AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearKey Terms in Title or Summary
Yuvraj Joshi RACIAL TRANSITION 98 Washington University Law Review 1181 (2021) The United States is a nation in transition, struggling to surmount its racist past. This transitional imperative underpins American race jurisprudence, yet the transitional bases of decisions are rarely acknowledged and sometimes even denied. This Article uncovers two main ways that the Supreme Court has sought racial transition. While Civil... 2021  
Vinay Harpalani RACIAL TRIANGULATION, INTEREST-CONVERGENCE, AND THE DOUBLE-CONSCIOUSNESS OF ASIAN AMERICANS 37 Georgia State University Law Review 1361 (Summer, 2021) This Essay integrates Professor Claire Jean Kim's racial triangulation framework, Professor Derrick Bell's interest-convergence theory, and W.E.B. Du Bois's notion of double-consciousness, all to examine the racial positioning of Asian Americans and the dilemmas we face as a result. To do so, this Essay considers the history of Asian immigration to... 2021  
Jasmine E. Harris RECKONING WITH RACE AND DISABILITY 130 Yale Law Journal Forum 916 (June 30, 2021) abstract. Our national reckoning with race and inequality must include disability. Race and disability have a complicated but interconnected history. Yet discussions of our most salient sociopolitical issues such as police violence, prison abolition, healthcare, poverty, and education continue to treat race and disability as distinct, largely... 2021  
Erika George , Jena Martin , Tara Van Ho RECKONING: A DIALOGUE ABOUT RACISM, ANTIRACISTS, AND BUSINESS & HUMAN RIGHTS 30 Washington International Law Journal 171 (March, 2021) Abstract: Video of George Floyd's death sparked global demonstrations and prompted individuals, communities and institutions to grapple with their own roles in embedding and perpetuating racist structures. The raison d'être of Business and Human Rights (BHR) is to tackle structural corporate impediments to the universal realization of human rights.... 2021  
Phyllis Goldfarb , Randy Hertz , Michael Pinard REFLECTING ON OUR TURBULENT TIMES 28 Clinical Law Review 1 (Fall, 2021) For a long period, all of us have been facing multiple overlapping crises. In a variety of ways, the last eighteen months have brought disruption, pain, and chaos to the lives of our students, clients, colleagues, and families. The future feels precarious. Despite closures, lockdowns, and vaccines, we remain in the midst of a global pandemic. In a... 2021  
Stéphanie Hennette-Vauchez RELIGIOUS NEUTRALITY, LAÏCITÉ AND COLORBLINDNESS: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS 42 Cardozo Law Review 539 (May, 2021) C1-3Table of Contents L1-2Introduction . L3540 I. A Caveat to Comparability. 549 II. Modes of Reasoning. 552 A. Formalistic Legal Reasoning, Anti-Classification as Symmetry, and the Limited Reach of Anti-Discrimination Law. 552 B. Shielding Discrimination from Equality and Anti-Discrimination Law. 568 1. The Public/Private Divide as a Limit on... 2021  
Chantal Thomas RELOADING THE CANON: THOUGHTS ON CRITICAL LEGAL PEDAGOGY 92 University of Colorado Law Review 955 (Fall, 2021) On the first day of the first-year contracts class that I teach, I preview for the students both the general contours of the blackletter law that we will be learning throughout the course, and some of the perspectives that I will incorporate in developing our critical thinking and analysis of the law. My aim is to impress upon the students that... 2021  
Christina Payne-Tsoupros REMOVING POLICE FROM SCHOOLS USING STATE LAW HEIGHTENED SCRUTINY 17 Northwestern Journal of Law & Social Policy 1 (Fall, 2021) This Article argues that school police, often called school resource officers, interfere with the state law right to education and proposes using the constitutional right to education under state law as a mechanism to remove police from schools. Disparities in school discipline for Black and brown children are well-known. After discussing the legal... 2021  
David M. Forman REOCCURRING CULTURAL INSENSITIVITY: CONFRONTING THE ABDICATION OF CORE JUDICIAL FUNCTIONS 43 University of Hawaii Law Review 341 (Summer, 2021) ROAD MAP. 347 I. AGENCY INTERPRETATIONS OF THEIR OWN ADMINISTRATIVE REGULATIONS ARE NOT ENTITLED TO DEFERENCE UNDER PASH. 351 II. REVISITING THE PASH GUIDELINES: ELEMENTS OF HAWAI'I'S CUSTOM DOCTRINE AND OTHER BADLY NEEDED JUDICIAL GUIDANCE. 356 A. PASH footnote 43. 356 B. PASH footnotes 23 and 25. 357 C. PASH footnote 26. 359 D. PASH footnote... 2021  
Lynn D. Lu RESTORATIVE RELATIONSHIPS AND "RADICAL HELP": REIMAGINING WELFARE-TO-WORK BEYOND THE MARKET-FAMILY DIVIDE 50 University of Baltimore Law Review 287 (Spring, 2021) INTRODUCTION. 288 I. WORKFARE AS PUNISHMENT AND THE MARKET-FAMILY DIVIDE. 293 II. RESTORING THE SAFETY NET FOR SANCTIONS: RESTORATIVE JUSTICE AS AN ALTERNATIVE TO PUNITIVE WORKFARE. 303 A. Choosing Relationships Over Retribution. 303 B. The Long Shadow of Sanctions. 310 III. REVIVING RELATIONAL WORK: RADICAL HELP AS VOLUNTARY AFFIRMATIVE SUPPORT.... 2021  
Jonathan Andrew Perez RIOTING BY A DIFFERENT NAME: THE VOICE OF THE UNHEARD IN THE AGE OF GEORGE FLOYD, AND THE HISTORY OF THE LAWS, POLICIES, AND LEGISLATION OF SYSTEMIC RACISM 24 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 87 (Spring, 2021) I. Introduction. 88 II. Looting Economic Equity from Black America. 96 A. The Statistics of Black Overrepresentation in the Criminal Justice System. 96 B. How Overrepresentation in the Criminal Justice System Affects Black Communities. 97 C. COVID-19 Amplifies The Looting of Black America. 101 III. The Anxiety of a Counterfeit America: Protests and... 2021  
Emily A. Benfer , James Bhandary-Alexander , Yael Cannon , Medha D. Makhlouf , Tomar Pierson-Brown SETTING THE HEALTH JUSTICE AGENDA: ADDRESSING HEALTH INEQUITY & INJUSTICE IN THE POST-PANDEMIC CLINIC 28 Clinical Law Review 45 (Fall, 2021) The COVID-19 pandemic surfaced and deepened entrenched preexisting health injustice in the United States. Racialized, marginalized, poor, and hyper-exploited populations suffered disproportionately negative outcomes due to the pandemic. The structures that generate and sustain health inequity in the United States--including in access to justice,... 2021  
Noah C. Chauvin SHADOWBOXING WITH FREE SPEECH PRINCIPLES: AGAINST FREE SPEECH. BY ANTHONY LEAKER. LANHAM, M.D.: ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD PUBLISHERS. 2020. PP. 128. PAPERBACK. $19.95 73 South Carolina Law Review 175 (Autumn, 2021) I. Introduction. 175 II. The Book. 176 III. The Critique. 180 IV. Conclusion. 188 2021  
Trust Kupupika SHAPING OUR FREEDOM DREAMS: RECLAIMING INTERSECTIONALITY THROUGH BLACK FEMINIST LEGAL THEORY 107 Virginia Law Review Online 27 (January, 2021) Black feminist legal theory has offered the tool of intersectionality to modern feminist movements to help combat interlocking systems of oppression. Despite this tremendous offering, intersectionality has become wholly divorced from its Black feminist origins. This is significant because without a deep engagement with Black feminist legal theory,... 2021  
James Thuo Gathii STUDYING RACE IN INTERNATIONAL LAW SCHOLARSHIP USING A SOCIAL SCIENCE APPROACH 22 Chicago Journal of International Law 71 (Summer, 2021) This Essay takes up Abebe, Chilton, and Ginsburg's invitation to use a social science approach to establish or ascertain some facts about international law scholarship in the United States. The specific research question that this Essay seeks to answer is to what extent scholarship has addressed international law's historical and continuing... 2021  
Matthew B. Lawrence SUBORDINATION AND SEPARATION OF POWERS 131 Yale Law Journal 78 (October, 2021) abstract. This Article calls for the incorporation of antisubordination into separation-of-powers analysis. Scholars analyzing separation-of-powers tools-- laws and norms that divide power among government actors--consider a long list of values ranging from protecting liberty to promoting efficiency. Absent from this list are questions of equity:... 2021  
Omarr Rambert THE ABSENT BLACK FATHER: RACE, THE WELFARE-CHILD SUPPORT SYSTEM, AND THE CYCLICAL NATURE OF FATHERLESSNESS 68 UCLA Law Review 324 (May, 2021) The perception of Black fathers is that they are largely absent from their children's lives, and that such absence--and the ensuing experience of growing up fatherless--is a direct cause of social issues in Black communities. Through media representations and policymaking, the absent Black father narrative has taken shape over the past fifty years,... 2021  
Pedro A. Malavet THE ACCIDENTAL CRIT III: THE UNBEARABLE LIGHTNESS OF BEING . PEDRO? 22 Rutgers Race & the Law Review 247 (2021) C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction: Names, Titles and Academic Survival. 249 II. How did you get to your current position?. 255 III. Why did you stay?. 281 IV. Conclusion: Reveling in Law Geekness. 289 2021  
Nicci Arete THE BAR EXAM'S CONTRIBUTION TO SYSTEMIC INEQUALITIES IN ACCESS TO JUSTICE AROUND THE WORLD 30 Washington International Law Journal 324 (March, 2021) Abstract: Existing literature does not give adequate attention to if and how the bar exam impacts the legal profession's goals. Bar exam proponents say that the test separates competent candidates from incompetent ones, protecting the public from falling victim to inadequate legal services. But what constitutes a competent attorney? What are the... 2021  
Charles L. Barzun THE COMMON LAW AND CRITICAL THEORY 92 University of Colorado Law Review 1221 (Fall, 2021) Before I got out of bed this morning, I had an exchange on Facebook Messenger, which began this way: Aunt Lucy: Question for you. Do you actually think there is no Marxist attempt, ongoing for years, to undermine and destroy America? Now most clearly involving China, but a la Gramsci, also in virtual total control of the media, universities, and... 2021  
Richard Ariel THE FIRST AMENDMENT IMPLICATIONS OF PRESIDENT TRUMP'S EXECUTIVE ORDER ON DIVERSITY TRAINING 56-SUM Procurement Lawyer 11 (Summer, 2021) Following the deaths of Breonna Taylor and George Floyd in March and May 2020, respectively, mass protests against police brutality and systemic racism erupted across the United States. Following this period of civil unrest, a multitude of companies, many of which were federal contractors, put a focus on diversity and inclusiveness training,... 2021  
Vincent M. Southerland THE INTERSECTION OF RACE AND ALGORITHMIC TOOLS IN THE CRIMINAL LEGAL SYSTEM 80 Maryland Law Review 487 (2021) A growing portion of the American public--including policymakers, advocates, and institutional stakeholders--have accepted the fact that racism endemic to the United States infects every stage of the criminal legal system. Acceptance of this fact has resulted in efforts to address and remedy pervasive and readily observable systemic bias. Chief... 2021  
Dr. Angélica Guevara THE NEED TO REIMAGINE DISABILITY RIGHTS LAW BECAUSE THE MEDICAL MODEL OF DISABILITY FAILS US ALL 2021 Wisconsin Law Review 269 (2021) All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. --Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 1 Disability is not a personal problem, but rather a social reaction to natural human variation and susceptibility to life circumstances. Current disability antidiscrimination law has been ineffective in overcoming this misleading... 2021  
Audra L. Savage THE RELIGION OF RACE: THE SUPREME COURT AS PRIESTS OF RACIAL POLITICS 2021 Utah Law Review 569 (2021) The tumultuous summer of 2020 opened the eyes of many Americans, leading to a general consensus on one issue--racism still exists. This Article offers a new descriptive account of America's history that can contextualize the zeitgeist of racial politics. It argues that the Founding Fathers created a national civil religion based on racism when they... 2021  
Daniel Abebe , Adam Chilton , Tom Ginsburg THE SOCIAL SCIENCE APPROACH TO INTERNATIONAL LAW 22 Chicago Journal of International Law 1 (Summer, 2021) For over a hundred years, scholars have argued that international law should be studied using a scientific approach. Throughout the twentieth century, however, the most prominent methods used to study international law primarily consisted of different theoretical and analytical claims about how international law should be developed, interpreted,... 2021  
Courtney Trombly THE SPACE RACE: FUTILE FIGHTING FOR FINITE FINDINGS 31 Albany Law Journal of Science and Technology 118 (2021) The advent of space exploration has brought a myriad of exciting new discoveries, among which are materials and resources. Such resources include sunlight and elements contained in the atmosphere, as well as materials included within the regolith (unconsolidated material that overlies solid rock on planetary bodies). The materials--which include... 2021  
Hiram E. Puig-Lugo THE WISCONSIN LAW REVIEW: ONE HUNDRED YEARS OF CREATIVITY, CONTINUITY, AND CHANGE 2021 Wisconsin Law Review 253 (2021) This issue explores the intellectual history and traditions of the University of Wisconsin Law School as the Wisconsin Law Review celebrates its 100th anniversary. It represents yet another example of the valuable contributions the Law Review has made to academic discourse and professional development throughout its history. I am extremely grateful... 2021  
Benjamin Justice , Tracey L. Meares THE WOLF WE FEED: DEMOCRACY, CASTE, AND LEGITIMACY 119 Michigan Law Review Online 95 (May, 2021) Legal authority rests on enactment; its pure type is best represented by bureaucracy. The basic idea is that laws can be enacted and changed at pleasure by formally correct procedure. The governing body is either elected or appointed and constitutes as a whole and in all its sections rational organizations .. Obedience is not owed to anybody... 2021  
Maleah Riley-Brown, Samia Osman, Justice C. Shannon , Yemaya Hanna, Brandie Burris, Tony Sanchez, Joshua Cottle THIS IS MINNESOTA: AN ANALYSIS OF DISPARITIES IN BLACK STUDENT ENROLLMENT AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA LAW SCHOOL AND THE EFFECTS OF SYSTEMIC BARRIERS TO BLACK REPRESENTATION IN THE LAW 105 Minnesota Law Review Headnotes 251 (Spring, 2021) Lawyers often occupy powerful positions in the highest levels of our government and economy. Whether drafting legislation, prosecuting or defending crimes, representing indigent clients in housing court, or finalizing corporate mergers, attorneys influence and operate within one of the most critical professions in the United States. Lawyers can... 2021  
Maleah Riley-Brown, Samia Osman, Justice C. Shannon , Yemaya Hanna, Brandie Burris, Tony Sanchez, Joshua Cottle THIS IS MINNESOTA: AN ANALYSIS OF DISPARITIES IN BLACK STUDENT ENROLLMENT AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA LAW SCHOOL AND THE EFFECTS OF SYSTEMIC BARRIERS TO BLACK REPRESENTATION IN THE LAW 47 Mitchell Hamline Law Review 26 (November, 2021) Lawyers often occupy powerful positions in the highest levels of our government and economy. Whether drafting legislation, prosecuting, or defending crimes, representing indigent clients in housing court, or finalizing corporate mergers, attorneys influence and operate within one of the most critical professions in the United States. Lawyers can... 2021  
Kyle C. Velte TOWARD A TOUCHSTONE THEORY OF ANTI-RACISM: SEX DISCRIMINATION LAW MEETS #LIVINGWHILEBLACK 33 Yale Journal of Law & Feminism 119 (2021) Abstract: White supremacy and anti-Black racism continue their pervasive and destructive paths in contemporary American society. From the murder of George Floyd to the daily exclusions of Black bodies from white spaces, the nation's failure to right the wrongs of chattel slavery and racism continues to be highlighted in stark relief. This article... 2021  
James Thuo Gathii TWENTY-SECOND ANNUAL GROTIUS LECTURE: THE PROMISE OF INTERNATIONAL LAW: A THIRD WORLD VIEW 36 American University International Law Review 377 (2021) James Thuo Gathii of the Loyola University Chicago School of Law, and discussant Fleur Johns of the University of New South Wales School of Law, provided the Twenty-Second Annual Grotius Lecture on Thursday, June 25, 2020, at 5:00 p.m. (Including a TWAIL Bibliography 1996-2019 as an Appendix) I. INTRODUCTION. 378 II. PART ONE: INTERNATIONAL LAW'S... 2021  
John A. Powell , Eloy Toppin, Jr. UPROOTING AUTHORITARIANISM: DECONSTRUCTING THE STORIES BEHIND NARROW IDENTITIES AND BUILDING A SOCIETY OF BELONGING 11 Columbia Journal of Race and Law 1 (January, 2021) Authoritarianism is on the rise globally, threatening democratic society and ushering in an era of extreme division. Most analyses and proposals for challenging authoritarianism leave intact the underlying foundations that give rise to this social phenomenon because they rely on a decontextualized intergroup dynamic theory. This Article argues that... 2021  
Vanita Saleema Snow VEILING AND INVERTED MASKING 36 Berkeley Journal of Gender, Law & Justice 115 (2021) Introduction. 115 I. The Identity Dichotomy. 120 A. Binary Gender Identity. 122 B. Black and African-American Women: Race Intersects with Gender. 128 C. Muslim Women: Religious Identity Intersects with Gender. 130 D. African-American Muslim Women: The Challenges of Identity Convergence. 134 II. Masking Identity. 135 A. Masking to Assimilate. 137 B.... 2021  
Meera E. Deo WHY BIPOC FAILS 107 Virginia Law Review Online 115 (June, 2021) Racial tensions have been endemic to the U.S. since its founding. In 2020, this racial conflict bubbled over into the streets as those supporting Black Lives Matter and opposing a long history of racist police violence congregated to demand justice. Last year and still now, the global pandemic has placed additional stress on communities of color,... 2021  
Shannon N. Morgan WORKING TWICE AS HARD FOR LESS THAN HALF AS MUCH: A SOCIOLEGAL CRITIQUE OF THE GENDERED JUSTIFICATIONS PERPETUATING UNEQUAL PAY IN SPORTS 45 Columbia Journal of Law & the Arts 121 (Fall, 2021) The difference is the total amount of revenue. It's not a gender issue. It's a revenue issue. This was Mark Cuban's response when called out about the pay gap between men's and women's professional basketball players by Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) player Skylar Diggins-Smith. So often when the question, Why do male athletes... 2021  
Walter I. Gonçalves, Jr. BANISHED AND OVERCRIMINALIZED: CRITICAL RACE PERSPECTIVES OF ILLEGAL ENTRY AND DRUG COURIER PROSECUTIONS 10 Columbia Journal of Race and Law 1 (2020) Scholarship on illegal entry and drug courier prosecutions fails to apply Critical Race Theory (CRT). Disregard of how these prosecutions contribute to racial stratification in and outside American prisons or how drug couriers experience intersectionality ignores sociological and cultural processes. Criminal justice professionals have racialized... 2020 Yes
Stewart Chang BRIDGING DIVIDES IN DIVISIVE TIMES: REVISITING THE MASSIE-FORTESCUE AFFAIR 42 University of Hawaii Law Review 4 (Spring, 2020) This Article revisits the infamous Massie-Fortescue rape and murder cases that occurred in Hawai'i during the 1930s, in order to challenge the methods by which race scholars have previously analyzed the case by relying on gender hierarchies. Thalia Massie, a white woman, accused five Hawaiians of gang raping her, even though they were of various... 2020 Yes
Heather L. Pickerell CRITICAL RACE THEORY & POWER: THE CASE FOR PROGRESSIVE PROSECUTION 36 Harvard Blackletter Law Journal 73 (Spring, 2020) This note makes the case for why scholars and members of the polity should identify and support genuinely progressive prosecutors. A key Critical Race Theory tenant--that legislation and favorable judicial decisions are often inadequate avenues to subvert power structures--holds true for criminal justice. Consequently, this note urges advocates to... 2020 Yes
T. Anansi Wilson FURTIVE BLACKNESS: ON BLACKNESS AND BEING 48 Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly 141 (Fall, 2020) Furtive Blackness: On Blackness and Being (Furtive Blackness) and The Strict Scrutiny of Black and BlaQueer Life (Strict Scrutiny) take a fresh approach to both criminal law and constitutional law; particularly as they apply to African descended peoples in the United States. This is an intervention as to the description of the terms of... 2020 Yes
Robert K. Yass, J.D., LL.M. HOMEOWNER'S INSURANCE AND CREDIT SCORE: A CRITICAL RACE THEORY PERSPECTIVE 27 Connecticut Insurance Law Journal 286 (Fall, 2020) L1-2TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION. 286 I. THE SIGNIFICANCE OF HOUSING. 290 II. RELEVANT HISTORY AND CASE LAW. 292 III. CURRENT FHA RULEMAKING AND RELATED LITIGATION. 298 IV. CREDIT SCORE AND ITS IMPACT OF AVAILABILITY AND AFFORDABILITY. 302 V. CRITICAL RACE THEORY. 307 VI. THE POSSIBLE ROLE DATA ON RACE MAY PLAY IN THIS DEBATE AND OTHER... 2020 Yes
Ann C. McGinley , Frank Rudy Cooper INTERSECTIONAL COHORTS, DIS/ABILITY, AND CLASS ACTIONS 47 Fordham Urban Law Journal 293 (February, 2020) This Article occupies the junction of dis/abilities studies and critical race theory. It joins the growing commentary analyzing the groundbreaking lawsuit by Compton, California students and teachers against the Compton school district brought under federal disability law and seeking class certification and injunctive relief in the form of teacher... 2020 Yes
George A. Martínez LAW, RACE, AND THE EPISTEMOLOGY OF IGNORANCE 17 Hastings Race and Poverty Law Journal 507 (Summer, 2020) Philosophers and other theorists have developed the field of epistemology which is the study of human knowledge. Critical race theorists have begun to explore how epistemological theory and insights may illuminate the study of race, including the analysis of race and the law. Such use of epistemology is appropriate because theoretical work on... 2020 Yes
Julia Hernandez LAWYERING CLOSE TO HOME 27 Clinical Law Review 131 (Fall, 2020) This essay incorporates ethnographic insights and narrative technique, rooted in part in Critical Race Theory and critical geography studies, to ground conversations about transformative pedagogy and praxis in the lived experiences of our students. Many of our students fight for radical social change and enter law school hoping to gain new tools... 2020 Yes
Valencia Richardson, Editor-in-Chief, Volume 12 LETTER FROM THE EDITOR 12 Georgetown Journal of Law & Modern Critical Race Perspectives 81 (Fall, 2020) Dear Reader, Our staff envisioned Volume 12.2 of the Georgetown Journal of Law and Modern Critical Race Perspectives to follow a successful Symposium, but forces beyond our control changed our plans. Approximately two months before our planned Symposium date, a global pandemic broke out, cancelling plans across the world--including all in-person... 2020 Yes
Ciarra J. Minacci-Morey PERSONAL NARRATIVE AS A TOOL OF LEGAL ANALYSIS TO EVALUATE AND IMPROVE ACCESS TO ABORTION SERVICES FOR INDIGENOUS WOMEN IN CANADA 35 Connecticut Journal of International Law 272 (Fall, 2020) INTRODUCTION. 275 I. Overview and Summary of Abortion Law in Canada after 1988. 275 II. Availability and Access to Abortion Services in Canada. 278 A. Systematic and Structural Barriers. 278 B. Socioeconomic Class and Location Barriers. 281 III. Application of Personal Narrative, a Tool of Critical Race Theory, to Evaluate and Improve Access to... 2020 Yes
Kara W. Swanson RACE AND SELECTIVE LEGAL MEMORY: REFLECTIONS ON INVENTION OF A SLAVE 120 Columbia Law Review 1077 (May, 2020) In 1858, the United States Attorney General issued an opinion, Invention of a Slave, declaring inventions by African Americans, enslaved and free, unpatentable. Within a few years, legal changes that abolished the law of slavery rendered the opinion obsolete, and it became forgotten, dropped from legal memory. Combining history and Critical Race... 2020 Yes
Bridget J. Crawford, Kathryn M. Stanchi, Linda L. Berger , Gabrielle Appleby, Susan Frelich Appleton, Ross Astoria, Sharon Cowan, Rosalind Dixon, J. Troy Lavers, Andrea L. McArdle, Elisabeth McDonald, Teri A. McMurtry-Chubb, Vanessa E. Munro, Pamela A. Wi TEACHING WITH FEMINIST JUDGMENTS: A GLOBAL CONVERSATION 38 Law & Inequality: A Journal of Theory and Practice 1 (Winter, 2020) This conversational-style essay is an exchange among fourteen professors-- representing thirteen universities across five countries--with experience teaching with feminist judgments. Feminist judgments are shadow court decisions rewritten from a feminist perspective, using only the precedent in effect and the facts known at the time of the... 2020 Yes
Susan R. Jones THE CASE FOR LEADERSHIP COACHING IN LAW SCHOOLS: A NEW WAY TO SUPPORT PROFESSIONAL IDENTITY FORMATION 48 Hofstra Law Review 659 (Spring, 2020) Leadership coaching, a personalized and confidential form of professional and personal development, is a creative partnership between a coach and a client designed to empower the client toward greater self-reflection, clarity of purpose, meaningful change, accountability, and effective engagement in the world. At its core, leadership is about... 2020 Yes
L. Danielle Tully THE CULTURAL (RE)TURN: THE CASE FOR TEACHING CULTURALLY RESPONSIVE LAWYERING 16 Stanford Journal of Civil Rights & Civil Liberties 201 (June, 2020) Recent changes to the American Bar Association's (ABA) accreditation standards require law schools to adopt learning outcomes that demonstrate competencies for legal practice and to measure progress toward this goal. Absent from the new requirements, however, is any mention of culture. Instead, cultural competence is included as an optional... 2020 Yes
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