AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearKey Terms in Title or Summary
Harvey Gee REDUCING GUN VIOLENCE WITH SHOTSPOTTER GUNSHOT DETECTION TECHNOLOGY AND COMMUNITY-BASED PLANS: WHAT WORKS? 100 Oregon Law Review 461 (2022) Urban violence is better understood as a grievous injury, a gushing wound that demands immediate attention in order to preserve life and limb. [T]he panoptic powers of modern surveillance . imperil our democracy in a way that we've never before seen . It is our responsibility to speak up for ourselves, our civil liberties, and the sort of world... 2022 Yes
Gabriel J. Chin ROBERT COVER AND CRITICAL RACE THEORY 37 Touro Law Review 1837 (2022) Professor Robert Cover is recognized as a leading scholar of law and literature; decades after his untimely passing, his works continue to be widely cited. Because of his interest in narrative, he is credited as a contributor to the development of Critical Race Theory. This essay proposes that in addition to narrative, some of his other,... 2022 Yes
Jorge L. Contreras SCIENCE FICTION AND THE LAW: A NEW WIGMORIAN BIBLIOGRAPHY 13 Harvard Journal of Sports & Entertainment Law 65 (Winter, 2022) In 1908, Northwestern Law School Dean John Henry Wigmore compiled a list of novels that no lawyer could afford to ignore. Wigmore's list, updated and amended by Professor Richard Weisberg in the 1970s, catalogs one hundred literary works ranging from Antigone to Native Son, each of which offers insight into the legal system or the practice of... 2022 Yes
Diane Kemker TEACHING CRITICAL TAX: WHAT, WHY, & HOW 19 Pittsburgh Tax Review 143 (Spring, 2022) Critical tax is an approach to the analysis of tax law and policy that takes race, gender, sexual orientation, disability, citizenship/immigrant status, and other historically marginalized statuses into account, and does so in a way that is centrally focused on the role of tax law in creating and perpetuating persistent economic inequality and... 2022 Yes
Ilhyung Lee THE "DIVISIVE CONCEPTS" LAWS AND AMERICANS OF ASIAN DESCENT 75 SMU Law Review Forum 212 (April, 2022) Sticks and stones May break my bones Oh but your words They really kill me. In the past year, a number of states have enacted laws that prohibit public schools from teaching certain lessons about race. The main target of these laws appears to be critical race theory, once a theory advanced in legal academia that has now become a catchall term... 2022 Yes
Danielle M. Conway THE ASSAULT ON CRITICAL RACE THEORY AS PRETEXT FOR POPULIST BACKLASH ON HIGHER EDUCATION 66 Saint Louis University Law Journal 707 (Summer, 2022) The rightwing is carrying out its most recent effort to install an authoritarian regime in America, which has been boosted by Donald Trump's white supremacist rhetoric and actions before, during, and after his four years holding the Office of the President of the United States. Resolute in the effort to destabilize American Democracy by forcing on... 2022 Yes
Dylan Salzman THE CONSTITUTIONALITY OF ORTHODOXY: FIRST AMENDMENT IMPLICATIONS OF LAWS RESTRICTING CRITICAL RACE THEORY IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS 89 University of Chicago Law Review 1069 (June, 2022) What else can the School Board now decide it does not like? How else will its sensibilities be offended? Are we sending children to school to be educated by the norms of the School Board or are we educating our youth to shed the prejudices of the past, to explore all forms of thought, and to find solutions to our world's problems? --Justice William... 2022 Yes
Angela Onwuachi-Willig THE CRT OF BLACK LIVES MATTER 66 Saint Louis University Law Journal 663 (Summer, 2022) Critical Race Theory (CRT), or at least its principles, stands at the core of most prominent social movements of today--from the resurgence of the #MeToo Movement, which was founded by a Black woman, Tarana Burke, to the Black Lives Matter Movement, which was founded by three Black women: Opal Tometi, Alicia Garza, and Patrisse Cullors. In fact,... 2022 Yes
Anneke Dunbar-Gronke THE MANDATE FOR CRITICAL RACE THEORY IN THIS TIME 69 UCLA Law Review Discourse 4 (2022) A necessary conclusion from Critical Race Theory (CRT) is that Black people cannot look to the law for justice because racism is baked into the law. As a result, the movement for Black liberation cannot rely on the law for just outcomes. This result does not, however, mean that we have to abandon legal interventions altogether. Instead, for those... 2022 Yes
Katherine Ranero THE SOUND OF RACIAL DISPARITY: COPYRIGHT LAW AND THE BLACK MUSICIAN 23 Loyola Journal of Public Interest Law 108 (Spring, 2022) C1-2TABLE OF CONTENTS ABSTRACT. 108 INTRODUCTION. 109 I. American Copyright Law. 111 a. The 1909 Copyright Law. 112 b. The 1976 Copyright Act and the Sound Recording Act. 113 i. Arbitrary Methods of Isolation: Disciplinary or Administrative?. 114 ii. Fixation. 115 iii. Idea-Expression Doctrine. 115 II. Critical Race Theory and IP. 116 III. The... 2022 Yes
Ederlina Co WEATHERING INVISIBLE LABOR 51 Southwestern Law Review 258 (2022) Professor Meera Deo's Unequal Profession: Race and Gender in Legal Academia powerfully demonstrates how the legal academy has adopted many of American society's social hierarchies as they relate to race and gender. Inspired by Unequal Profession and using a Critical Race Feminism framework, this Essay centers on women of color professors and the... 2022 Yes
Natalie Gomez-Velez WHAT U.S. v. VAELLO-MADERO AND THE INSULAR CASES CAN TEACH ABOUT ANTI-CRT CAMPAIGNS 94-APR New York State Bar Journal 20 (March/April, 2022) Critical Race Theory (CRT) has contributed to a meaningful understanding of how U.S. history and law have engendered systemic racism. As Kimberlé Crenshaw explains, Critical race theory explores how racial inequality was historically structured into the fabric of the republic, reinforced by law, insulated by the founding Constitution and embedded... 2022 Yes
Marissa Jackson Sow WHITENESS AS GUILT: ATTACKING CRITICAL RACE THEORY TO REDEEM THE RACIAL CONTRACT 69 UCLA Law Review Discourse 20 (2022) The year of racial justice awakening following George Floyd's 2020 murder have been accompanied by a rise in attacks on Black thought, including Critical Race Theory, led by far-right activists who are invested in maintenance of a white supremacist status quo in the United States. This Essay uses artist Kara Walker's 2014 Sugar Sphinx to... 2022 Yes
Ebony McKeever WHO TURNED OUT THE LIGHTS?: HOW CRITICAL RACE THEORY BANS KEEP PEOPLE IN THE DARK 15 Washington University Jurisprudence Review 111 (2022) Agnotology is the study of ignorance making, the lost and forgotten .. [K]nowledge that could have been but wasn't, or should be but isn't. In other words, in part, agnotology is the study of manufactured ignorance. It is an examination of ignorance, confusion, and deceit intentionally created to fulfill a purpose such as selling a product or... 2022 Yes
Lynn D. Lu WHO'S AFRAID OF BOB JONES? "FUNDAMENTAL NATIONAL PUBLIC POLICY" AND CRITICAL RACE THEORY IN A DELICATE DEMOCRACY 25 CUNY Law Review 93 (Winter, 2022) Introduction. 93 I. Reading Bob Jones. 96 A. The Road to the Supreme Court. 96 B. A Roadmap to Fundamental National Public Policy. 99 II. Bob Jones: Slippery Slope or Dead End?. 103 A. Testing the Limits of FNPP. 103 B. Unanswered Questions. 105 1. Pluralism. 105 2. Remedies for Racial Discrimination. 107 3. Redistributive Economic Justice. 108... 2022 Yes
Susan D. Carle WHY THE U.S. FOUNDERS' CONCEPTIONS OF HUMAN AGENCY MATTER TODAY: THE EXAMPLE OF SENATE MALAPPORTIONMENT 9 Texas A&M Law Review 533 (Spring, 2022) This Article links the U.S. founders' ideas about human agency--i.e., their understandings of the link between the individual and the social and political structure--with how they designed the Constitution and, in particular, how they designed the U.S. Senate as a non-majoritarian institution. I mine primary sources to show that although the... 2022 Yes
Theresa Montaño , Tricia Gallagher-Geurtsen YES, CRITICAL RACE THEORY SHOULD BE TAUGHT IN YOUR SCHOOL: UNDOING RACISM IN K-12 SCHOOLING AND CLASSROOMS THROUGH CRT 69 UCLA Law Review Discourse 84 (2022) Despite panicked calls from the right to keep Critical Race Theory (CRT) out of the K-12 classroom, the authors assert that CRT, one of many theoretical frameworks used in ethnic studies, is needed to address the entrenched status quo of well-documented inequity through racism in schooling. Rather than deny that CRT is being taught in schools, the... 2022 Yes
Harvey Gee "BANG!": SHOTSPOTTER GUNSHOT DETECTION TECHNOLOGY, PREDICTIVE POLICING, AND MEASURING TERRY'S REACH 55 University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform 767 (Summer, 2022) ShotSpotter technology is a rapid identification and response system used in ninety American cities that is designed to detect gunshots and dispatch police. ShotSpotter is one of many powerful surveillance tools used by local police departments to purportedly help fight crime, but they often do so at the expense of infringing upon privacy rights... 2022  
Kylee Verrill "COLLATERAL" DAMAGE: IMPLICATIONS OF THE ZERO-TOLERANCE POLICY ON IMMIGRATION 25 Quinnipiac Health Law Journal 333 (2022) Introduction. 335 I. The Fundamentals of U.S. Immigration Law. 335 II. Executive Influence and the Zero-Tolerance Policy. 337 III. Discussion. 341 a. The Zero-Tolerance Policy and the Principles of Immigration Law. 341 b. The Zero-Tolerance Policy and Sociological Issues. 342 c. The Zero-Tolerance Policy and Psychological Trauma. 343 d. Migrant... 2022  
Darren Lenard Hutchinson "WITH ALL THE MAJESTY OF THE LAW": SYSTEMIC RACISM, PUNITIVE SENTIMENT, AND EQUAL PROTECTION 110 California Law Review 371 (April, 2022) United States criminal justice policies have played a central role in the subjugation of persons of color. Under slavery, criminal law explicitly provided a means to ensure White dominion over Blacks and require Black submission to White authority. During Reconstruction, anticrime policies served to maintain White supremacy and re-enslave Blacks,... 2022  
Leslie P. Culver , Elizabeth Kronk-Warner #INCLUDETHEIRSTORIES: RETHINKING, REIMAGINING, AND RESHAPING LEGAL EDUCATION 2022 Utah Law Review 709 (2022) On January 23, 2021, Professor Alexa Chew of the University of North Carolina School of Law tweeted, Does this already exist: A law journal symposium w papers adding race/gender/etc context for core 1L casebook cases? The papers would be written for a law student audience + symposium issue could be a free study aid/companion for 1Ls. Weeks... 2022  
Jonathan D. Glater A BRIEF REFLECTION ON THE DOCTRINAL ENTRENCHMENT OF INEQUALITY: BRACH v. NEWSOM 13 California Law Review Online 66 (September, 2022) Introduction. 66 I. Fed-up Pandemic Parents: Brach v. Newsom. 68 II. Precedents and the Perpetuation of Inequality: The Appellate Panel Majority's Reading of Supreme Court Doctrine. 70 III. Critique. 75 Conclusion. 77 2022  
Tom I. Romero, II A BROWN BUFFALO'S OBSERVATIONS ON COLOR (BLINDNESS), LEGAL HISTORY, AND RACIAL JUSTICE IN THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN WEST 2022 Utah Law Review 751 (2022) Close your eyes and join me on a quintessential American road trip driving west along I-70. As our car hurtles through the corn and wheat fields of western Kansas at over eighty miles an hour, we imperceptibly are gaining altitude. As we cross the 100th meridian, the air becomes drier, the land more barren. Suddenly, a giant brown sign emerges on... 2022  
Todd A. DeMitchell, Ed.D., Richard Fossey, J.D., Ed.D., Terri A. DeMitchell, J.D., M.A., M.Ed. A MORAL PANIC, BANNING BOOKS, AND THE CONSTITUTION: THE RIGHT TO DIRECT THE UPBRINGING AND THE RIGHT TO RECEIVE INFORMATION IN A TIME OF INFLECTION 397 West's Education Law Reporter 905 (14-Apr-22) I'm sure we've got hundreds of people out there that would like to see those books before we burn them, said [Virginia Spotsylvania County School board member,] Kirk Twigg. Just so we can identify, within our community, that we are eradicating this bad stuff. [I]t's not just the books under fire now that worry me. It is the books that will never... 2022  
Julie C. Suk A WORLD WITHOUT ROE: THE CONSTITUTIONAL FUTURE OF UNWANTED PREGNANCY 64 William and Mary Law Review 443 (November, 2022) With the demise of Roe v. Wade, the survival of abortion access in America will depend on new legal paths. In the same moment that Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization has constrained access to abortion in the United States, other constitutional democracies have moved in the opposite direction, expanding access to safe, legal, and free... 2022  
Steven Sacco ABOLISHING CITIZENSHIP: RESOLVING THE IRRECONCILABILITY BETWEEN "SOIL" AND "BLOOD" POLITICAL MEMBERSHIP AND ANTI-RACIST DEMOCRACY 36 Georgetown Immigration Law Journal 693 (Winter, 2022) C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 694 II. Citizenship as Racism and Anti-Democracy. 698 A. Citizenship as Race. 698 1. Race Becomes Citizenship. 700 2. Citizenship Becomes Race. 711 3. Citizenship Racializes Citizens. 714 B. Citizenship as Anti-Democracy. 718 1. Citizenship Is Anti-Egalitarian. 718 a. Citizenship Is a Caste System. 718 b.... 2022  
Jeannie Suk Gersen ACADEMIC FREEDOM AND DISCRIMINATION IN A POLARIZING TIME 59 Houston Law Review 781 (Symposium, 2022) Academic freedom is under attack from both the left and the right. The very notion of academic freedom is at stake as liberals and conservatives attack exercises of it that do not align with their political goals. Moreover, those who purport to champion academic freedom frequently end up attempting to restrict it. This trend has accompanied an... 2022  
Cyra Akila Choudhury , Shruti Rana ADDRESSING ASIAN (IN)VISIBILITY IN THE ACADEMY 51 Southwestern Law Review 287 (2022) To be Asian American in the legal academy is to be caught between a paradox and a dichotomy, with both marked by silencing and erasure. The paradox exists within the term Asian American itself, as Asian and American have historically been posed as antithetical identities in U.S. history and jurisprudence. On one side is a representation of... 2022  
Zoe Masters AFTER DENIAL: IMAGINING WITH EDUCATION JUSTICE MOVEMENTS 25 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change 219 (2022) Abstract. In many U.S. states, Republican lawmakers are working to restrict how children can learn about racism. This article puts these efforts in context as part of a larger phenomenon of denial, which is integral to the social construction and maintenance of white supremacy. Denial has long been embedded in the constitutional framework that all... 2022  
Gabriela Vasquez AMERICAN EXCLUSION DOCTRINE: A RESPONSE TO LIBERAL DEFENSES OF STARE DECISIS 28 National Black Law Journal 1 (2022) Stare decisis has long been considered a conservative doctrine. Yet, in recent years, liberals have taken up a defense of the legal principle in efforts to preserve key liberal precedents. Despite the existing critiques of stare decisis as oppressive, political, and inconsistent, advocates along the entire political spectrum continue to claim its... 2022  
Thalia González, Alexis Etow, Cesar De La Vega AN ANTIRACIST HEALTH EQUITY AGENDA FOR EDUCATION 50 Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 31 (Spring, 2022) Keywords: Education Law and Policy, School Discipline and Policing, Structural Discrimination, Racism is a Public Health Crisis, Social Determinants of Health, Antiracist Health Equity Agenda Abstract: With growing public health and health equity challenges brought to the forefront--following racialized health inequities resulting from COVID-19 and... 2022  
L. Kate Mitchell, Maya K. Watson, Abigail Silva, Jessica L. Simpson AN INTER-PROFESSIONAL ANTIRACIST CURRICULUM IS PARAMOUNT TO ADDRESSING RACIAL HEALTH INEQUITIES 50 Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 109 (Spring, 2022) Keywords: Antiracism, Health, Equity, Curriculum, Interprofessional Abstract: Legal, medical, and public health professionals have been complicit in creating and maintaining systems that drive health inequities. To ameliorate this, current and future leaders in law, medicine, and public health must learn about racism and its impact along the life... 2022  
Peter H. Huang ANTI-ASIAN AMERICAN RACISM, COVID-19, RACISM CONTESTED, HUMOR, AND EMPATHY 16 FIU Law Review 669 (Spring, 2022) This Article analyzes the history of anti-Asian American racism. This Article considers how anger, fear, and hatred over COVID-19 fueled the increase of anti-Asian American racism. This Article introduces the phrase, racism contested, to describe an incident where some people view racism as clearly involved, while some people do not. This Article... 2022  
Danielle M. Conway ANTIRACIST LAWYERING IN PRACTICE BEGINS WITH THE PRACTICE OF TEACHING AND LEARNING ANTIRACISM IN LAW SCHOOL 2022 Utah Law Review 723 (2022) I was honored by the invitation to deliver the 2021 Lee E. Teitelbaum keynote address. Dean Teitelbaum was a gentleman and a titan for justice. I am confident the antiracism work ongoing at the S.J. Quinney College of Law would have deeply resonated with him, especially knowing the challenges we are currently facing within and outside of legal... 2022  
Andrea A. Curcio, Alexis Martinez ARE DISCIPLINE CODE PROCEEDINGS ANOTHER EXAMPLE OF RACIAL DISPARITIES IN LEGAL EDUCATION? 22 University of Maryland Law Journal of Race, Religion, Gender and Class 1 (Spring, 2022) Addressing racism within legal education has historically focused on diversifying the faculty and student body, as well as integrating teaching about institutional and structural racism into the law school curriculum. More recently, law school faculty have begun to focus on creating an inclusive campus culture, which requires looking at all systems... 2022  
Vinay Harpalani ASIAN AMERICANS, RACIAL STEREOTYPES, AND ELITE UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 102 Boston University Law Review 233 (February, 2022) Asian Americans have long occupied a precarious position in America's racial landscape, exemplified by controversies over elite university admissions. Recently, this has culminated with the Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President & Fellows of Harvard College case. In January 2022, the Supreme Court granted certiorari in this case, and it... 2022  
Berta Esperanza Hernández-Truyol AWAKENING THE LAW: A LATCRITICAL PERSPECTIVE 20 Seattle Journal for Social Justice 927 (Summer, 2022) The law is asleep; it needs awakening--a concept deployed across myriad disciplines to denote attaining a deep consciousness about and connection with the human condition, human actions, and their consequences. The outcome of an awakening is a realization of raw truths that allows seeing realities otherwise obscured by our perceptual... 2022  
LaToya Baldwin Clark BARBED WIRE FENCES: THE STRUCTURAL VIOLENCE OF EDUCATION LAW 89 University of Chicago Law Review 499 (March, 2022) In this Essay, I argue that, in urban metros like Chicago, poor Black children are victims of not just gun violence but also the structural violence of systemic educational stratification. Structural violence occurs in the context of domination, where poor Black children are marginalized and isolated, vulnerable to lifelong subordination across... 2022  
Mary Kate McGowan BEYOND SPEECH ACTS: ON HATE SPEECH AND THE UBIQUITY OF NORM ENACTMENT 20 Georgetown Journal of Law & Public Policy 1055 (Special Issue 2022) This paper argues against two frameworks for thinking about how language functions. The first such framework treats language use as primarily in the business of communicating content. On this content expression view, when we say things, we are only making claims about the world and/or offering considerations for or against such claims. It is shown... 2022  
Goldburn P. Maynard Jr. BIDEN'S GAMBIT: ADVANCING RACIAL EQUITY WHILE RELYING ON A RACE-NEUTRAL TAX CODE 131 Yale Law Journal Forum 656 (9-Jan-22) abstract. The American Rescue Plan Act was both a major infusion of economic aid to low-income and middle-class Americans and an opportunity for the Biden Administration to keep its promise to promote racial equity. This Essay analyzes ARPA's major provisions to determine their potential impact on racial equity. It argues that the Biden... 2022  
Kyler J. Palmer BOSTOCK, BACKLASH, AND BEYOND THE PALE: RELIGIOUS RETRENCHMENT AND THE FUTURE OF LGBTQ ANTIDISCRIMINATION ADVOCACY IN THE WAKE OF TITLE VII PROTECTION 15 DePaul Journal for Social Justice 1 (Winter/Spring, 2021-2022) The Supreme Court's landmark decision in Bostock v. Clayton County is an influential ruling affecting future LGBTQ rights projects. However, the Court's ability to produce social and political change through legally formalistic decisions related to highly contentious social issues is routinely undercut by public backlash. In the context of LGBTQ... 2022  
Kevin R. Johnson BRINGING RACEXGENDER EQUALITY TO THE UNEQUAL PROFESSION 51 Southwestern Law Review 200 (2022) Meera Deo's powerful book, Unequal Profession, sheds much light on the stunning inequalities facing women of color in legal academia. Collecting a wealth of quantitative and qualitative data, the book reveals the stark raceXgender (race multiplied by gender) disadvantages faced by women of color law professors. By Deo's account, the barriers to... 2022  
Bryan Castro CAN YOU PLEASE SEND SOMEONE WHO CAN HELP? HOW QUALIFIED IMMUNITY STOPS THE IMPROVEMENT OF POLICE RESPONSE TO DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AND MENTAL HEALTH CALLS 16 Harvard Law & Policy Review 581 (Summer, 2022) Society interacts with the police in many ways. However, there is a great deal of tension between the police and the public at large. This paper focuses on the tension between domestic violence victims, persons with significant psychological conditions (PWSPC), and the police. Currently, police spend equal amounts of time with these two groups as... 2022  
Brishen Rogers CAPITALIST DEVELOPMENT, LABOR LAW, AND THE NEW WORKING CLASS: THE NEXT SHIFT: THE FALL OF INDUSTRY AND THE RISE OF HEALTH CARE IN RUST BELT AMERICA, BY GABRIEL WINANT, HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 2021 131 Yale Law Journal 1842 (April, 2022) Gabriel Winant's The Next Shift charts the transformation of Pittsburgh's labor market and political economy from the postwar period through the era of unabashed neoliberalism. During that time, relatively well-paid and unionized employment in steel and metalworking plummeted, while low-wage, precarious, nonunion employment in health care and... 2022  
Kara W. Swanson CENTERING BLACK WOMEN INVENTORS: PASSING AND THE PATENT ARCHIVE 25 Stanford Technology Law Review (2022) (Spring, 2022) This Article uses historical methodology to reframe persistent race and gender gaps in patent rates as archival silences. Gaps are absences, positioning the missing as failed non-participants. By centering Black women inventors and letting the silences fill with whispered stories, this Article upends our understanding of the patent archive as an... 2022  
Charquia Wright CIRCUIT CIRCUS: DEFYING SCOTUS AND DISENFRANCHISING BLACK VOTERS 83 Ohio State Law Journal 601 (2022) Law students are uniformly taught that federal circuit courts cannot and will not overrule Supreme Court precedent under any circumstance. This is not true. They can, with little fear of corrective mechanisms like en banc oversight, Supreme Court review, or congressional override. And in certain circumstances, they are bound to do so by the law of... 2022  
Jonathan P. Feingold CIVIL RIGHTS CATCH-22S 43 Cardozo Law Review 1855 (June, 2022) Civil rights advocates have long viewed litigation as a vital path to social change. In many ways, it is. But in key respects that remain underexplored in legal scholarship, even successful litigation can hinder remedial projects. This perverse effect stems from civil rights doctrines that incentivize litigants (or their attorneys) to foreground... 2022  
Anne D. Gordon CLEANING UP OUR OWN HOUSES: CREATING ANTI-RACIST CLINICAL PROGRAMS 29 Clinical Law Review 49 (Fall, 2022) A formidable body of research and scholarship describes the unique difficulties faced by various minoritized groups within our law schools. Women, people of color, those with disabilities, LGBTQ+ people, and all those outside, overlapping, or in-between have powerfully described how their turn through legal academia was marked by discrimination,... 2022  
Cinnamon P. Carlarne CLIMATE COURAGE: REMAKING ENVIRONMENTAL LAW 41 Stanford Environmental Law Journal 125 (May, 2022) I. Introduction. 126 II. The Making of Environmental Law. 133 A. How It Began: Environmental Law's Ecological Roots. 135 B. How It Is Going: A Field Detached. 140 III. Examining the Roots of Environmental Law. 142 A. International Environmental Leadership. 143 B. Environmental Justice. 147 C. Climate Justice. 152 D. Environmental Rights. 156 IV.... 2022  
Jeena Shah COMMUNITY LAWYERING IN RESISTANCE TO NEOLIBERALISM 120 Michigan Law Review 1061 (April, 2022) An Equal Place: Lawyers in the Struggle for Los Angeles. By Scott L. Cummings. New York: Oxford University Press. 2021. Pp. xxi, 661. $44.95. 1. . This is a multi-layered city, unceremoniously built on hills, valleys, ravines. Flying into Burbank airport in the day, you observe gradations of trees and earth. A city seems to be an afterthought,... 2022  
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