Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year | Key Terms in Title or Summary |
Kendall Lawrenz |
REMEDYING THE HEALTH IMPLICATIONS OF STRUCTURAL RACISM THROUGH REPARATIONS |
90 George Washington Law Review 1018 (August, 2022) |
From the early introduction of slavery to the United States, not only did the economic prosperity of slavery depend on extracting reproductive labor from Black birthing people, but so did the field of medicine. Enslaved Black people were experimented on and forced to undergo inhumane procedures in the name of science, yet as the medical profession... |
2022 |
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Peter H. Huang |
RESISTANCE IS NOT FUTILE: CHALLENGING AAPI HATE |
28 William and Mary Journal of Race, Gender, and Social Justice 261 (Winter, 2022) |
This Article analyzes how to challenge AAPI (Asian American Pacific Islander) hate--defined as explicit negative bias in racial beliefs towards AAPIs. In economics, beliefs are subjective probabilities over possible outcomes. Traditional neoclassical economics view beliefs as inputs to making decisions with more accurate beliefs having indirect,... |
2022 |
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Jamelia Morgan |
RESPONDING TO ABOLITION ANXIETIES: A ROADMAP FOR LEGAL ANALYSIS |
120 Michigan Law Review 1199 (April, 2022) |
We Do This Til We Free Us. By Mariame Kaba. Edited by Tamara K. Nopper. Chicago: Haymarket Books. 2021. Pp. xxviii, 197. $16.95. During the uprisings that followed the police killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, abolitionist organizers and groups across the country seized the moment and set forth public demands to end the systems of... |
2022 |
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Natasha Varyani |
RESPONSE TO NANCY LEONG'S IDENTITY CAPITALISTS: IMPLICATIONS FOR PROPERTY, ACADEMIA, AND AFFIRMATIVE ACTION |
56 New England Law Review 175 (Spring, 2022) |
Professor Leong's work is extraordinary in its effortless combination of data, legal theory, and personal narrative. As someone who strives to incorporate those very different lenses into my own teaching and scholarship, Professor Leong's ease and skill in weaving these various approaches to illustrate a concept and craft a framework has left me in... |
2022 |
|
Michael Haggerty , Gregory P. Downs |
ROGER TANEY: INTERSECTIONAL RACIST IN AN AGE OF RACIST DIFFERENTIATION |
24 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law 729 (June, 2022) |
In his article Dred Scott and Asian Americans, Gabriel J. Chin creatively and persuasively reads the well-known, much-reviled opinion by Chief Justice Roger Taney in Dred Scott v. Sandford through Taney's little-known opinion in United States v. Dow to argue that Dred Scott should be regarded as pertinent to all people of color, not only African... |
2022 |
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Lincoln Davies , Karrigan Börk , Sarah Krakoff |
ROUNDTABLE TWO ENVIRONMENTAL LAW EDUCATION: NEW TECHNIQUES IN THE CLASSROOM AND BEYOND |
46 Vermont Law Review 575 (Summer, 2022) |
First, I want to briefly explain our curriculum, as it exists, to help with the context for my answer. At Colorado, we have what I think of as a developmental curriculum. We have a foundations class that is the gateway to the rest of the substantive classes. And then we have pollution law, water law, public lands, climate change--a full suite of... |
2022 |
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Leah C. Rachow |
SCAPEGOATING AND STEREOTYPING: THE EXECUTIVE'S POWER OVER FEDERAL CONTRACTORS |
47 Journal of Corporation Law 529 (Winter, 2022) |
I. Introduction. 529 II. The Executive's Authority over Federal Contractor Agreements. 531 A. The Lead Up to EO 13,950. 531 B. The President's Authority under FPASA. 532 C. History of Executive Orders Impacting Federal Contractors. 532 D. The Bounds of Executive Authority over Federal Contract Agreements. 533 E. A Boundless Power over Federal... |
2022 |
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Jill C. Engle |
SEXUAL VIOLENCE, INTANGIBLE HARM, AND THE PROMISE OF TRANSFORMATIVE REMEDIES |
79 Washington and Lee Law Review 1045 (Summer, 2022) |
This Article describes alternative remedies that survivors of sexual violence can access inside and outside the legal system. It describes the leading restorative justice approaches and recommends one of the newest and most innovative of those--transformative justice--to heal the intangible harms of sexual violence. The Article also discusses the... |
2022 |
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Scott Franks |
SOME REFLECTIONS OF A MÉTIS LAW STUDENT AND ASSISTANT PROFESSOR ON INDIGENOUS LEGAL EDUCATION IN CANADA |
48 Mitchell Hamline Law Review 744 (May, 2022) |
This Article is a reflection on some of my experiences as a Métis law student and assistant professor on the subject of Indigenous legal education in Canada. I introduce myself and what brought me to law school and describe some of my experiences as a law student, as a co-president of an Indigenous Students Association, and as a student organizer... |
2022 |
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Angelique EagleWoman, Wambdi A. Was'teWinyan, Dominic J. Terry, Lani Petrulo., Dr. Gavin Clarkson, Angela Levasseur, Leah R. Sixkiller, Jack Rice |
STORYTELLING AND TRUTH-TELLING: PERSONAL REFLECTIONS ON THE NATIVE AMERICAN EXPERIENCE IN LAW SCHOOLS |
48 Mitchell Hamline Law Review 704 (May, 2022) |
I. Introduction. 705 II. Becoming a Native Lawyer. 710 A. Ya'at'eeh!. 710 B. Don't Be A Victim of Your Environment. 710 C. Work Hard, and Never Give Up. 711 D. The Scenic Route. 711 E. So Close, Yet So Far. 712 F. The Bar Exam Does Not Define You!. 713 G. Ya'at'eeh, My Name is Dominic Terry. 713 III. Barred: A Personal Reflection on the Native... |
2022 |
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Devon W. Carbado |
STRICT SCRUTINY & THE BLACK BODY |
69 UCLA Law Review 2 (March, 2022) |
When people in law think about strict scrutiny, often they are also thinking about equal protection law's treatment of race. For more than four decades, scholars have vigorously challenged that legal regime. Yet none of that contestation has interrogated the social manifestation of strict scrutiny. This Article does that work. Its central claim is... |
2022 |
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Abigail E. Lowe, Kelly K. Dineen, Seema Mohapatra |
STRUCTURAL DISCRIMINATION IN PANDEMIC POLICY: ESSENTIAL PROTECTIONS FOR ESSENTIAL WORKERS |
50 Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 67 (Spring, 2022) |
Keywords: Essential Workers, Emergency Preparedness, Health and Safety, Infection Prevention and Control, Anti-Racism Abstract: An inordinate number of low wage workers in essential industries are Black, Hispanic, or Latino, immigrants or refugees--groups beset by centuries of discrimination and burdened with disproportionate but preventable harms... |
2022 |
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Isaiah Strong |
SURVEILLANCE OF BLACK LIVES AS INJURY-IN-FACT |
122 Columbia Law Review 1019 (May, 2022) |
Black communities have been surveilled by governmental institutions and law enforcement agencies throughout the history of the United States. Most recently, law enforcement has turned to monitoring social media, devoting an increasing number of resources and time to surveilling various social media platforms. Yet this rapid increase in law... |
2022 |
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S. Lisa Washington |
SURVIVED & COERCED: EPISTEMIC INJUSTICE IN THE FAMILY REGULATION SYSTEM |
122 Columbia Law Review 1097 (May, 2022) |
Recent calls to defund the police were quickly followed by calls to fund social service agencies, including the family regulation apparatus. These demands fail to consider the shared carceral logic of the criminal legal and family regulation system. This Essay utilizes the term family regulation system to more accurately describe the surveillance... |
2022 |
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Clay Calvert |
TAKING THE FIGHT OUT OF FIGHTING WORDS ON THE DOCTRINE'S EIGHTIETH ANNIVERSARY: WHAT "N" WORD LITIGATION TODAY REVEALS ABOUT ASSUMPTIONS, FLAWS AND GOALS OF A FIRST AMENDMENT PRINCIPLE IN DISARRAY |
87 Missouri Law Review 493 (Spring, 2022) |
Analyzing a trio of recent rulings involving usage of the N word by white people directed at Black individuals, this Article explores problems with the United States Supreme Court's fighting words doctrine on its eightieth anniversary. In the process of examining these cases and the troubles they illuminate, including the doctrine's dubious... |
2022 |
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Phyllis C. Taite , Nicola “Nicky” Boothe |
TEACHING CULTURAL COMPETENCE IN LAW SCHOOL CURRICULA: AN ESSENTIAL STEP TO FACILITATE DIVERSITY, EQUITY, & INCLUSION IN THE LEGAL PROFESSION |
2022 Utah Law Review 813 (2022) |
A judge made national news when a video was leaked of her and her family using racial slurs. A lawyer's racist rant, where he threatened to call Immigration and Customs Enforcement on New York restaurant workers because they were speaking Spanish, went viral and earned him a public scolding by the court. The defense team for Ahmaud Arbery's... |
2022 |
|
Vinay Harpalani |
TESTING THE LIMITS: ASIAN AMERICANS AND THE DEBATE OVER STANDARDIZED ENTRANCE EXAMS |
73 South Carolina Law Review 759 (Spring, 2022) |
I. Introduction. 759 II. Social, Political, and Historical Context. 762 A. Racial Triangulation. 762 B. Model Minority to Peril of the Mind. 763 C. Negative Action and Affirmative Action. 766 III. Controversies over Standardized Entrance Exams. 770 A. College Entrance Exams and the Test-Blind Movement. 771 B. New York City's Specialized High... |
2022 |
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Daniel E. Walters |
THE ADMINISTRATIVE AGON: A DEMOCRATIC THEORY FOR A CONFLICTUAL REGULATORY STATE |
132 Yale Law Journal 1 (October, 2022) |
A perennial challenge for the administrative state is to answer the democracy question: how can the bureaucracy be squared with the idea of self-government of, by, and for a sovereign people with few direct means of holding agencies accountable? Scholars have long argued that this challenge can be met by bringing sophisticated thinking about... |
2022 |
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Laura M. Padilla |
THE BLACK--WHITE PARADIGM'S CONTINUING ERASURE OF LATINAS: SEE WOMEN LAW DEANS OF COLOR |
99 Denver Law Review 683 (Summer, 2022) |
The Black-white paradigm persists with unintended consequences. For example, there have been only six Latina law deans to date with only four presently serving. This Article provides data about women law deans of color, the dearth of Latina law deans, and explanations for the data. It focuses on the enduring Black-white paradigm, as well as other... |
2022 |
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Alexis Hoag |
THE COLOR OF JUSTICE |
120 Michigan Law Review 977 (April, 2022) |
Free Justice: a History of the Public Defender in Twentieth Century America. By Sara Mayeux. University of North Carolina Press. 2020. Pp. xi, 271. $26.95. Writing about history requires making certain decisions: when to start the account, what to include and exclude, which documents and artifacts to rely upon, and what questions to address. One... |
2022 |
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Tom I. Romero, II |
THE COLOR OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT: OBSERVATIONS OF A BROWN BUFFALO ON RACIAL IMPACT STATEMENTS IN THE MOVEMENT FOR WATER JUSTICE |
25 CUNY Law Review 241 (Summer, 2022) |
This Article advocates for the adoption of racial impact statements (RIS) in local government decision making, particularly among water utilities. Situated in the larger history of water and climate injustice in Colorado and the arid American West, this Article examines ways that racially minoritized communities engage and contest legal and... |
2022 |
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Tiffany Hilton |
THE DANGER OF UNFAIR PREJUDICE: RACIAL DISPARITIES IN THE FEDERAL RULES OF EVIDENCE |
52 Stetson Law Review 153 (Fall, 2022) |
The chasm between the principles upon which this Government was founded . and those which are daily practiced under the protection of the flag, yawns so wide and deep. - Mary Church Terrell, 1906 The year 2020 brought about many new challenges in America. The COVID-19 pandemic ushered in a nationwide sense of unease and uncertainty that... |
2022 |
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Gil Rothschild-Elyassi |
THE DATAFICATION OF LAW: HOW TECHNOLOGY ENCODES CARCERAL POWER AND AFFECTS JUDICIAL PRACTICE IN THE UNITED STATES |
47 Law and Social Inquiry 55 (February, 2022) |
This inquiry explores how data analyses about US Federal sentences have transformed sentencing practice beginning in the mid-1980s. I consider this inquiry an early case of the datafication of law, a pervasive process that translates legal practice into data and embeds it in digital networks so it can be tracked and analyzed in real time. To... |
2022 |
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Ngozi Okidegbe |
THE DEMOCRATIZING POTENTIAL OF ALGORITHMS? |
53 Connecticut Law Review 739 (February, 2022) |
Jurisdictions are increasingly embracing the use of pretrial risk assessment algorithms as a solution to the problem of mass pretrial incarceration. Conversations about the use of pretrial algorithms in legal scholarship have tended to focus on their opacity, determinativeness, reliability, validity, or their (in)ability to reduce high rates of... |
2022 |
|
Khiara M. Bridges |
THE DYSGENIC STATE: ENVIRONMENTAL INJUSTICE AND DISABILITY-SELECTIVE ABORTION BANS |
110 California Law Review 297 (April, 2022) |
Disability-selective abortion bans are laws that prohibit individuals from terminating a pregnancy because the fetus has been diagnosed with a health impairment. Many environmental toxins--to which low-income people and people of color disproportionately are exposed--are known to cause impairments in fetuses. When the fact of environmental... |
2022 |
|
Brendan Williams |
THE EXPENDABLES: HISPANIC WORKERS IN THE U.S. DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC |
13 Alabama Civil Rights & Civil Liberties Law Review 119 (2021-2022) |
I. Essential Work. 121 II. Health Care Inequities. 127 III. White Privilege and Opposition to COVID-19 Safeguards. 136 IV. Conclusion. 141 |
2022 |
|
Rabia Belt |
THE FAT PRISONERS' DILEMMA: SLOW VIOLENCE, INTERSECTIONALITY, AND A DISABILITY RIGHTS FRAMEWORK FOR THE FUTURE |
110 Georgetown Law Journal 785 (April, 2022) |
America is having a reckoning on mass incarceration. Events such as George Floyd's killing, COVID behind bars, and Black Lives Matter have punctured our collective consciousness. Advocates and scholars alike are pushing U.S. society to examine the costs--financial, psychic, social--of putting millions of people behind bars. Despite this... |
2022 |
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Wendy Netter Epstein , DePaul University College of Law, 25 E. Jackson Blvd., Chicago, IL 60604, USA |
THE HEALTH EQUITY MANDATE |
9 Journal of Law & the Biosciences 1 (January-June, 2022) |
People of color and the poor die younger than the White and prosperous. And when they are alive, they are sicker. Health inequity is morally tragic. But it is also economically inefficient, raising the nation's healthcare bill and lowering productivity. The COVID pandemic only, albeit dramatically, highlights these pre-existing inequities. COVID... |
2022 |
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K-Sue Park |
THE HISTORY WARS AND PROPERTY LAW: CONQUEST AND SLAVERY AS FOUNDATIONAL TO THE FIELD |
131 Yale Law Journal 1062 (February, 2022) |
This Article addresses the stakes of the ongoing fight over competing versions of U.S. history for our understanding of law, with a special focus on property law. Insofar as legal scholarship has examined U.S. law within the historical context in which it arose, it has largely overlooked the role that laws and legal institutions played in... |
2022 |
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Christopher Cruz |
THE LEARN ACT: A BIPARTISAN LEGISLATIVE PROPOSAL TO ADVANCE EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES FOR IMMIGRANTS AND ENGLISH LEARNERS |
59 Harvard Journal on Legislation 223 (Winter, 2022) |
Immigrants and English learners (ELs) have consistently faced overwhelming odds in attaining a sound, basic education in the United States. Today, both groups are subject to systemic discrimination and face lower than average high school graduation and college matriculation rates. This is despite the fact that nearly fifty years ago, the Equal... |
2022 |
|
Riaz Tejani |
THE LIFE OF TRANSPLANTS: WHY LAW AND ECONOMICS HAS "SUCCEEDED" WHERE LEGAL ANTHROPOLOGY HAS NOT |
73 Alabama Law Review 733 (2022) |
Introduction. 734 I. Legal Anthropology. 735 A. Maine: Status to Contract. 736 B. Llewellyn and the UCC. 737 C. Legal Translation: The Gluckman-Bohannan Debate. 737 II. Law and Economics. 740 A. Risk-Utility Balancing. 741 B. Irrelevance and Social Cost. 742 III. The Life of Transplants. 744 A. The Culture of Neoliberalism. 746 B. The Seduction... |
2022 |
|
Neil Fulton |
THE MERITS OF MERIT: THE TYRANNY OF MERIT: WHAT'S BECOME OF THE COMMON GOOD? MICHAEL J. SANDEL. ALLEN LANE, 2020. 288 PP |
67 South Dakota Law Review 39 (2022) |
The idea of merit is hardwired into American consciousness more than almost any concept. It is generally accepted that the race is to the swift and that the cream rises to the top. This belief that the most talented achieve the most is paired with a widespread belief that anyone can rise to the top with enough effort and ability. The Horatio... |
2022 |
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Etienne C. Toussaint |
THE MISEDUCATION OF PUBLIC CITIZENS |
29 Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy 287 (Spring, 2022) |
The American Bar Association Model Rules of Professional Conduct calls upon lawyers, as public citizens, to embrace a special responsibility for the quality of justice in the legal profession and in society. Yet, some law professors have historically adopted a formalistic and doctrinally neutral approach to law teaching that elides critical... |
2022 |
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Shaun Ossei-Owusu |
THE NEW PENAL BUREAUCRATS |
170 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 1389 (June, 2022) |
Introduction. 1390 I. The Same Legal Problems. 1400 A. Criminal Legal Education and the Reproduction of Hierarchy. 1400 B. Law School Socialization. 1407 C. Demographics. 1413 II. The New Penal Bureaucrats. 1420 A. Generational Change in the Legal Profession. 1421 B. Prosecution Reimagined. 1426 C. Indigent Defense Rebooted. 1433 III. Provocation... |
2022 |
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I. India Thusi |
THE PATHOLOGICAL WHITENESS OF PROSECUTION |
110 California Law Review 795 (June, 2022) |
Criminal law scholarship suffers from a Whiteness problem. While scholars appear to be increasingly concerned with the racial disparities within the criminal legal system, the scholarship's focus tends to be on the marginalized communities and the various discriminatory outcomes they experience as a result of the system. Scholars frequently mention... |
2022 |
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Luke P. Norris |
THE PROMISE AND PERILS OF PRIVATE ENFORCEMENT |
108 Virginia Law Review 1483 (November, 2022) |
A new crop of private enforcement suits is sprouting up across the country. These laws permit people to bring enforcement actions against those who aid or induce abortions, against schools that permit transgender students to use bathrooms consistent with their gender identities, and against schools that permit transgender students to play on sports... |
2022 |
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Lauren Moxley Beatty |
THE RESURRECTION OF STATE NULLIFICATION--AND THE DEGRADATION OF CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS: SB8 AND THE BLUEPRINT FOR STATE COPYCAT LAWS |
111 Georgetown Law Journal Online 18 (2022) |
In Whole Woman's Health v. Jackson, the Supreme Court resurrected the zombie doctrine of nullification--and called into question the ability of our constitutional structure to effectively enforce the supremacy of federal rights. The case centered on Texas's Senate Bill 8 (SB8), which prohibits abortion at approximately six weeks of pregnancy. Texas... |
2022 |
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Susan Bisom-Rapp |
THE ROLE OF LAW AND MYTH IN CREATING A WORKPLACE THAT 'LOOKS LIKE AMERICA' |
43 Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law 251 (2022) |
Equal employment opportunity (EEO) law has played a poor role in incentivizing effective diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) and harassment prevention programming. In litigation and investigation, too many judges and regulators credit employers for maintaining policies and programs rather than requiring employers to embrace efforts that work.... |
2022 |
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Raquel Muñiz , Maria Lewis , Grace Cavanaugh , Melissa Woolsey |
THE SOCIAL CONTEXT OF THE LAW: A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF RELIANCE INTERESTS IN THE DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY v. REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA |
95 Southern California Law Review 857 (April, 2022) |
In 2020, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on the Department of Homeland Security v. Regents of the University of California case. The case concerned the rescission of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) policy, an issue that sparked the interest of a wide range of amicus curiae, including those in support of the policy. Using Critical... |
2022 |
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Ming Tanigawa-Lau |
THE STATE'S KULEANA: DECONSTRUCTING THE PERMITTING PROCESS FOR THE THIRTY-METER TELESCOPE AND FINDING RESTORATION THROUGH SYSTEMIC VALIDATION OF NATIVE HAWAIIAN RIGHTS |
68 UCLA Law Review 1390 (January, 2022) |
To many Native Hawaiians, Maunakea is a sacred place, central to their creation. To the astronomy community, it represents modern astronomy's greatest opportunity for scientific advancement. The steady construction of observatories on Maunakea since the 1960s, and the resultant destruction of the mountain's natural and spiritual landscape... |
2022 |
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Vania Blaiklock, Esq. |
THE UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES OF THE COURT'S RELIGIOUS FREEDOM REVOLUTION: A HISTORY OF WHITE SUPREMACY AND PRIVATE CHRISTIAN CHURCH SCHOOLS |
117 Northwestern University Law Review Online 46 (26-Sep-22) |
Abstract--Although private church schools have historically received less attention than charter schools and other private nonsectarian schools in public discourse, in recent years, the Supreme Court's First Amendment jurisprudence has allowed private church schools to make great strides in achieving state funding. At a time where public education... |
2022 |
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Prof. Sandra L. Rierson, Melanie H. Schwimmer |
THE WILMINGTON MASSACRE AND COUP OF 1898 AND THE SEARCH FOR RESTORATIVE JUSTICE |
14 Elon Law Review 117 (2022) |
I. Introduction. 118 II. North Carolina's Ethnic Cleansing: The Wilmington Massacre and Coup of 1898. 121 A. The Establishment and Rise of Wilmington. 122 B. Wilmington's Thriving Black Middle Class and the Ephemeral Success of Reconstruction. 124 C. White Backlash and Democrats' Plot to Overthrow the Fusionist Government. 128 D. Death and... |
2022 |
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Deborah L. Brake |
THEORY MATTERS--AND TEN MORE THINGS I LEARNED FROM MARTHA CHAMALLAS ABOUT FEMINISM, LAW, AND GENDER |
83 Ohio State Law Journal 435 (2022) |
C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 435 II. Feminism Is Plural. 437 III. Gender Is Intersectional. 442 IV. Gender Is Constructed and Gender Constructs. 444 V. Everything Old Becomes New Again. 446 VI. Nothing Is as Easy as It Seems. 450 VII. Gender Hides in Plain Sight. 457 VIII. It's the Institution, Stupid!. 459 IX. Mind the Gap. 462 X. Take... |
2022 |
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Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw |
THIS IS NOT A DRILL: THE WAR AGAINST ANTIRACIST TEACHING IN AMERICA |
68 UCLA Law Review 1702 (February, 2022) |
On January 5, 2022, Professor Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw received the 2021 Triennial Award for Lifetime Service to Legal Education and the Legal Profession from the Association of American Law Schools (AALS). In this modified acceptance speech delivered at the 2022 AALS Awards Ceremony, she reflects on the path that brought her to this moment and... |
2022 |
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Dr. Angélica Guevara |
TO BE, OR NOT TO BE, WILL LONG COVID BE REASONABLY ACCOMMODATED IS THE QUESTION |
23 Minnesota Journal of Law, Science & Technology 253 (17-Feb-22) |
To be, or not to be, that is the reasonable accommodation question: whether Long COVID will be reasonably accommodated now that it is covered under disability antidiscrimination law. Some manifestations of Long COVID will certainly be considered disabilities under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). However, even if it is considered a... |
2022 |
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Khrystan Nicole Policarpio, Grecia Orozco |
TOGETHER BUT UNEQUAL: HOW THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC EXACERBATED THE INEQUITIES HARMING MINORITY LAW STUDENTS |
55 U.C. Davis Law Review Online 91 (May, 2022) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 93 I. The Law School Institutional Structure. 95 A. Law School Admissions Have Numerous Structural Hurdles for Minority Law Students. 96 1. LSAT. 96 2. Law School Rankings. 99 B. Law Schools Continue to Uphold White Supremacy in the Classroom. 101 C. Minority Law School Graduates Continue to Face Structural... |
2022 |
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Brooke Zentmeyer |
TOWARDS A LORAXIAN PRAXIS: LESSONS FROM LEGAL HISTORY, LAKE ERIE, AND THE LORAX |
83 Ohio State Law Journal Online 1 (2022) |
C1-3Table of Contents I. Introduction. 1 II. Backstory on Rights of Nature Theory. 4 A. The Standing Requirement. 4 B. Rights of Nature Theory in Scholarship. 5 C. Reactions to Rights of Nature Theory. 6 III. Rights of Nature Re-Imagined. 8 A. Individual Rights. 8 B. Towards Collective Rights. 10 C. I am the river, and the river is me.. 10 IV.... |
2022 |
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Medha D. Makhlouf |
TOWARDS RACIAL JUSTICE: THE ROLE OF MEDICAL-LEGAL PARTNERSHIPS |
50 Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 117 (Spring, 2022) |
Keywords: Medical-Legal Partnership, Health Equity, Structural Determinants of Health, Racism, Poverty Abstract: Medical-legal partnerships (MLPs) integrate knowledge and practices from law and health care in pursuit of health equity. However, the MLP movement has not reached its full potential to address racial health inequities, in part because... |
2022 |
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Margaret Bushko |
TOXIC: A FEMINIST LEGAL THEORY APPROACH TO GUARDIANSHIP LAW REFORM |
81 Maryland Law Review Online 141 (2022) |
Anything that happened to me had to be approved by my dad .. The control he had over someone as powerful as me as he loved the control to hurt his own daughter, 100,000% .. I'm not happy. I can't sleep. I'm so angry. It's insane and I'm depressed. I cry every day. And the reason I'm telling you this is because I don't [know] how the state of... |
2022 |
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Sandra L. Rierson |
TRACING THE ROOTS OF THE THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT |
91 UMKC Law Review 57 (Fall, 2022) |
The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice. The quotation above belongs to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who delivered the line several times, including during a speech given in Montgomery, Alabama, at the completion of a protest march that began in Selma. That march came to define the Civil Rights Movement, as Black... |
2022 |
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