Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year | Key Terms in Title or Summary |
Francisco Valdes |
OUTSIDER SCHOLARS, LEGAL THEORY & OUTCRIT PERSPECTIVITY: POSTSUBORDINATION VISION AS JURISPRUDENTIAL METHOD |
49 DePaul Law Review 831 (Spring 2000) |
Introduction. 831 I. Postsubordination Vision as Jurisprudential Method: Identities, Ideals, and Ideas. 834 II. Sameness and Difference: Toward Critical Coalitions. 835 III. Postsubordination Vision and Euroheteropatriarchy: Substantive Security for All. 838 Conclusion. 844 This essay considers the relationship of Critical Race Theory (CRT) to... |
2000 |
Yes |
Nathaniel Berman |
SHADOWS: DU BOIS AND THE COLONIAL PROSPECT, 1925 |
45 Villanova Law Review 959 (2000) |
OUR panel on intellectual origins reminds us that this conference on critical race theory and international law follows in a venerable tradition. Many American race-critics have long placed their analysis in an international frame--a fact that becomes particularly evident if one casts one's gaze beyond international law's formal disciplinary... |
2000 |
Yes |
Margaret E. Montoya |
SILENCE AND SILENCING: THEIR CENTRIPETAL AND CENTRIFUGAL FORCES IN LEGAL COMMUNICATION, PEDAGOGY AND DISCOURSE |
33 University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform 263 (Spring 2000) |
Language and voice have been subjects of great interest to scholars working in the areas of Critical Race Theory and Latina/o Critical Legal Theory. Silence, a counterpart of voice, has not, however, been well theorized. This Article is an invitation to attend to silence and silencing. The first part of the Article argues that one's use of silence... |
2000 |
Yes |
Margaret E. Montoya |
SILENCE AND SILENCING: THEIR CENTRIPETAL AND CENTRIFUGAL FORCES IN LEGAL COMMUNICATION, PEDAGOGY AND DISCOURSE |
5 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 847 (Summer 2000) |
Language and voice have been subjects of great interest to scholars working in the areas of Critical Race Theory and Latina/o Critical Legal Theory. Silence, a counterpart of voice, has not, however, been well theorized. This Article is an invitation to attend to silence and silencing. The first part of the Article argues that one's use of silence... |
2000 |
Yes |
Keith Aoki |
SPACE INVADERS: CRITICAL GEOGRAPHY, THE 'THIRD WORLD' IN INTERNATIONAL LAW AND CRITICAL RACE THEORY |
45 Villanova Law Review 913 (2000) |
I. Introduction: Why Space Matters: A Paradox and a Question. 914 II. The Politics of Place and Space in the Condition of Postmodernity. 917 III. The Critique of Development in International Law: Where Exactly Is the Third World?. 924 IV. Liberal v. Cultural Nationalist Visions of Race . 931 V. Race, Place and Space Matter. 936 A.... |
2000 |
Yes |
Richard Delgado |
TOWARD A LEGAL REALIST VIEW OF THE FIRST AMENDMENT |
113 Harvard Law Review 778 (January, 2000) |
Nearly three-quarters of a century ago, legal realism swept aside what Roscoe Pound called mechanical jurisprudence, paving the way for a host of movements--law and society, critical legal studies (CLS), feminist legal theory, and critical race theory, to name a few--that broadened our concept of law, generally for the better. The one area that... |
2000 |
Yes |
Anthony V. Alfieri |
(ER)RACE-ING AN ETHIC OF JUSTICE |
51 Stanford Law Review 935 (April, 1999) |
For several years, I have pursued a project devoted to the study of race, lawyers, and ethics in the American criminal justice system. Building on the evolving jurisprudence of Critical Race Theory, the project spans a series of case studies investigating the rhetoric of race, or race-talk, in the prosecution and defense of racially motivated... |
1999 |
Yes |
Isabelle R. Gunning |
AN ESSAY ON TEACHING RACE ISSUES IN THE REQUIRED EVIDENCE COURSE: MORE LESSONS FROM THE O.J. SIMPSON CASE |
28 Southwestern University Law Review 355 (1999) |
Legal scholars have been analyzing the impact of race and gender on a range of legal concepts including evidentiary categories and approaches for many years. Feminist scholars and Critical Race Theorists, especially, have questioned the neutrality of legal and evidentiary rules and exposed the unspoken sets of assumptions, values, and particular... |
1999 |
Yes |
HARVEY GEE |
BEYOND BLACK AND WHITE: SELECTED WRITINGS BY ASIAN AMERICANS WITHIN THE CRITICAL RACE THEORY MOVEMENT |
30 Saint Mary's Law Journal 759 (1999) |
I. Introduction. 760 II. Critical Race Theory. 764 III. History of Discrimination Against Asian Americans: Nativism and the Racialization of Asian Americans As Foreign. 769 IV. Asian-American Contributions to the Critical Race Movement. 773 A. Constructing Asian-American Identities During the Exclusion Era. 776 B. Contemporary Discrimination... |
1999 |
Yes |
Chantal Thomas |
CAUSES OF INEQUALITY IN THE INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC ORDER: CRITICAL RACE THEORY AND POSTCOLONIAL DEVELOPMENT |
9 Transnational Law & Contemporary Problems 1 (Spring, 1999) |
I. L2-3,T3Applying CRT to Northern Postcolonial Hegemony 2. L1-4 A. Critique of Material Inequality of Northern Hegemony in the Liberal Postcolonial International Economic Order. 3 L1-4 B. Critique of Ideological Components of Northern Hegemony in the Liberal Postcolonial International Economic Order. 5 L1-4 II. L2-3,T3Objections, Shortcomings, and... |
1999 |
Yes |
Carolyn Wolpert |
CONSIDERING RACE AND CRIME: DISTILLING NON-PARTISAN POLICY FROM OPPOSING THEORIES |
36 American Criminal Law Review 265 (Spring 1999) |
I. Introduction. 265 II. Opposing Theoretical Arguments. 268 A. Critical Race Theory. 268 B. Neo-Conservative Theorists on Race and Crime. 271 C. Traditional Liberal and Conservative Arguments. 274 III. Criminology and Sociology. 276 IV. The Distillation of Policy. 280 A. De-emphasizing Race. 281 B. Recognizing the Non-Mutually Exclusive Nature of... |
1999 |
Yes |
Keith Aoki and Margaret Chon |
CRITICAL RACE PRAXIS AND LEGAL SCHOLARSHIP |
5 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 35 (Fall 1999) |
The publication of this symposium issue is an occasion for three distinct and yet related celebrations. First, we honor the Western Law Teachers of Color, whose sixth annual meeting on the sublime Oregon Coast in 1998 provided the occasion for organizing the papers published here. Dean Strickland's preface, as well as Professors Linda Greene's and... |
1999 |
Yes |
Natsu Taylor Saito |
CRITICAL RACE THEORY AS INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW |
93 American Society of International Law Proceedings 228 (March 24-27, 1999) |
Growing out of and in response to the Critical Legal Studies Movement (CLS), Critical Race Theory (CRT) has viewed the legal system as one whose aim is to perpetuate a status quo that protects the accumulation of wealth and power in the hands of a few, and uses racial divisions and discrimination to do so. Focusing on race has been necessary... |
1999 |
Yes |
Greta Mcmorris |
CRITICAL RACE THEORY, COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, AND THE SOCIAL MEANING OF RACE: WHY INDIVIDUALISM WILL NOT SOLVE RACISM |
67 UMKC Law Review 695 (Summer, 1999) |
Racism is so universal in this country, so widespread and deep-seated, that it is invisible because it is so normal. Shirley Chisholm [R]ace is our American obsession. With a history steeped in racist attitudes and laws, issues of race are inescapable and have divided America since its creation. The legal and political systems of this country... |
1999 |
Yes |
Toby Egan |
CRITICAL RACE THEORY'S INDIVIDUAL FLAW |
67 UMKC Law Review 661 (Summer, 1999) |
I am an invisible man. No, I am not a spook like those who haunted Edgar Allan Poe; nor am I one of your Hollywood-movie ectoplasms. I am a man of substance, of flesh and bone, fiber and liquids - and I might even be said to possess a mind. I am invisible, understand, simply because people refuse to see me. Like the bodiless heads you see sometimes... |
1999 |
Yes |
Dan Subotnik |
CRITICAL RACE THEORY-THE LAST VOYAGE |
15 Touro Law Review 657 (Winter, 1999) |
Until [whites] understand that conversations about race are ones in which they engage to learn rather than to teach (which is their historical and customary position), real and meaningful conversations cannot happen. Chris Iijima I do not want any more American progresswhite-over black, to white over black, to white over black. I am not going to... |
1999 |
Yes |
Kevin R. Johnson ; George A. Martínez |
CROSSOVER DREAMS: THE ROOTS OF LATCRIT THEORY IN CHICANA/O STUDIES ACTIVISM AND SCHOLARSHIP |
53 University of Miami Law Review 1143 (July, 1999) |
As the century comes to a close, critical Latina/o theory has branched off from Critical Race Theory. This article considers how this burgeoning body of scholarship finds its roots in a long tradition of Chicana/o activism and scholarship, particularly the work of Chicana/o Studies professors. In the critical study of issues of particular... |
1999 |
Yes |
Jon B. Gould |
DIFFERENCE THROUGH A NEW LENS: FIRST AMENDMENT LEGAL REALISM AND THE REGULATION OF HATE SPEECH |
33 Law and Society Review 761 (1999) |
Move over critical legal studies and critical race studies, the First Amendment legal realists are here. In two recent books, Richard Abel's Speaking Respect and Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic's Must We Defend Nazis? the authors take the mantle from such colleagues as Stanley Fish and Mari Matsuda in critiquing a First Amendment jurisprudence... |
1999 |
Yes |
John Hayakawa Torok |
FINDING THE ME IN LATCRIT THEORY: THOUGHTS ON LANGUAGE ACQUISITION AND LOSS |
53 University of Miami Law Review 1019 (July, 1999) |
I have been invited to join an exciting, collective intellectual and political enterprise, centering Latina/os in critical race discourse. The third LatCrit conference continues the LatCrit Theory project, building both community and knowledge in the service of transformation. The four principal goals of LatCrit Theory are (1) knowledge production,... |
1999 |
Yes |
Adrien K. Wing , Christine A. Willis |
FROM THEORY TO PRAXIS: BLACK WOMEN, GANGS, AND CRITICAL RACE FEMINISM |
11 La Raza Law Journal 1 (Spring, 1999) |
Despite the media's portrayal, the American gang problem is not attributable solely to African-American and Hispanic males. Females have been and are increasingly becoming a significant component of the gang crisis that faces many American communities. Twenty years ago Waln K. Brown criticized the lack of information on female delinquency and... |
1999 |
Yes |
Adrien K. Wing , Christine A. Willis |
FROM THEORY TO PRAXIS: BLACK WOMEN, GANGS, AND CRITICAL RACE FEMINISM |
4 African-American Law and Policy Report 1 (Fall, 1999) |
Despite the media's portrayal, the American gang problem is not attributable solely to African-American and Hispanic males. Females have been and are increasingly becoming a significant component of the gang crisis that faces many American communities. Twenty years ago Waln K. Brown criticized the lack of information on female delinquency and... |
1999 |
Yes |
Isabelle R. Gunning |
GLOBAL FEMINISM AT THE LOCAL LEVEL: CRIMINAL AND ASYLUM LAWS REGARDING FEMALE GENITAL SURGERIES |
3 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 45 (Fall 1999) |
This essay is one example of a Critical Race Feminist/Critical Race Theorist exploration of the impact of the implementation of international law--or norms through domestic legislation--on women of color at the local level. Global norms that have been hammered out at the international level by feminists of all nationalities are subject to... |
1999 |
Yes |
Darren Lenard Hutchinson |
IGNORING THE SEXUALIZATION OF RACE: HETERONORMATIVITY, CRITICAL RACE THEORY AND ANTI-RACIST POLITICS |
47 Buffalo Law Review 1 (Winter, 1999) |
A fiery dissent rages within the body of identity politics and civil rights theory. The participants in this discourse have lodged fundamental (as well as controversial) charges. Most frequently, these critics argue that the enormous cadre of political activists, progressive lawyers and legal theorists engaged in the particulars of challenging... |
1999 |
Yes |
Darren Lenard Hutchinson |
IGNORING THE SEXUALIZATION OF RACE: HETERONORMATIVITY, CRITICAL RACE THEORY AND ANTI-RACIST POLITICS |
47 Buffalo Law Review 1 (Winter 1999) |
A fiery dissent rages within the body of identity politics and civil rights theory. The participants in this discourse have lodged fundamental (as well as controversial) charges. Most frequently, these critics argue that the enormous cadre of political activists, progressive lawyers and legal theorists engaged in the particulars of challenging... |
1999 |
Yes |
Edward L. Rubin |
JEWS, TRUTH, AND CRITICAL RACE THEORY |
93 Northwestern University Law Review 525 (Winter 1999) |
Once the initial shock had subsided and the succeeding sense of agonized self-doubt had been resolved, the counterattack against critical race theory began. Even liberals have their limits after all, and to be called racists was just too much. George Wallace, Bull Connor, and the Ku Klux Klan--those are racists. Liberals and others who have... |
1999 |
Yes |
|
MAPPING INTERSECTIONS OF CRITICAL RACE THEORY, POSTCOLONIAL STUDIES AND INTERNATIONAL LAW |
93 American Society of International Law Proceedings 225 (March 24-27, 1999) |
The panel was convened at 3:15 p.m., Thursday, March 25, by its Chair, Elizabeth M. Iglesias, who introduced the panelists: Ediberto Roman, St. Thomas university School of Law; and Natsu Taylor Saito, Georgia State University College of Law. Until recently, Critical Race Theory (CRT) concerned itself primarily with the impact of domestic law on the... |
1999 |
Yes |
GERALDINE SZOTT MOOHR |
OPTING IN OR OPTING OUT: THE NEW LEGAL PROCESS OR ARBITRATION |
77 Washington University Law Quarterly 1087 (1999) |
Professor Krotoszynski suggests that judicial legitimacy has fallen victim to the expectations of multiple constituencies, who evaluate judicial competency on the basis of particular substantive results. These outsider constituencies--feminists, critical race scholars, queer theorists, critical legal studies scholars, and law and economics... |
1999 |
Yes |
Brendan P. Lynch |
PERSONAL INJURIES OR PETTY COMPLAINTS?: EVALUATING THE CASE FOR CAMPUS HATE SPEECH CODES: THE ARGUMENT FROM EXPERIENCE |
32 Suffolk University Law Review 613 (1999) |
The critical race theory movement in legal studies over the last eighteen years has generated a provocative challenge to traditional civil libertarian views on free speech and the First Amendment. Beginning with Professor Richard Delgado's 1982 article calling for a tort remedy for victims of racist hate speech, several Critical Race Theorists... |
1999 |
Yes |
Matthew W. Finkin |
QUATSCH! |
83 Minnesota Law Review 1681 (June, 1999) |
[I]t matters, it always matters, to name rubbish as rubbish . . . to do otherwise is to legitimize it. Daniel Farber and Suzanna Sherry examine the writings of a loosely connected group of legal academics who hail from several schools of thought--critical legal studies, radical feminism, critical race theory and its literary borrowing in narrative... |
1999 |
Yes |
Robert L. Hayman, Jr. |
RACE AND REASON: THE ASSAULT ON CRITICAL RACE THEORY AND THE TRUTH ABOUT INEQUALITY |
16 National Black Law Journal 1 (1998-1999) |
Progressive critiques of law invariably generate a reaction that might be called, somewhat euphemistically, conservative or conventional. That reaction has by now been standardized into something of a three-step formula: first, identify some cultural value that pretty much everyone agrees is worth conserving; second, identify the ways in which... |
1999 |
Yes |
Jeffrey J. Pyle |
RACE, EQUALITY AND THE RULE OF LAW: CRITICAL RACE THEORY'S ATTACK ON THE PROMISES OF LIBERALISM |
40 Boston College Law Review 787 (May, 1999) |
In recent years, critical race theory (CRT) has come to occupy a conspicuous place in American law schools. The theory holds that despite the great victories of the civil rights movement, liberal legal thought has consistently failed African Americans and other minorities. Critical race theorists attack the very foundations of the liberal legal... |
1999 |
Yes |
Reviewed by Samuel J. Levine |
THE CHALLENGES OF RELIGIOUS NEUTRALITY |
13 Journal of Law and Religion 531 (1998-1999) |
Among the major developments in legal scholarship in the last few decades, an emphasis on critical reexamination and reevaluation of some of the fundamental assumptions underlying legal doctrine has proved highly influential. Proponents of such movements as critical legal studies, critical race theory, and feminist jurisprudence have aimed at... |
1999 |
Yes |
Stephanie L. Phillips |
THE CONVERGENCE OF THE CRITICAL RACE THEORY WORKSHOP WITH LATCRIT THEORY: A HISTORY |
53 University of Miami Law Review 1247 (July, 1999) |
This essay was sparked by my participation in a moderated panel at the LatCrit III conference, entitled From RaceCrit to LatCrit to BlackCrit?: Exploring Critical Race Theory Beyond and Within the Black/White Paradigm. From my point of view, this title, as well as the presentations by panelists Anthony Farley and Dorothy Roberts, posed following... |
1999 |
Yes |
Francisco Valdes |
THEORIZING 'OUTCRIT' THEORIES: COALITIONAL METHOD AND COMPARATIVE JURISPRUDENTIAL EXPERIENCE--RACECRITS, QUEERCRITS AND LATCRITS |
53 University of Miami Law Review 1265 (July, 1999) |
Introduction. 1266 Prologue. 1274 I. The Emergence of a Nonwhite Outsider Jurisprudence: Critical Race Theory, Un/critical Coalitions, and Intersectonal Ambivalence. 1278 A. Formative Circumstances: Societal Heteronormativity, Racial Binarism and Color-Blind Culture. 1280 B. History and Experience: Equality and Ambivalence. 1286 C. CRT as Nonwhite... |
1999 |
Yes |
Anthony Paul Farley |
THIRTEEN STORIES |
15 Touro Law Review 543 (Winter, 1999) |
L1-2Introduction 544 1 Story: Wargasm. 550 2 Story: Casablanca. 565 3 Story: America Unveiled. 570 4 Story This Timeless Burning. 573 5 Story: Colorlines. 578 6 Story: A Critique Of Critical Race Theory. 586 7 Story: What Do Black People Want?. 589 8 Story: Illness And Its Interlocutors. 594 9 Story: Vomit. 625 10 Story: The Beautiful Rainbow Of... |
1999 |
Yes |
Adrien Katherine Wing ; and Laura Weselmann |
TRANSCENDING TRADITIONAL NOTIONS OF MOTHERING: THE NEED FOR CRITICAL RACE FEMINIST PRAXIS |
3 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 257 (Fall 1999) |
Many people ask me why I stay in Iowa . . . and I tell them that it is largely because of mother love for my five sons and a new grandson. I stay in Iowa because I am raising five Black young men in the United States of America, a country that would rather spend private university tuition to keep them in jail than in college; that would rather see... |
1999 |
Yes |
Ibrahim J. Gassama |
TRANSNATIONAL CRITICAL RACE SCHOLARSHIP: TRANSCENDING ETHNIC AND NATIONAL CHAUVINISM IN THE ERA OF GLOBALIZATION |
5 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 133 (Fall 1999) |
Globalization is compounding the gap between rich and poor nations and intensifying U.S. Dominance of the world's economic and cultural market. [M]ore than 1.3 billion people in the developing world still struggle to survive on less than a dollar a day, and the number continues to increase. Every year nearly 8 million children die from diseases... |
1999 |
Yes |
Adrien Katherine Wing |
VIOLENCE AND STATE ACCOUNTABILITY: CRITICAL RACE FEMINISM |
1999 Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law 95 (Summer, 1999) |
Critical Race Feminism (CRF), a theory that emphasizes the legal status of women of color, is a new addition to the critical networks jurisprudence that now includes Critical Legal Studies (CLS), Critical Race Theory (CRT), Feminist Legal Theory, Lat-Crit Theory, Queer Theory, and Critical White Studies. As editor of the first anthology on CRF, I... |
1999 |
Yes |
George A. Martínez |
AFRICAN-AMERICANS, LATINOS, AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF RACE: TOWARD AN EPISTEMIC COALITION |
19 Chicano-Latino Law Review 213 (Spring 1998) |
Latinos will soon become the largest minority group in the United States. African-Americans may therefore be about to give up political clout to Latinos. This prospect has generated tension between African-Americans and Latinos. Given this background, it is important for Critical Race Theory and Latino Critical Theory to consider the matter of the... |
1998 |
Yes |
Francisco Valdes |
BEYOND SEXUAL ORIENTATION IN QUEER LEGAL THEORY: MAJORITARIANISM, MULTIDISCIPLINARY, AND RESPONSIBILITY IN SOCIAL JUSTICE SCHOLARSHIP OR LEGAL SCHOLARS AS CULTURAL WARRIORS |
75 Denver University Law Review 1409 (1998) |
Introduction. 1410 A. Sexual Minorities & Sexual Orientation Scholarship Since 1979. 1416 B. Sexual Orientation, Critical Race Theory & Postmodern Analysis. 1418 C. Queering Sexual Orientation Legal Scholarship. 1422 D. Cultural War, Cultural Traditionalism & Majoritarian Essentialism. 1426 E. Formal Democracy, Cultural War & Backlash Lawmaking.... |
1998 |
Yes |
Anthony V. Alfieri |
BLACK AND WHITE |
10 La Raza Law Journal 561 (Spring 1998) |
Critical Race Theory dreams in black and white. No rhapsody of color, only charred history and pale hope. Yet the dreams stamp hard, inspiring a jurisprudential movement of diverse scholars and earning an uneasy place in the postwar scholarship of the American legal academy. Having waged both theoretical and practical battles to gain that place,... |
1998 |
Yes |
Mari J. Matsuda |
CRIME AND AFFIRMATIVE ACTION |
1 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 309 (Spring 1998) |
Let me begin, as critical race theorists often do, with a story. Earlier this year, in the city of Los Angeles, a three-generation Korean American family moved into a new home. The grandfather from the family left to take his customary evening stroll. Don't go too far, and please come back soon, his daughter requested. As he returned from his... |
1998 |
Yes |
Jody Armour |
CRITICAL RACE FEMINISM: OLD WINE IN A NEW BOTTLE OR NEW LEGAL GENRE? |
7 Southern California Review of Law and Women's Studies 431 (Spring 1998) |
The phrase Critical Race Feminism incorporates by reference two of the most vibrant genres in contemporary legal thought--Critical Race Theory (CRT) and Feminist Jurisprudence. But then is Critical Race Feminism as a legal genre merely redundant? Is it just a parasite on the margin of knowledge generated by the older schools it refers to? Put... |
1998 |
Yes |
Erik M. Jensen |
CRITICAL THEORY AND THE LONELINESS OF THE TAX PROF |
76 North Carolina Law Review 1753 (June, 1998) |
This essay has two goals: to suggest why feminist and critical race commentary (what I'll call the New Criticism) is spreading in taxation and, in the course of evaluating some specific examples of the New Criticism, to discuss some dangers of that criticism. My first thesis--ultimately unprovable, I admit--is that the emergence of New Criticism... |
1998 |
Yes |
Daria Roithmayr |
DECONSTRUCTING THE DISTINCTION BETWEEN BIAS AND MERIT |
10 La Raza Law Journal 363 (Spring 1998) |
In this article Professor Roithmayr attempts to develop in the context of law school admissions a theoretical argument from deconstruction to support the radical critique of merit. The radical critique, espoused primarily by Critical Race Theorists and radical feminists, argues that merit standards disproportionately exclude white women and people... |
1998 |
Yes |
James R. Hackney Jr. |
DERRICK BELL'S RE-SOUNDING: W. E. B. DU BOIS, MODERNISM, AND CRITICAL RACE SCHOLARSHIP |
23 Law and Social Inquiry 141 (Winter, 1998) |
Critical race scholarship (CRS) is one of the most prominent and controversial strands of thought in legal academe. It has spawned widespread criticisms but has also reached a stage of intellectual maturity, warranting two general anthologies and others more specialized (Gates 1997; Wing 1997; Crenshaw et al. 1995; Delgado 1995). Given the... |
1998 |
Yes |
Hope Lewis |
GLOBAL INTERSECTIONS: CRITICAL RACE FEMINIST HUMAN RIGHTS AND INTER/NATIONAL BLACK WOMEN |
50 Maine Law Review 309 (1998) |
My life stories influence my perspective, a perspective unable to function within a single paradigm because I am too many things at one time. Say, I remember, when we used to sit in a government yard in Brooklyn . As an African American feminist law professor who is visually impaired and the daughter of immigrants, I am often torn as to which... |
1998 |
Yes |
Rogers M. Smith, Yale University |
IAN F. HANEY LÓPEZ, WHITE BY LAW: THE LEGAL CONSTRUCTION OF RACE. |
42 American Journal of Legal History 65 (January, 1998) |
White by Law is most significant for its important arguments. It is also a valuable representative of critical race theory in law, of the new interdisciplinary community of whiteness scholars, and of the N.Y.U. Press's efforts to build a list of innovative scholarship on race, particularly by scholars of color. The book's main empirical and... |
1998 |
Yes |
|
INTRODUCTION |
76 North Carolina Law Review 1519 (June, 1998) |
In recent years, the Internal Revenue Code increasingly has become the focus of feminist and critical race theorists. In the main, critics of the Code maintain that there are provisions that are inherently biased and thus operate to disadvantage certain groups, or that the Code should be redesigned to advance social policies benefiting historically... |
1998 |
Yes |
Richard Schmalbeck |
RACE AND THE FEDERAL INCOME TAX: HAS A DISPARATE IMPACT CASE BEEN MADE? |
76 North Carolina Law Review 1817 (June, 1998) |
Professors Moran and Whitford's A Black Critique of the Internal Revenue Code is a straightforward and plausible application of critical race theory to the United States federal income tax. Their argument proceeds essentially as follows: (a) African-Americans differ from the white majority in several important socioeconomic respects; (b) the U.S.... |
1998 |
Yes |