| Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year | Key Terms in Title or Summary |
| Elizabeth E. Joh |
NARRATING PAIN: THE PROBLEM WITH VICTIM IMPACT STATEMENTS |
10 Southern California Interdisciplinary Law Journal 17 (Fall 2000) |
[Not being allowed to make a victim impact statement] was the most crushing feeling in the world. It was feeling like a secondhand citizen, like a piece of evidence. -- Roberta Roper, mother of a murder victim Q: Could you tell the Court, Mrs. Johnson, how the loss of Daralyn Johnson has affected you personally? A: I would say probably... |
2000 |
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| Leland Ware |
PEOPLE OF COLOR IN THE ACADEMY: PATTERNS OF DISCRIMINATION IN FACULTY HIRING AND RETENTION |
20 Boston College Third World Law Journal 55 (Winter, 2000) |
On March 25-28, 1999, a group of more than one hundred minority law professors met at John Marshall Law School in Chicago, Illinois. Regional conferences of this sort have been held annually since 1990, but the Chicago event was the first time that the various conferences gathered at a single meeting. The First National Meeting of the Regional... |
2000 |
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| Pedro A. Malavet |
PUERTO RICO:CULTURAL NATION, AMERICAN COLONY |
6 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 1 (Fall 2000) |
INTRODUCTION. 2 I. Historical Development of the Legal Relationship between Puerto Rico and the Estados Unidos de Norteamérica (U.S.A.). 11 A. Historical Antecedents: The First Colony. 12 B. The Second Colony: Development of the United States-Puerto Rico Legal Regime. 21 1. Booty of the Spanish-American War. 21 2. Legal Consequences of the New... |
2000 |
|
| Laurie Rose Kepros |
QUEER THEORY: WEED OR SEED IN THE GARDEN OF LEGAL THEORY? |
9 Law and Sexuality: A Review of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Legal Issues 279 (1999-2000) |
I. Introduction: We're Here, We're Queer . . . Now What?. 279 II. What Is Queer Theory?. 280 A. On the Q.T.: A Definition?. 280 B. Hystory. 284 C. No Mo' Po-Mo Homo! Queer Theory & Identity Politics. 289 III. Queer Theory as a Legal Theory. 293 A. Strike a Pose: Strategies for Queer Legal Theory. 293 B. Queer Theory in the Legal Academy: If Paris... |
2000 |
|
| George A. Martínez |
RACE AND IMMIGRATION LAW: A PARADIGM SHIFT? |
2000 University of Illinois Law Review 517 (2000) |
For many years, controversies impacting many areas of legal scholarship have left the field of immigration law virtually untouched. Thus, although other areas of law have felt the critique advanced by critical scholars, immigration law has proceeded as a virtually self-contained unit. In doing so, immigration law has developed a paradigm for legal... |
2000 |
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| Reginald Leamon Robinson |
RACE CONSCIOUSNESS: CAN THICK, LEGAL CONTEXTUAL ANALYSIS ASSIST POOR, LOW-STATUS WORKERS OVERCOME DISCRIMINATORY HURDLES IN THE FAST FOOD INDUSTRY? A REPLY TO REGINA AUSTIN |
34 John Marshall Law Review 245 (Fall 2000) |
Racists are people who are afraid. [T]he general effect of the dominance-subjection relation is to destroy both parties, each by the other, and each in a specific manner. Though the corrosive suffering of the victim is wholly incommensurate with and overshadows the psychic deformation of the victimizer, one nevertheless does not transform oneself... |
2000 |
|
| Kevin R. Johnson |
RACE MATTERS: IMMIGRATION LAW AND POLICY SCHOLARSHIP, LAW IN THE IVORY TOWER, AND THE LEGAL INDIFFERENCE OF THE RACE CRITIQUE |
2000 University of Illinois Law Review 525 (2000) |
After the elimination of the discriminatory national origins quota system in 1965, the United States experienced a dramatic change in the demographics of immigration. Many more immigrants of color from developing nations have come to this country since the revolutionary reform. Over the decades following the elimination of the quota system, public... |
2000 |
|
| Francisco Valdes |
RACE, ETHNICITY, AND HISPANISMO IN A TRIANGULAR PERSPECTIVE: THE "ESSENTIAL LATINA/O" AND LATCRIT THEORY |
48 UCLA Law Review 305 (December, 2000) |
The central theme of this Article is the questionable character and consequences of Hispanismo, a racial and ethnic ideology that prevails among Latina/o communities worldwide and that is promoted directly by Spain despite its problematic nature. Hispanismo is problematic for at least two reasons: first, because it perpetuates colonial-era... |
2000 |
|
| Joan Fitzpatrick |
RACE, IMMIGRATION, AND LEGAL SCHOLARSHIP: A RESPONSE TO KEVIN JOHNSON |
2000 University of Illinois Law Review 603 (2000) |
The harshest measures of contemporary American immigration law disproportionately affect persons of color. At the same time, persons of color have become the primary subjects of migration to the United States and are thus the main beneficiaries of the substantial benefits the U.S. immigration system offers. The extent to which racism, conscious or... |
2000 |
|
| Sherrilyn A. Ifill |
RACIAL DIVERSITY ON THE BENCH: BEYOND ROLE MODELS AND PUBLIC CONFIDENCE |
57 Washington and Lee Law Review 405 (Spring, 2000) |
The lack of racial diversity on our nation's courts threatens both the quality and legitimacy of judicial decision-making. Traditional arguments emphasizing the role model value of black judges and the need for black judges to help promote public confidence in the justice system have turned our attention away from the most important... |
2000 |
|
| Linda R. Crane |
REFLECTIONS FROM THE CHAIR--THE ROAD TAKEN: HONORING THE DECADE OF SCHOLARSHIP BY LAW PROFESSORS OF COLOR IN U.S. LAW SCHOOLS AND THE PEOPLE OF COLOR MOVEMENT (1989-1999) |
20 Boston College Third World Law Journal 13 (Winter, 2000) |
The first national meeting of the six regional People of Color (POC) Legal Scholarship Conferences was the result of a planning process that began in March, 1997, during the eighth annual meeting of the Midwestern People of Color Legal Scholarship Conference (Midwestern Region) at The John Marshall Law School in Chicago, Illinois. The Midwestern... |
2000 |
|
| Hope Lewis |
REFLECTIONS ON 'BLACKCRIT THEORY': HUMAN RIGHTS |
45 Villanova Law Review 1075 (2000) |
The Colorline Belts the World. -- W.E.B. Du Bois[T]he left-liberal approach to globalization has yet to generate an adequate account of the connections between racial power and political economy in the New World Order. -- Kimberlé Crenshaw, Neil Gotanda, Gary Peller, Kendall Thomas AS the United Nations World Conference Against Racism... |
2000 |
|
| James Thuo Gathii |
REJOINDER: TWAILING INTERNATIONAL LAW |
98 Michigan Law Review 2066 (May, 2000) |
Brad Roth's response to my Review of his book seeks to privilege his approach to international law as the most defensible. His response does not engage one of the central claims of my Review--that present within international legal scholarship and praxis is a simultaneous and dialectical coexistence of the dominant conservative/liberal approach... |
2000 |
|
| Adrien Katherine Wing |
RENO v. AMERICAN-ARAB ANTI-DISCRIMINATION COMMITTEE: A CRITICAL RACE PERSPECTIVE |
31 Columbia Human Rights Law Review 561 (Summer, 2000) |
On January 26, 1987, life changed forever for Michel Shehadeh, a Palestinian who had immigrated to the United States in 1975. [He] and his 3-year old son, Ibrahim, were sleeping at home in Long Beach, Calif., when Shehadeh heard a loud knock. He opened the front door to a man and woman in grey suits. Shehadeh had just applied for naturalization and... |
2000 |
|
| Chris K. Iijima |
SEPARATING SUPPORT FROM BETRAYAL: EXAMINING THE INTERSECTIONS OF RACIALIZED LEGAL PEDAGOGY, ACADEMIC SUPPORT, AND SUBORDINATION |
33 Indiana Law Review 737 (2000) |
If we have learned anything at all, it has to be that power and politics are not separate or different from teaching. They are at the heart of it. When I was a beginning instructor in the New York University School of Law's Lawyering Program, its renowned Director, Professor Anthony Amsterdam, periodically gave teaching workshops to the entire... |
2000 |
|
| William C. Kidder |
SITUATING ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICANS IN THE LAW SCHOOL AFFIRMATIVE ACTION DEBATE: EMPIRICAL FACTS ABOUT THERNSTROM'S RHETORICAL ACTS |
7 Asian Law Journal 29 (December, 2000) |
I. L2-3,T3Introduction 30 II. L2-3,T3APAs and the Political Discourse on Affirmative Action 33 A. Historical Background. 33 B. Treatment of APAs by the Political Right and Left. 34 III. L2-3,T3Racial Mascotting: The Real and Imagined Impact of Prop. 209 and SP-1 at University of California Law Schools 36 A. A Review of the Aggregate Data. 38 B.... |
2000 |
|
| Devon W. Carbado |
STRAIGHT OUT OF THE CLOSET |
15 Berkeley Women's Law Journal 76 (2000) |
Prologue: Privileged Perpetrators. 77 I. Introduction. 79 II. Male Feminist or Oxymoron?. 84 A. Men are Not Where Women Are: A Starting Point for Male Feminism. 85 B. Gender Identity/Feminist Ideology. 87 III. Black Men and Black Feminism. 88 A. Authenticity and Dominance. 88 B. Identity Authenticity vs. Politics. 90 C. Summary. 92 IV. Rethinking... |
2000 |
|
| Binny Miller |
TELLING STORIES ABOUT CASES AND CLIENTS: THE ETHICS OF NARRATIVE |
14 Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics 1 (Fall, 2000) |
In recent years, narrative has achieved great prominence in legal scholarship and in much other academic work, although the concept is not new. The legal realists always have emphasized the importance of stories; as long ago as 1941, Karl Llewellyn published case studies of the Cheyenne and their dispute settlement practices. In step with the... |
2000 |
|
| David I. Levine |
THE CHINESE AMERICAN CHALLENGE TO COURT-MANDATED QUOTAS IN SAN FRANCISCO'S PUBLIC SCHOOLS: NOTES FROM A (PARTISAN) PARTICIPANT-OBSERVER |
16 Harvard BlackLetter Law Journal 39 (Spring, 2000) |
Since 1994, I have been involved in a high-profile lawsuit, Ho v. San Francisco Unified School District. This suit challenges the constitutionality of a 1983 consent decree mandating quotas on the assignment of children to all public schools in San Francisco on the basis of their race or ethnicity. As one of the first suits brought by Asian... |
2000 |
|
| Ronald J. Krotoszynski, Jr. |
THE DISSENT OF THE GOVERNED: A MEDITATION ON LAW, RELIGION, AND LOYALTY. BY STEPHEN L. CARTER. CAMBRIDGE: HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS. 1998. PP. XI, 167. CLOTH, $20.50; PAPER, $12.95. |
98 Michigan Law Review 1613 (May, 2000) |
Those who begin coercive elimination of dissent soon find themselves exterminating dissenters. Compulsory unification of opinion achieves only the unanimity of the graveyard. Since the Warren Court's expansive construction of the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment, there has been no shortage of legal scholarship aimed at justifying the... |
2000 |
|
| Melissa Cole |
THE MITIGATION EXPECTATION AND THE SUTTON COURT'S CLOSETING OF DISABILITIES |
43 Howard Law Journal 499 (Spring 2000) |
Fox. Socks. Box. Knox. Knox in box. Fox in socks. Not long ago, I saw the children's book Fox in Socks on display in a bookstore and, feeling a soft sense of nostalgia, picked it up and began reading. I was amazed at how quickly the first few pages came back to me, along with an overwhelming sense of the frustration and anger I felt as a... |
2000 |
|
| Jonathan A. Beyer |
THE SECOND LINE: RECONSTRUCTING THE JAZZ METAPHOR IN CRITICAL RACE THEORY |
88 Georgetown Law Journal 537 (March, 2000) |
Racism in the law died on a chilly, sun-soaked morning in February. It was not an easy passing. The fallen angel of the legal family lingered on for generations, an unwelcome vestige of a time care forgot. Its opponents in the legal system struggled for its demise, but it survived by masking itself in subtle, discreet, and opaque forms. When death... |
2000 |
|
| Reginald Leamon Robinson |
THE SHIFTING RACE-CONSCIOUSNESS MATRIX AND THE MULTIRACIAL CATEGORY MOVEMENT: A CRITICAL REPLY TO PROFESSOR HERNANDEZ |
20 Boston College Third World Law Journal 231 (Spring, 2000) |
In this article, the author posits that race as an idea begins with consciousness that reinforces that race is real and immutable. The Multiracial Category Movement can shift our race consciousness away from traditional ways of thinking, talking, and using race. The Movement moves us beyond binary race thinking, and this new thinking shifts the... |
2000 |
|
| Robert C. Ellickson |
TRENDS IN LEGAL SCHOLARSHIP: A STATISTICAL STUDY |
29 Journal of Legal Studies 517 (January, 2000) |
This study tracks the appeal of various intellectual approaches to legal scholars during the period 1982-96. Fifteen different approaches were paired with one or more proxies consisting of a word or phrase. Searches were conducted in a Westlaw database that contains full texts of law review documents to determine trends in the appearance of these... |
2000 |
|
| W. Burlette Carter |
TRUE REPARATIONS |
68 George Washington Law Review 1021 (July/September, 2000) |
Not surprisingly, Professor Anthony Cook delivers a provocative piece, one that follows the tradition of his other scholarship illuminating the world of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. He also joins a number of notable African American commentators, including U.S. Representative John Conyers and Randall Robinson, President of TransAfrica, in advocating... |
2000 |
|
| Makau Mutua |
WHAT IS TWAIL? |
94 American Society of International Law Proceedings 31 (April, 2000) |
The regime of international law is illegitimate. It is a predatory system that legitimizes, reproduces and sustains the plunder and subordination of the Third World by the West. Neither universality nor its promise of global order and stability make international law a just, equitable, and legitimate code of global governance for the Third World.... |
2000 |
|
| Clark Freshman |
WHATEVER HAPPENED TO ANTI-SEMITISM? HOW SOCIAL SCIENCE THEORIES IDENTIFY DISCRIMINATION AND PROMOTE COALITIONS BETWEEN "DIFFERENT" MINORITIES |
85 Cornell Law Review 313 (January, 2000) |
Prologue. 315 I. Introduction. 319 A. Atomized and Generalized Discrimination. 320 B. The Litigant Payoff: The Lily White Organization and Intersectionality's Sibling. 326 C. The Societal Payoff: Coalition Effects, Empathy and Prevention. 329 D. Racism, Prejudice, and the Metaphors of Disease. 330 E. Overview and Roadmap. 332 II. Generalized... |
2000 |
|
| David Kennedy |
WHEN RENEWAL REPEATS: THINKING AGAINST THE BOX |
32 New York University Journal of International Law & Politics 335 (Winter 2000) |
I should start by thanking the board of editors for inviting me to contribute an essay to the journal's millennium issue. The editors seek new thinking and ask what international legal issues will consume your legal career and shape the parameters of international law in the new millennium? At forty-five it is flattering to be solicited as a... |
2000 |
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| Martha R. Mahoney |
WHITENESS AND REMEDY: UNDER-RULING CIVIL RIGHTS INWALKER V. CITY OF MESQUITE |
85 Cornell Law Review 1309 (July, 2000) |
Teenagers quote rules on how fictional characters survive horror movies: Never have sex. (Virgins always live.) . . . Never say, I'll be right back. Another rule predicts the fate of black characters in action films: The brother always dies first. Unsurprisingly, these movie rules reflect racist and sexist attitudes in American culture.... |
2000 |
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| Barbara Stark |
WOMEN AND GLOBALIZATION: THE FAILURE AND POSTMODERN POSSIBILITIES OF INTERNATIONAL LAW |
33 Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law 503 (May, 2000) |
This Article examines the role of international law, particularly human rights law, as it relates to the process of globalization and its effects on women. Initially, the Article sets the stage by describing the course of globalization and the dramatic impact it has had on the world economy. The Author next examines the multiple and contradictory... |
2000 |
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| Devon W. Carbado ; Mitu Gulati |
WORKING IDENTITY |
85 Cornell Law Review 1259 (July, 2000) |
Introduction. 1260 I. Everyone Works Identity. 1263 A. The Concept. 1263 B. The Negotiation. 1263 II. Outsiders Working Identity. 1267 A. Stereotypes at Work. 1267 B. The Incentive System: The General Idea. 1270 C. The Incentive System in Institutional Context: Law Firms and Law Faculties. 1272 1. The Up-or-Out Structure: The Carrot and the... |
2000 |
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| 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 |