE CONTEXT OF COLLEGIATE ATHLETICS AS A BARRIER TO EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES FOR MINORITIES |
35 Wake Forest Law Review 445 (Summer 2000) |
Kevin Ross attended and played basketball for Creighton University from 1978 to 1982. After leaving Creighton, he mastered the fundamental concept of reading after joining a third grade class in Chicago, Illinois. Dexter Manley graduated from Oklahoma State University and became an All-Pro lineman for the Washington Redskins in the National... |
2000 |
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Richard Delgado |
DERRICK BELL'S TOOLKIT--FIT TO DISMANTLE THAT FAMOUS HOUSE? |
75 New York University Law Review 283 (May, 2000) |
Does United States antidiscrimination law embrace a black/white binary paradigm of race, in which other, nonblack minority groups must compare their treatment to that of African Americans in order to gain redress? In this Derrick Bell Lecture, Professor Richard Delgado argues that it does, and that other minorities also fall from time to time into... |
2000 |
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Ian Ayres, Fredrick E. Vars |
DETERMINANTS OF CITATIONS TO ARTICLES IN ELITE LAW REVIEWS |
29 Journal of Legal Studies 427 (January, 2000) |
This article analyzes the determinants of citations to pieces published from 1980 to 1995 in Harvard Law Review, Stanford Law Review, and The Yale Law Journal. We also rank articles by number of citations using regressions controlling for time since publication, journal, and subject area. To summarize a few of our results: citations per year peak... |
2000 |
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Angela P. Harris |
EQUALITY TROUBLE: SAMENESS AND DIFFERENCE IN TWENTIETH-CENTURY RACE LAW |
88 California Law Review 1923 (December, 2000) |
Introduction. 1925 I. The First Reconstruction: Prelude to the Twentieth Century. 1930 A. The Legal Structure of the First Reconstruction. 1931 B. Dismantling Reconstruction: The Southern Redemption. 1936 II. Race Law in the Age Of Difference. 1937 A. Civilization and Self-Determination: The Increasing Importance of Race. 1938 B. Race Law and... |
2000 |
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Margaret Chon |
ERASING RACE?: A CRITICAL RACE FEMINIST VIEW OF INTERNET IDENTITY-SHIFTING |
3 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 439 (Spring 2000) |
Algo de mi se ha perdido Something of mine is lost Entre tu casa y mi casa Between your house and mine Será el calor que no abrasa It's the heat that doesn't singe No es de gozo Not from joy No es de ira Not from anger Como tampoco es mentira Nor is it a lie Que algo de ti se ha escondido That something of yours is hidden If race signifies and... |
2000 |
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Elizabeth M. Iglesias , Francisco Valdes |
EXPANDING DIRECTIONS, EXPLODING PARAMETERS: CULTURE AND NATION IN LATCRIT COALITIONAL IMAGINATION |
5 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 787 (Summer 2000) |
We have to believe in the power of imagination because it is all we have, and ours is stronger than theirs. The real war is between our imagination and theirs, what we can see and what they are blinded to. Do not despair. None of them can see far enough, and so long as we do not let them violate our imagination we will survive. In Imagining... |
2000 |
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Robert Westley |
FIRST-TIME ENCOUNTERS: "PASSING" REVISITED AND DEMYSTIFICATION AS A CRITICAL PRACTICE |
18 Yale Law and Policy Review 297 (2000) |
I hope the reader will indulge me in my use of the terms white, black, mulatto, and Negro. Admittedly, they are very loose and laden with powerful emotional charges. But most who read this book will know their weaknesses and recognize their strengths as necessary symbols in talking about these subjects. -- Joel Williamson Robert Green filed... |
2000 |
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Christopher Tomlins |
FRAMING THE FIELD OF LAW'S DISCIPLINARY ENCOUNTERS: A HISTORICAL NARRATIVE |
34 Law and Society Review 911 (2000) |
In this article I address the historical interrelationship of law and social science. I explore the separation of law and social science during the later 19th century, examine their relationship over the next 50 years, and finally take up their more elaborate post-World War II interaction, culminating in the birth and development of the law and... |
2000 |
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Timothy A. Canova |
GLOBAL FINANCE AND THE INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND'S NEOLIBERAL AGENDA: THE THREAT TO THE EMPLOYMENT, ETHNIC IDENTITY, AND CULTURAL PLURALISM OF LATINA/O COMMUNITIES |
33 U.C. Davis Law Review 1547 (Summer, 2000) |
Critical legal scholarship can be seen as a slowly evolving movement of inclusion, a movement that has expanded in scope and vision to include voices previously excluded from elite academic discourse. For instance, LatCrit emerged in recent years as a movement that speaks for those who were not just subordinated by legal structures and processes,... |
2000 |
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Penelope E. Andrews |
GLOBALIZATION, HUMAN RIGHTS AND CRITICAL RACE FEMINISM: VOICES FROM THE MARGINS |
3 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 373 (Spring 2000) |
I. Introduction II. Violence Against Women in South Africa and Aboriginal Women in Australia A. South Africa B. Australia III. Globalization and Feminist Intervention A. Our Global Neighborhood?: The Phenomenon of Globalization B. Hierarchies of Human Rights C. Women and Globalization D. Feminist Interventions in International Human Rights... |
2000 |
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Dan Subotnik |
GOODBYE TO THE SAT, LSAT? HELLO TO EQUITY BY LOTTERY? EVALUATING LANI GUINIER'S PLAN FOR ENDING RACE CONSCIOUSNESS |
43 Howard Law Journal 141 (Winter 2000) |
What destiny awaits us if nearly 80 percent of our youngsters in Denver fail the fourth grade reading tests, as they did last year? Hugh Price The more books you read, the more stupid you become. Mao Zedong Two beggars are standing across from the university in pre-World War II Berlin. The atmosphere is repressive, even hateful, though not yet... |
2000 |
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Kenneth A. Sprang |
HOLISTIC JURISPRUDENCE: LAW SHAPED BY PEOPLE OF FAITH |
74 Saint John's Law Review 753 (Summer 2000) |
He has told you, O mortal, what is good; and what does the Lord require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God. To be a lawyer and at the same time to be a faithful Christian or other person of faith is difficult--some would say impossible. Some resolve the crisis by tossing in the towel and leaving the... |
2000 |
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Michael A. Olivas |
IMMIGRATION LAW TEACHING AND SCHOLARSHIP IN THE IVORY TOWER: A RESPONSE TO RACE MATTERS |
2000 University of Illinois Law Review 613 (2000) |
Why does one write? Why does one respond to another's writing? What sources does one consult and cite as influences? In Race Matters: Immigration Law and Policy Scholarship, Law in the Ivory Tower, and the Legal Indifference of the Race Critique, Professor Kevin Johnson offers an interesting and provocative response to these and other key questions... |
2000 |
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Larry Cata Backer |
INSCRIBING JUDICIAL PREFERENCES INTO OUR FUNDAMENTAL LAW: ON THE EUROPEAN PRINCIPLE OF MARGINS OF APPRECIATION AS CONSTITUTIONAL JURISPRUDENCE IN THE U.S. |
7 Tulsa Journal of Comparative & International Law 327 (Spring 2000) |
The interpretation of the laws is the proper and peculiar province of the courts. A constitution is in fact - and must be regarded by the judges as - a fundamental law. It therefore belongs to them to ascertain its meaning, as well as the meaning of any particular act proceeding from the legislative body. The recent constitutional jurisprudence of... |
2000 |
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Ian F. Haney López |
INSTITUTIONAL RACISM: JUDICIAL CONDUCT AND A NEW THEORY OF RACIAL DISCRIMINATION |
109 Yale Law Journal 1717 (June, 2000) |
I. Introduction. 1721 II. Discrimination in the Selection of Los Angeles County Grand Jurors. 1730 A. Discretion Codified. 1730 B. Judicial Practice: Friends and Neighbors. 1732 C. Inside the Circle. 1735 D. Outside the Circle. 1737 E. Extraracial Discrimination. 1740 F. Discrimination by the Numbers. 1741 G. Jury Discrimination and the... |
2000 |
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Elizabeth M. Iglesias |
INSTITUTIONALIZING ECONOMIC JUSTICE: A LATCRIT PERSPECTIVE ON THE IMPERATIVES OF LINKING THE RECONSTRUCTION OF 'COMMUNITY' TO THE TRANSFORMATION OF LEGAL STRUCTURES THAT INSTITUTIONALIZE THE DEPOLITICIZATION AND FRAGMENTATION OF LABOR/COMMUNITY SOLIDARITY |
2 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Labor and Employment Law 773 (Spring 2000) |
The long and unwieldy title of this essay reflects the complex range of issues implicated in any project designed to promote the effective participation of labor/community coalitions in the process of progressive social transformation. The decision of the University of Pennsylvania Journal of Labor and Employment Law to organize a unique gathering... |
2000 |
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Robert S. Chang, Natasha Fuller |
INTRODUCTION |
33 U.C. Davis Law Review 1277 (Summer, 2000) |
Borrowing from Eric Yamamoto's definition of race praxis, we understand LatCrit praxis to be a critical pragmatic process of race theory generation and translation, practical engagement, material change, and reflection . [[which] integrate[s] conceptual inquiries into power and representation with frontline struggles for racial justice,... |
2000 |
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