AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearKey Terms in Title or Summary
Berta Esperanza Hernández-Truyol LAS OLVIDADAS--GENDERED IN JUSTICE/GENDERED INJUSTICE: LATINAS, FRONTERAS AND THE LAW 1 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 353 (Spring 1998) Ever since I can remember, I have always been ashamed of who I am. I was ashamed of being poor, I was ashamed of being on welfare, I was ashamed of being a spic (Puerto Rican) with all the prejudices and connotations that go along with a society that does not honor the individual as a spiritual being who is unique and deserves every opportunity... 1998  
Luz Guerra LATCRIT Y LA DES-COLONIZACIÓN NUESTRA: TAKING COLÓN OUT 19 Chicano-Latino Law Review 351 (Spring 1998) El panorama de América durante estos últimos quinientos años, y luego de estos quinientos, nos muestra un curioso mosaico multiétnico, multirracial y en su conjunto plural, donde el eje de unidad y coherencia está plasmado en aquello que aparece como herencia de Occidente y que nosotros identificamos como latino-américa y anglo-américa, en... 1998  
Jean Stefancic LATINO AND LATINA CRITICAL THEORY: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY 10 La Raza Law Journal 423 (Spring 1998) Latino/a critical scholarship, though largely ignored, has been around for a long time. One might say that its progenitor was Rodolfo Acuña, whose book Occupied America, originally published in 1972, is now in its third edition. Acuña was the first scholar to reformulate American history to take account of U.S. colonization of land formerly held by... 1998  
Reinhard Zimmermann LAW REVIEWS: A FORAY THROUGH A STRANGE WORLD 47 Emory Law Journal 659 (Spring 1998) I. The Most Remarkable Institution--Introduction 660 II. Law Review's Empire--An Overview of the Journal Landscape 661 1. General Law Reviews. .661 2. Specialized Law Reviews. .664 3. Law Reviews Oriented Towards International Law. .668 III. Keeping Up With Harvard--The Origin of Law Reviews 670 IV. The Work of Boys--The Editing and... 1998  
Garner K. Weng LOOK AT THE PRETTY COLORS! RETHINKING PROMISES OF DIVERSITY AS LEGALLY BINDING 10 La Raza Law Journal 753 (Fall, 1998) Institutions of higher learning have become much more complex than simple schools. Today's top universities manage billion-dollar budgets and are as much in the business of business as education. Accordingly, universities compete with each other. They compete for business, which among other things means competing for students. School... 1998  
Verna Sánchez LOOKING UPWARD AND INWARD: RELIGION AND CRITICAL THEORY 19 Chicano-Latino Law Review 431 (Spring 1998) La vida es duda, y la fe sin la duda es sólo muerte. Several years ago, I somehow fell into writing about religion and the First Amendment. I was intrigued, for several reasons, by a case then in a Florida district court. The case was unusual in a number of respects. It was perhaps the first time in this country that a babalawo (very loosely... 1998  
Gloria Sandrino-Glasser LOS CONFUNDIDOS: DE-CONFLATING LATINOS/AS' RACE AND ETHNICITY 19 Chicano-Latino Law Review 69 (Spring 1998) Introduction. 71 I. Latinos: A Demographic Portrait. 75 A. Latinos: Dispelling the Legacy of Homogenization. 75 B. Los Confundidos: Who are We? (?Quién Somos?). 77 1. Mexican-Americans: The Native Sons and Daughters. 77 2. Mainland Puerto Ricans: The Undecided. 81 3. Cuban-Americans: Last to Come, Most to Gain. 85 II. The Conflation: An Overview.... 1998  
Robert Westley MANY BILLIONS GONE: IS IT TIME TO RECONSIDER THE CASE FOR BLACK REPARATIONS? 19 Boston College Third World Law Journal 429 (Fall, 1998) For each beloved hour, sharp pittances of years. Bitter contested farthings and coffers heaped with tears. Affirmative action for Black Americans as a form of remediation for perpetuation of past injustice is almost dead. Due to a string of Supreme Court decisions beginning with Bakke and leading up to Adarand, the future possibility of using... 1998  
Robert Westley MANY BILLIONS GONE: IS IT TIME TO RECONSIDER THE CASE FOR BLACK REPARATIONS? 40 Boston College Law Review 429 (December, 1998) For each beloved hour, sharp pittances of years. Bitter contested farthings and coffers heaped with tears. Affirmative action for Black Americans as a form of remediation for perpetuation of past injustice is almost dead. Due to a string of Supreme Court decisions beginning with Bakke and leading up to Adarand, the future possibility of using... 1998  
Carolyn C. Jones MAPPING TAX NARRATIVES 73 Tulane Law Review 653 (December, 1998) Following scholars in other disciplines, some legal scholars have begun to analyze and use narrative. This interest in narrative has not, up to now, characterized tax scholarship. There is a world of tax narratives, and this essay proposes one map of the territory. Like all lawyers and legal scholars, tax scholars have been making, using, and... 1998  
Elvia R. Arriola MARCH 19 Chicano-Latino Law Review 1 (Spring 1998) I. Introduction. 2 II. Quiénes Somos: Who Are We?. 6 A. A LatCrit I Retrospective: Or, I Wasn't In Puerto Rico but I Went to La Jolla. 6 B. On to LatCrit II and the Material Experiences of Diversity: Un Movimiento Tumultuouso. 11 1. Multiplicity of Identities: Multiplicity of Agendas. 13 2. Practicing Diversity for the Sake of Community: It Soon... 1998  
Jeffery C. Mingo MORE COLORS THAN THE RAINBOW: GAY MEN OF COLOR SPEAK ABOUT THEIR IDENTITIES AND LEGAL CHOICES 8 Law and Sexuality: A Review of Lesbian, Gay. Bisexual, and Transgender Legal Issues 561 (1998) I. Introduction. 562 II. Gay Rights, Special Rights. 566 III. Andrew Cunanan. 571 IV. Perry Watkins. 578 V. Gay Men of Color at Boalt. 583 VI. The Interviews. 590 1998  
Devon W. Carbado MOTHERHOOD AND WORK IN CULTURAL CONTEXT: ONE WOMAN'S PATRIARCHAL BARGAIN 21 Harvard Women's Law Journal 1 (Spring, 1998) Of course, your mother is not only that woman whose womb formed and released you . But naming your own mother (or her equivalent) enables people to place you precisely within the universal web of your life, in each of its dimensions: cultural, spiritual, personal, and historical. Paula Gunn Allen, Who Is Your Mother? My mother mothered. That is... 1998  
Jean Stefancic NEEDLES IN THE HAYSTACK: FINDING NEW LEGAL MOVEMENTS IN CASEBOOKS 73 Chicago-Kent Law Review 755 (1998) What is the relation between law teaching and scholarship? One may conceive of this relation in many different ways. Some of them are explored in this symposium: Are good teaching and good writing related? Are the most prolific writers good teachers? Can scholarship about teaching be truly excellent? What has the greater correlation with... 1998  
Frank H. Wu NEW PARADIGMS OF CIVIL RIGHTS: A REVIEW ESSAY 66 George Washington Law Review 698 (March, 1998) Can we become one America? In another era, the question might have been rhetorical. In our age, it sounds more like a plea than an inquiry. In a commencement address delivered at the University of California at San Diego on June 14, 1997, President William Jefferson Clinton asked, [C]an we become one America in the 21st Century? In his remarks,... 1998  
Larry Catá Backer NOT A ZOOKEEPER'S CULTURE: LATCRIT THEORY AND THE SEARCH FOR LATINO/A AUTHENTICITY IN THE U.S. 4 Texas Hispanic Journal of Law and Policy 7 (Spring 1998) We always used to know who we were. We did not need anyone to tell us. We did not have to think too hard about it. We understood that we were many and that we might not like each other or each other's practices very much at times. We also understood how everyone else saw us. We were mostly Mexican (certainly, that is how Disney saw us). We were... 1998  
Judith Resnik ON THE MARGIN: HUMANITIES AND LAW 10 Yale Journal of Law & the Humanities 413 (Summer 1998) Austin Sarat reminds us that l aw is part of The Humanities and that the study of law could be situated appropriately in a liberal arts college committed to the humanities. Yet given that law is humanities, it is poignant to consider how marginal the study of humanities is to law schools, which constitute one venue (but not the only, as Austin... 1998  
Elizabeth M. Iglesias OUT OF THE SHADOW: MARKING INTERSECTIONS IN AND BETWEEN ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN CRITICAL LEGAL SCHOLARSHIP AND LATINA/O CRITICAL LEGAL THEORY 19 Boston College Third World Law Journal 349 (Fall, 1998) Before Professor Sumi Cho asked me to comment on the two excellent articles that now constitute the major points of reference for my own contribution to this Symposium, Korematsu was just another of the many cases I had often encountered as blurbs or in the string cites of some judicial opinion or law review text. It was, for me, one of those cases... 1998  
Elizabeth M. Iglesias OUT OF THE SHADOW: MARKING INTERSECTIONS IN AND BETWEEN ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN CRITICAL LEGAL SCHOLARSHIP AND LATINA/O CRITICAL LEGAL THEORY 40 Boston College Law Review 349 (December, 1998) Before Professor Sumi Cho asked me to comment on the two excellent articles that now constitute the major points of reference for my own contribution to this Symposium, Korematsu was just another of the many cases I had often encountered as blurbs or in the string cites of some judicial opinion or law review text. It was, for me, one of those cases... 1998  
Thomas Michael McDonnell PLAYING BEYOND THE RULES: A REALIST AND RHETORIC-BASED APPROACH TO RESEARCHING THE LAW AND SOLVING LEGAL PROBLEMS 67 UMKC Law Review 285 (Winter, 1998) TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction. 286 I. The Significance of Audience and of Unpublished and Often Unwritten Law. 290 A. Why Researching the Main Characters in the Lawsuit Matters. 290 i. Researching the Relevant Audiences. 296 ii. The Audience's Needs or Interests. 299 B. Why Discovering Unpublished Rules and Practices Matters. 301 II. Methods of... 1998  
Daniel T. Ostas POSTMODERN ECONOMIC ANALYSIS OF LAW: EXTENDING THE PRAGMATIC VISIONS OF RICHARD A. POSNER 36 American Business Law Journal 193 (Fall, 1998) Economic analysis of law (EAL) was born in the early 1960s with the publication of two seminal articles: one by Ronald Coase, the other by Guido Calabresi. But it is with the 1973 publication of Judge Richard Posner's Economic Analysis of Law that EAL began to have a dramatic impact on legal education and scholarship. Posner's central thesis was... 1998  
Lisa D. Thompson PROPOSITION 209: DOES IT ELIMINATE OR PERPETUATE DISCRIMINATION? THE NINTH CIRCUIT DISMANTLES AFFIRMATIVE ACTION IN COALITION FOR ECONOMIC EQUITY V. WILSON 42 Saint Louis University Law Journal 883 (Summer 1998) Turner Law School is a public institution in the State of California. It only has one admission space remaining in its first year class. Suppose two male college students, one African-American and one white, apply for admission to Turner, a typically average-ranked law school. Both students academically were average college students; their academic... 1998  
Anthony V. Alfieri RACE TRIALS 76 Texas Law Review 1293 (May, 1998) I told Mister Washington / You couldn't find a white man / With his name. --Yusef Komunyakaa This Article is the third in a series devoted to the study of race, lawyers, and ethics in American law. The opening work of the series explored the rhetoric of race in cases of black-on-white racially motivated violence, citing the defense of Damian... 1998  
Ian F. Haney López RACE, ETHNICITY, ERASURE: THE SALIENCE OF RACE TO LATCRIT THEORY 10 La Raza Law Journal 57 (Spring 1998) On September 20, 1951, an all-White grand jury in Jackson County, Texas indicted twenty-six-year-old Pete Hernández for the murder of another farm worker, Joe Espinosa. Gus García and John Herrera, lawyers with the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), a Mexican-American civil rights organization, took up Hernández's case, hoping to use... 1998  
Kevin R. Johnson RACE, THE IMMIGRATION LAWS, AND DOMESTIC RACE RELATIONS: A "MAGIC MIRROR" INTO THE HEART OF DARKNESS 73 Indiana Law Journal 1111 (Fall, 1998) L1-2Introduction 1112 I. The History of Racial Exclusion in the U.S. Immigration Laws. 1119 A. From Chinese Exclusion to General Asian Subordination. 1120 1. Chinese Exclusion and Reconstruction. 1122 2. Japanese Internment and Brown v. Board of Education. 1124 B. The National Origins Quota System. 1127 C. Modern Racial Exclusion. 1131 1. The War... 1998  
John O. Calmore RACE/ISM LOST AND FOUND: THE FAIR HOUSING ACT AT THIRTY 52 University of Miami Law Review 1067 (July, 1998) I. Introduction. 1068 II. Racism in the 1990s: Its Changing but Central Significance. 1073 A. Polarized Conceptions of Racism: Expansive-Impersonal vs. Restrictive-Personal. 1073 B. The Reactionary Approach to Racism: Reductio Ad Absurdum . 1080 III. Racism's Reincorporation of Prejudice, Stereotype, and Rational Discrimination. 1087 A. The... 1998  
Sumi Cho REDEEMING WHITENESS IN THE SHADOW OF INTERNMENT: EARL WARREN, BROWN, AND A THEORY OF RACIAL REDEMPTION 19 Boston College Third World Law Journal 73 (Fall, 1998) Earl Warren is a civil rights/civil liberties icon. During his reign as Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court from 1953-69, the Court set standards of liberal judicial activism on race issues by which future Courts would be judged. Chief Justice Warren presided over momentous decisions that outlawed segregation in public education and public... 1998  
Sumi Cho REDEEMING WHITENESS IN THE SHADOW OF INTERNMENT: EARL WARREN, BROWN, AND A THEORY OF RACIAL REDEMPTION 40 Boston College Law Review 73 (December, 1998) Earl Warren is a civil rights/civil liberties icon. During his reign as Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court from 1953-69, the Court set standards of liberal judicial activism on race issues by which future Courts would be judged. Chief Justice Warren presided over momentous decisions that outlawed segregation in public education and public... 1998  
Justin D. Cummins REFASHIONING THE DISPARATE TREATMENT AND DISPARATE IMPACT DOCTRINES IN THEORY AND IN PRACTICE 41 Howard Law Journal 455 (Spring, 1998) INTRODUCTION. 456 I. CURRENT ANTI-DISCRIMINATION LAW: THE UNITARY SELF, INTENTIONAL AND PARTICULARIZED RACISM, AND FORMAL EQUALITY. 458 A. The Disparate Treatment Doctrine Under the Illusion of a Unitary Self. 459 1. An Inequitable Requirement of Intent. 459 2. An Unreasonable Standard of Particularized Discrimination. 461 B. The... 1998  
Michael A. Livingston REINVENTING TAX SCHOLARSHIP: LAWYERS, ECONOMISTS, AND THE ROLE OF THE LEGAL ACADEMY 83 Cornell Law Review 365 (January, 1998) Introduction. 366 I. Tax Scholarship and the Place of Academic Lawyers. 370 A. The Problem: Lawyers in an Economist's World. 370 1.The General Challenge of Legal Scholarship. 370 2.Special Problems Facing Tax Scholars. 373 B. Traditional Tax Scholarship: Haig-Simons and Its Intellectual Descendants. 375 C. The Challenge to Traditional Scholarship.... 1998  
Elizabeth M. Iglesias , Francisco Valdes RELIGION, GENDER, SEXUALITY, RACE AND CLASS IN COALITIONAL THEORY: A CRITICAL AND SELF-CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF LATCRIT SOCIAL JUSTICE AGENDAS 19 Chicano-Latino Law Review 503 (Spring 1998) Introduction. 504 I. Mapping the Power of Faith: The Role of Religion in LatCrit Theory as Anti-Subordination Legal Scholarship. 511 A. Anti-Essentialism, Anti-Subordination (Again). 513 B. Detecting the Bottom. 515 C. Locating LatCrit Analysis in the Material Realities and Historical Antecedents of the Here and Now. 521 D. A Two-Tiered Framework... 1998  
Chris K. Iijima REPARATIONS AND THE "MODEL MINORITY" IDEALOGY OF ACQUIESCENCE: THE NECESSITY TO REFUSE THE RETURN TO ORIGINAL HUMILIATION 19 Boston College Third World Law Journal 385 (Fall, 1998) Any attempt to soften the power of the oppressor in deference to the weakness of the oppressed almost always manifests itself in the form of false generosity; indeed, the attempt never goes beyond this. In order to have the continued opportunity to express their generosity, the oppressors must perpetuate injustice as well. An unjust social... 1998  
Chris K. Iijima REPARATIONS AND THE "MODEL MINORITY" IDEALOGY OF ACQUIESCENCE: THE NECESSITY TO REFUSE THE RETURN TO ORIGINAL HUMILIATION 40 Boston College Law Review 385 (December, 1998) Any attempt to soften the power of the oppressor in deference to the weakness of the oppressed almost always manifests itself in the form of false generosity; indeed, the attempt never goes beyond this. In order to have the continued opportunity to express their generosity, the oppressors must perpetuate injustice as well. An unjust social... 1998  
Banu Ramachandran RE-READING DIFFERENCE: FEMINIST CRITIQUES OF THE LAW SCHOOL CLASSROOM AND THE PROBLEM WITH SPEAKING FROM EXPERIENCE 98 Columbia Law Review 1757 (November, 1998) Accompanying the recent surge in the number of women and people of color attending law school has been an explosion of legal scholarship devoted to examining the marginalization of law students on the basis of gender and race. Much of this work has focused specifically on the law school classroom, and three of the leading self-denominated feminist... 1998  
Gabriel J. Chin , Sumi K. Cho , Marina C. Hsieh , Deborah C. Malamud RETHINKING RACIAL DIVIDES--PANEL ON AFFIRMATIVE ACTION 4 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 195 (Fall 1998) Professor Malamud: Organizing this conference has been only one part of the activist social practice that the Asian Pacific American law student community has been involved in at Michigan this year. The planning for this conference predates the now-pending law suits against the University of Michigan Law School's affirmative action program. And... 1998  
Mary Louise Fellows ROCKING THE TAX CODE: A CASE STUDY OF EMPLOYMENT-RELATED CHILD-CARE EXPENDITURES 10 Yale Journal of Law & Feminism 307 (1998) Introduction. 308 I. Current Tax Treatment of Employment-Related Child-Care Expenditures. 312 II. The History of Waged Childcare. 315 A. Domestic Work from the Nineteenth Century Until World War II. 316 1. The Respectability/Degeneracy Distinction. 316 2. The Cult of Respectability in the Last Half of the Nineteenth Century. 318 3. Geographic... 1998  
Peter C. Alexander SILENT SCREAMS FROM WITHIN THE ACADEMY: LET MY PEOPLE GROW 59 Ohio State Law Journal 1311 (1998) There is an ominous silence in America's law schools. Minority law professors have too often been quieted-feeling a sense of aloneness, lack of support, and fear-by a dug-in majority that often view minorities as necessary affirmative-action hires or diversity or token appointments. While the silence among the minority community is not absolute,... 1998  
Collin O'Connor Udell STALKING THE WILD LACUNA: COMMUNICATION, COGNITION AND CONTINGENCY 16 Law & Inequality: A Journal of Theory and Practice 493 (Summer 1998) There is a moment, a lacuna, that hangs in space and time. Faced with it, an individual records sensations and events, organizes and categorizes phenomena, assigns meaning. In that moment, abhorring a vacuum, we rush to fill the void, to shape and to take control of our world. If we are naive, we reify that which we construct. In this Article, we... 1998  
W.H. Knight, Jr. STANDING ON THE CORNER--TRYING TO FIND OUR WAY 1 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 419 (Spring 1998) Corners are, of course, the places of intersection where two or more streets meet. When you get to a street corner, you must choose a path. But what happens when you find yourself in the middle of that intersection? How do you, or can you even choose a path? Socially and culturally, we Americans are at such an intersection. What do we do? Which way... 1998  
Lawrence Zelenak TAKING CRITICAL TAX THEORY SERIOUSLY 76 North Carolina Law Review 1521 (June, 1998) Among the most interesting and important developments in tax scholarship in recent years has been the growth of feminist tax policy analysis. The basic insight of this analysis--that the tax treatment of work, family, and children has a significant effect on the lives of women--traces back a quarter century to Grace Blumberg's 1971 article... 1998  
Steve R. Johnson TARGETS MISSED AND TARGETS HIT: CRITICAL TAX STUDIES AND EFFECTIVE TAX REFORM 76 North Carolina Law Review 1771 (June, 1998) Medieval alchemy is popularly associated with attempts to become rich by transmuting base elements into gold. Such attempts were less than universally successful. Yet, alchemy yielded great benefits in other areas. For instance, alchemy was one of the sources of modern sciences such as pharmacology and metallurgy. Also, the rich and profound... 1998  
Martha Chamallas THE ARCHITECTURE OF BIAS: DEEP STRUCTURES IN TORT LAW 146 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 463 (January, 1998) Gender and race have disappeared from the face of tort law. The old doctrines that explicitly limited recovery exclusively to one gender have been either abolished or extended on a gender-neutral basis. Women as well as men may now recover for such claims as loss of spousal consortium and loss of a child's services. The disabilities that prevented... 1998  
Juan F. Perea THE BLACK/WHITE BINARY PARADIGM OF RACE: THE "NORMAL SCIENCE" OF AMERICAN RACIAL THOUGHT 10 La Raza Law Journal 127 (Spring 1998) The Black/White Binary Paradigm of race has become the subject of increasing interest and scrutiny among some scholars of color. This Article uses Thomas Kuhn's notions of paradigm and the properties of paradigms to explore several leading works on race. The works the author explores demonstrate the Black/White paradigm of race and some of its... 1998  
J.M. Balkin, Sanford Levinson THE CANONS OF CONSTITUTIONAL LAW 111 Harvard Law Review 963 (February, 1998) C1-3TABLE OF CONTENTS I. Introduction. 964 II. The Different Meanings of Canonicity. 970 A. Pedagogy, Cultural Literacy, and Academic Theory. 970 B. Audience and Function. 970 C. Canons Legal and Literary. 981 D. Deep Canonicity. 984 1. Canonical Arguments. 985 2. Canonical Problems and Approaches. 985 3. Canonical Narratives. 987 4. Canonical... 1998  
Carlos J. Cuevas THE CONSUMER CREDIT INDUSTRY, THE CONSUMER BANKRUPTCY SYSTEM, BANKRUPTCY CODE SECTION 707(B), AND JUSTICE: A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF THE CONSUMER BANKRUPTCY SYSTEM 103 Commercial Law Journal 359 (Winter, 1998) The vast majority of bankruptcy cases that are filed are consumer bankruptcy cases. Indeed, the filing of consumer bankruptcy cases are at an all-time high. In the last two decades, personal bankruptcy cases have increased by more than 700 percent. One would think that honest people of color, honest working class, and honest poor people would have... 1998  
Michael D. McClintock THE DECLINING USE OF LEGAL SCHOLARSHIP BY COURTS: AN EMPIRICAL STUDY 51 Oklahoma Law Review 659 (Winter, 1998) In 1931, Judge Cardozo, in describing what he viewed as the prejudice held by judges and practitioners toward law reviews, stated the following: The law-review essay has felt beyond the common lot the repressive cruelty of prejudice. There has been prejudice against it on two grounds - prejudice because it was not bound, and prejudice because its... 1998  
Deborah C. Malamud THE JEW TABOO: JEWISH DIFFERENCE AND THE AFFIRMATIVE ACTION DEBATE 59 Ohio State Law Journal 915 (1998) One of the most important questions for a serious debate on affirmative action is why certain minority groups need affirmative action while others have succeeded without it. The question is rarely asked, however, because the comparison that most frequently comes to mind-i.e., blacks and Jews-is seen by many as taboo. Daniel A. Farber and Suzanna... 1998  
Yxta Maya Murray THE LATINO-AMERICAN CRISIS OF CITIZENSHIP 31 U.C. Davis Law Review 503 (Winter 1998) C1-3Table of Contents Introduction. 505 I. Latinos as a Legal Category and as a Felt Identity. 507 A. Latino-Americans as a Legal Category. 508 B. Latino as a Felt Identity. 511 C. The Intersection of Legal Categories and Latino-American Identity. 514 II. The Stigmatization of Latino-American People and Language. 516 A. Immigration Policy. 516 1.... 1998  
Mary Beth Beazley , Linda H. Edwards THE PROCESS AND THE PRODUCT: A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF SCHOLARSHIP ABOUT LEGAL SCHOLARSHIP 49 Mercer Law Review 741 (Spring 1998) This bibliography of scholarship about legal scholarship was originally prepared for the 1997 Conference of the Association of Legal Writing Directors. The Conference explored the rapidly developing area of scholarship by legal writing professors and the ways in which this important scholarship can be encouraged. Characteristically, when writing... 1998  
Marjorie E. Kornhauser THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS WITH ALICE AND LARRY: THE NATURE OF SCHOLARSHIP 76 North Carolina Law Review 1609 (June, 1998) Oliver Wendell Holmes once said that taxes are the price of civilization; they are also the story of civilization, or rather the stories of civilization. For example, taxes trace the history of wars, and even explain some of our physical surroundings by their effects on architecture. Taxes also tell us more generally about our society since what we... 1998  
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