| Author | Title | Citation | Document Type | Status | Summary | Year |
| Fareed Nassor Hayat |
ABOLISH GANG STATUTES WITH THE POWER OF THE THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT: REPARATIONS FOR THE PEOPLE |
70 UCLA Law Review 1120 (November, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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The abolitionist movement seeks to fundamentally dismantle the prison industrial complex. Modern abolitionists recognize that mass incarceration of Black and Brown people is twenty-first century slavery. True abolition, they note, cannot be realized by merely tinkering with the carceral state. Instead, the complete elimination of modern-day badges... |
2023 |
| Dorothy Couchman |
AFFIRMING AND SUPPORTING BLACK WOMEN'S LACTATION AGENCY AS REDRESS |
60 San Diego Law Review 587 (August-September, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 588 II. Why Lactation as Redress?. 591 III. The Atrocity. 592 A. Lactation Abuse in Enslavement. 593 B. Lactation Denial During Jim Crow. 593 IV. The Harms of Lactation Agency Denial. 597 V. Atonement and Redress. 598 VI. Areas for Lactation Redress. 600 A. Lactation Agency in Perinatal Care. 600 B. Infant... |
2023 |
| Inga N. Laurent |
AN ABSENCE OF ACCOUNTABILITY |
54 Seton Hall Law Review 137 (2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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Transitional justice (TJ) is emerging as the prevailing method for addressing large-scale societal conflicts--be they post-war or a response to entrenched structural injustice. While TJ has more commonly been associated with countries facing periods of rupture, typically in the form of a civil war, military dictatorship, or genocide, TJ may prove... |
2023 |
| William Froehlich, Sara del Nido Budish, Jan Martinez, Cary McClelland, Neil McGaraghan, Carl Smallwood |
AN INTRODUCTION TO THE COLLABORATIVE SYMPOSIUM SERIES "RETHINKING SYSTEMS DESIGN FOR RACIAL JUSTICE & EQUITY" |
38 Ohio State Journal on Dispute Resolution 1 (2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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In late 2020, the Divided Community Project (DCP), housed at The Ohio State University Michael E. Moritz College of Law's Program on Dispute Resolution, envisioned hosting a collaborative event series designed to draw together and elevate dispute systems design lessons for enhancing racial equity from US-based truth, reconciliation, action, and... |
2023 |
| Neena Albarus |
AN OVERVIEW OF THE ONGOING LEGACIES OF COLONIALISM IN CONTEMPORARY LEGAL SYSTEMS IN THE BLACK DIASPORA |
23 Berkeley Journal of African-American Law & Policy 15 (2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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This perspective paper explores the ongoing legacies of colonialism in contemporary legal systems and policies in the Black Diaspora. Drawing on examples from Africa, the Caribbean, Latin America and the United States, this paper argues that colonial legal systems and policies continue to shape the legal and political landscape of these regions,... |
2023 |
| California Task Force |
APPENDIX |
60 San Diego Law Review 613 (August-September, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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In 1863, Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation, and, in 1865, the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution commanded that [n]either slavery nor involuntary servitude . shall exist within the United States. In supporting the passage of the 13th Amendment, its co-author Senator Lyman Trumbull of Illinois said that it is perhaps... |
2023 |
| Samantha Sar Hing |
APPLYING A REPARATIONS FRAMEWORK TO ADVOCATE FOR MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES FOR CAMBODIAN REFUGEES, 40 YEARS LATER |
24 Rutgers Race & the Law Review 203 (2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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My parents suffered PTSD from the Khmer Rouge - to cope, I ran the streets and as a result I am now serving a life sentence. While many scholars have talked generally about why the United States deports refugees, there has been a focus by academics and students into the deportation of Cambodian-American refugees. I utilize a reparations-based... |
2023 |
| |
Baker v. Coates |
Slip Copy (7/26/2023) |
Cases |
|
TO THE HONORABLE J. PAUL OETKEN, United States District Judge: Pro se Plaintiff Ralph W. Baker, Jr. (Mr. Baker) is the author and copyright owner of Shock Exchange: How Inner-City Kids From Brooklyn Predicted the Great Recession and the Pain Ahead (Shock Exchange), an autobiographical book about... |
2023 |
| Roy L. Brooks |
BLACK BOARDING ACADEMIES AS A PRUDENTIAL REPARATION: FINIS ORIGINE PENDET |
13 Columbia Journal of Race and Law 790 (May, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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The past is never dead. It's not even past. - William Falkner, Requiem for a Nun 85 (1951) With billions of dollars pledged and trillions of dollars demanded to redress slavery and Jim Crow (Black Reparations) the question of how best to use these funds has moved into the forefront of the ongoing campaign for racial justice in our post-civil... |
2023 |
| Kyle Ridgeway |
BROKEN PROMISES: THE CONTINUING DECLINE OF BLACK FARM OWNERS AND OPERATORS IN AMERICA |
27 U.C. Davis Social Justice Law Review 50 (Winter, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 51 I. The Growth of Black Farm Ownership and the Rotten Roots of Decline. 53 II. Pigford and the Jim USDA Crow. 56 A. Pigford v. Glickman. 57 B. Pigford II: In re Black Farmers Discrimination Litigation. 60 III. The American Rescue Plan Act. 63 A. Section 1005: Farm Loan Assistance for Socially Disadvantaged... |
2023 |
| Jessica Robertson |
CALIFORNIA ASSEMBLY BILL 3121'S CLAIM FOR BLACK REDRESS: THE CASE FOR A STATE TRUTH AND RECONCILIATION COMMISSION AND HOUSING VOUCHERS |
60 San Diego Law Review 513 (August-September, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 514 II. The Keys to Atonement: Reconciliation and Rehabilitation. 515 A. The Tort Model and The Atonement Model Explained. 517 B. The Task Force Will Likely Seek a Reconciliatory Approach to Redress. 522 C. The Atonement Model Modified. 524 D. The Task Force Should Include a Truth and Reconciliation Commission... |
2023 |
| James L. Buchwalter, J.D. |
Cause of Action Under Whistleblower Provision of Surface Transportation Assistance Act, 49 U.S.C.A. § 31105(a) |
99 Causes of Action Second Series 537 (2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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This article presents a plaintiff's practice guide for bringing a cause of action under the whistleblower provisions of the Federal Surface Transportation Assistance Act (STAA), 49 U.S.C.A. § 31105(a), which prohibits retaliation by employers against truck driver employees who complain about safety violations or refuse to drive a vehicle because of... |
2023 |
| Monica Shaffer |
CONSTITUTIONALITY OF REPARATIONS FOR NATIVE AMERICANS: CONFRONTING THE BOARDING SCHOOLS |
49 Mitchell Hamline Law Review 403 (April, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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I. Introduction. 404 II. Government Mistreatment of Native Americans: Boarding Schools. 405 A. Historical Context of the Boarding Schools. 405 B. The Boarding School Experience. 406 C. Historical Trauma and Direct Impact. 410 D. Ripple Effects. 412 III. About Reparations and Native Americans. 414 A. General Review. 414 B. Types of Reparations:... |
2023 |
| Magali Duque |
CONTRACTING FOR DEBT: THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN DEBT CAPITALISM, HIGHER EDUCATION, AND THE BLACK-WHITE WEALTH GAP |
58 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 415 (Winter, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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This Note explores the relationship between contractual parties in the credit market, as shaped by debt capitalism, through a brief history of slavery, peonage, and credit/debt legislation. Debt capitalism is a racially exclusionary system--stemming from slavery--in which asset acquisition, facilitated by working to pay debt, (1) is a requirement... |
2023 |
| Ali Murat Gali |
CRAWLING OUT OF FEAR AND THE RUINS OF AN EMPIRE: QUEER, BLACK, AND NATIVE INTIMACIES, LAWS OF CREATION AND FUTURES OF CARE |
34 Yale Journal of Law & Feminism 176 (2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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L1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 177 Part I. Relational Possibilities Under the Siege of Equality: Privatized Romances of Sensuality and the Family. 184 A. Lawrence v. Texas and Domesticated Sensualities. 187 B. Obergefell v. Hodges and Fantasizing Privatized Marriage. 193 Part II. Privatized Subjects in Lifeless Streets: Ethical Ramifications... |
2023 |
| Lauren Feldman |
CREATING LAW THROUGH REGULATING INTIMACY: THE CASE OF SLAVE MARRIAGE IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY NEW YORK AND THE UNITED STATES |
41 Law and History Review 119 (February, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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This article argues that American jurists fashioned new understandings about the capacity of states to legislate about marriage through regulating the intimate lives of enslaved and newly freed individuals. This article does so through analyzing the creation and impact of a little-studied 1809 law in New York that legalized the marriages of... |
2023 |
| Sandra Wisner, Brian Concannon |
DEBT AND DEPENDENCE: FOREIGN INTERFERENCE IN HAITI AND THE IMPORTANCE OF NON-STATE ACTOR ACCOUNTABILITY |
21 Northwestern Journal of Human Rights 185 (Summer, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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C1-2Table of Contents Table of Contents. 186 Introduction. 185 I. Haiti: A Case Study. 186 A. Debt and Foreign Aid Dependence. 187 B. Foreign State Interference. 189 C. Interference by Foreign Non-State Actors. 194 II. Implicated Human Rights. 207 A. Implicated Economic and Social Rights. 208 B. Implicated Civil and Political Rights. 217 III. Human... |
2023 |
| Jennifer M. Page, University of Zurich, jennifer.page@uzh.ch |
DEFENSIVE KILLING BY POLICE |
24 Journal of Ethics & Social Philosophy 315 (April, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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All self-defense is undertaken under uncertain circumstances. If amid a violent encounter, someone pulls out and unlocks a gun, takes aim, and begins to squeeze the trigger, it is always possible for the gun to jam or be out of bullets. However, some self-defense scenarios are far more uncertain, where a person has not revealed a clear intent to... |
2023 |
| Brandon Hasbrouck |
DEMOCRATIZING ABOLITION |
69 UCLA Law Review 1744 (September, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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When abolitionists discuss remedies for past and present injustices, they are frequently met with apparently pragmatic objections to the viability of such bold remedies in U.S. legislatures and courts held captive by reactionary forces. Previous movements have seen their lesser reforms dashed by the white supremacist capitalist order that retains... |
2023 |
| Jon D. Michaels |
DESIGNING A LATTER-DAY FREEDMEN'S BUREAU |
71 UCLA Law Review Discourse 70 (2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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This Essay, based on written and oral testimony before the California Task Force to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African Americans, addresses how best to translate substantive reparations proposals into durable, legible, legitimate, and democratically accessible programs. Specifically, this Essay evaluates institutional design... |
2023 |
| Briana Pérez-Brennan, Emily R. Walsh, Editors-in-Chief |
EDITORS' FOREWORD |
27 U.C. Davis Social Justice Law Review I (Winter, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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We live in a time of right-wing extremism, amplification of existing inequalities due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and consequences of failing to provide reparations for our nation's racist past. These are not new phenomena, but the inevitable result of systems that threaten the lives and liberties of communities of color, particularly Black people.... |
2023 |
| Lolita Buckner Inniss |
FOREWORD: EXPANDING THE BOUNDARIES OF KNOWLEDGE ABOUT SLAVERY AND ITS LEGACY |
94 University of Colorado Law Review 381 (Spring, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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I taught Property Law for over twenty years before becoming the Dean of the University of Colorado Law School in 2021. In those years I covered the legal, economic, and social aspects of property, both historic and modern, and along the way addressed property in many of its iterations and forms. In my discussions of property law, I not only... |
2023 |
| Suzette M. Malveaux |
FOREWORD: LOOKING BACK TO MOVE FORWARD: EXPLORING THE LEGACY OF U.S. SLAVERY |
94 University of Colorado Law Review 373 (Spring, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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This year, the 30th Annual Ira C. Rothgerber Conference brought together scholars, lawyers, and community leaders from all over the country to discuss one of the most salient issues today--the legacy of U.S. slavery. Centuries of systemic racism and discrimination following the brutal chattel slavery of African Americans has resulted in Black... |
2023 |
| Hal Clay |
FORTY ACRES AND A MULE: AMERICA'S BILL FOR REPARATIONS IS LONG PAST OVERDUE |
24 Scholar: St. Mary's Law Review on Race and Social Justice 505 (2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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Introduction. 507 A. The Justification For Timely Reparations Stems From The Historic Injustices Perpetrated On Black Americans. 507 I. History. 517 A. There Are Historical Justifications For Reparations. 517 B. There Is No Better Justification For Reparations Established Than Federal Payments Made To Slave Owners Before And After The Civil War.... |
2023 |
| Sujaya Rajguru |
FULFILLING THE PROMISES OF OUR PREAMBLE: A HOLISTIC APPROACH TO TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE IN THE UNITED STATES |
58 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 355 (Winter, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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The murder of George Floyd sparked renewed advocacy around racial justice. However, many Americans responded defensively to the increasingly widespread recognition of systemic racism and police brutality against Black Americans. Backlash to increased calls for racial justice manifested in the passage of anti-critical race theory bills by multiple... |
2023 |
| Asees Bhasin, Gregory Curfman, M.D. |
GUTTING GRUTTER: THE EFFECT OF THE LOSS OF AFFIRMATIVE ACTION ON DIVERSITY AMONG PHYSICIANS |
20 Indiana Health Law Review 1 (2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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Over the last four decades, race-conscious admission policies have been the subject of heated judicial and social controversy. In 1978, in the case Regents of the University of California v. Bakke, the consideration of race was held to be permissible to serve the compelling interest of promoting diversity in higher education. Since then, this issue... |
2023 |
| Chelsea J. Gaudet |
HEALTHCARE REPARATIONS IN CALIFORNIA |
60 San Diego Law Review 569 (August-September, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 569 II. Weathering. 570 III. Obstacles to Effectively Treating Weathering. 573 IV. Achieving Task Force Objectives. 576 V. Healthcare Reparations. 579 VI. Conclusion. 584 |
2023 |
| Christopher L. Mathis, JD, PhD |
HIGHER EDUCATION REDRESS STATUTES: A PRELIMINARY ANALYSIS OF STATES' REPARATIONS IN HIGHER EDUCATION |
94 University of Colorado Law Review 387 (Spring, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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Professor Mathis gave an abbreviated version of this speech at the University of Colorado Law School's 30th Annual Ira C. Rothgerber Jr. Conference during the Institutional Complicity in U.S. Slavery; the Role of the Judiciary and Higher Education panel. Included here are additions to his original Conference speech which provide greater context for... |
2023 |
| Jonathan G. Blattmachr |
HOW WEALTH TRANSFER TAXES MIGHT REDUCE RACIAL WEALTH DISPARITY IN AMERICA |
20 Pittsburgh Tax Review 297 (Spring, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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This Article will discuss what seems to be the impact of estate, gift and generation-skipping taxes (collectively and commonly referred to as wealth transfer taxes) imposed by the United States (Federal) on the disparity of wealth in America. It describes, in general terms, how those taxes work. It also describes, again in general terms, the... |
2023 |
| Eric K. Yamamoto |
INTERNATIONAL REPARATIONS: WHAT JUSTICE AMENDS CAN AND SHOULD THERE BE? |
52 Southwestern Law Review 141 (2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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In Professor Martha Minow's Preface to the Southwestern Law Review symposium on Healing the Persisting Wounds of Historic Injustice, she poses pressing questions for civil societies struggling with historical injustices. Speaking of the Jeju 4.3 Tragedy and many others, Professor Minow, a renowned restorative justice scholar, asks: When the... |
2023 |
| Dr. Julie Shackford-Bradley |
LEGAL VIOLENCE AND RESTORATIVE JUSTICE |
20 Hastings Race and Poverty Law Journal 103 (Spring, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 103 A Framework for Examining Legal Violence:. 106 The Scope and Scale of Legal Violence in Immigrant Communities. 106 Legal Violence as experienced by Indigenous Peoples in the US: A Focus on the Major Crimes Act of 1885. 109 Black Communities' experiences of Legal Violence through Mass Incarceration. 117 Arenas... |
2023 |
| Dr. Julie Shackford-Bradley |
LEGAL VIOLENCE AND RESTORATIVE JUSTICE |
34 Hastings Journal on Gender and the Law 103 (Spring, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 103 A Framework for Examining Legal Violence:. 106 The Scope and Scale of Legal Violence in Immigrant Communities. 106 Legal Violence as experienced by Indigenous Peoples in the US: A Focus on the Major Crimes Act of 1885. 109 Black Communities' experiences of Legal Violence through Mass Incarceration. 117 Arenas... |
2023 |
| Eric J. Miller |
LOVING REPARATIONS |
94 University of Colorado Law Review 395 (Spring, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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Introduction. 395 I. Brief History of the Massacre. 398 II. Loving Blackness Through Reparations. 404 III. More than Economic Reparations. 407 IV. Group and Community Eligiblity. 411 Conclusion: What Does Solidarity Look Like?. 412 |
2023 |
| Erica Witter |
MAKING AMENDS: LOCALIZING AND IMPLEMENTING HOUSING REPARATION PROGRAMS FOR AFRICAN AMERICANS AFFECTED BY DISCRIMINATORY HOUSING POLICIES |
15 Drexel Law Review 509 (2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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In Philadelphia, there is a significant gap in African American home ownership that has contributed to many of the problems that African American residents face today. Decreased industrialization, high poverty rates, crime, and loss in property values are direct consequences of housing discrimination by state and private actors. This Note... |
2023 |
| Allison Roy Kawachi |
MUNICIPAL FAIR HOUSING ACT LITIGATION AND REPARATIONS |
69 UCLA Law Review 1322 (January, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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L1-2TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction. 1324 I. Reparations Litigation: What It Is and Why It Fails. 1327 A. What Are Reparations?. 1327 1. Definition. 1327 2. History. 1330 3. Goals. 1334 a. Economic Goals. 1334 b. Moral Goals. 1336 B. Reparations and Litigation. 1337 1. The Role of Litigation. 1337 2. Overview of Key Reparations Cases. 1339 a.... |
2023 |
| Brandee McGee |
NO APOLOGY UNTIL ABOLITION: REDRESSING THE ONGOING ATROCITY OF SLAVERY |
60 San Diego Law Review 535 (August-September, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 536 II. Mythologizing Black Criminality. 539 III. The Prison-Industrial Complex. 545 A. The Origin of the Penitentiary. 545 B. The Prison-Industrial Complex Today. 546 C. Broader Consequences of Mass Incarceration and How It Continues the Atrocity. 551 IV. Abolition. 553 V. Abolition Must Come Before or With... |
2023 |
| Julia Emtseva |
PHILANTHROPIC JUSTICE: THE ROLE OF PRIVATE FOUNDATIONS IN TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE PROCESSES |
44 Michigan Journal of International Law 219 (2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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In recent years, political transitions have become a major area of interest to private actors, including philanthropies. More and more philanthropic foundations have chosen to donate money to support transitional justice processes across the globe. However, philanthropies often take on not only the role of a funder but also the role of an active... |
2023 |
| Bridget J. Crawford |
PINK TAX AND OTHER TROPES |
34 Yale Journal of Law & Feminism 88 (2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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Abstract: Law reform advocates should be strategic in deploying tax tropes. This Article examines five common tax phrases--the nanny tax, death tax, soda tax, Black tax, and pink tax--and demonstrates that tax rhetoric is more likely to influence law when used to describe specific economic injustices resulting from actual government... |
2023 |
| Keith H. Hirokawa |
RACE, SPACE, AND PLACE: INTERROGATING WHITENESS THROUGH A CRITICAL APPROACH TO PLACE |
29 William and Mary Journal of Race, Gender, and Social Justice 279 (Winter, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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The Civil Rights Movement is long past, yet segregation persists. The wider society is still replete with overwhelmingly white neighborhoods, restaurants, schools, universities, workplaces, churches and other associations, courthouses, and cemeteries, a situation that reinforces a normative sensibility in settings in which black people are... |
2023 |
| Steven W. Bender |
RACIAL JUSTICE AND MARIJUANA |
59 California Western Law Review 223 (Spring, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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Current legalization approaches for recreational marijuana fall short of performing and delivering racial justice as measured by materiality and outcomes rather than promises of formal legal equality. As a small first step for unwinding the War on Drugs, this Article considers how legalizing recreational marijuana can help move law and society... |
2023 |
| Yuvraj Joshi |
RACIAL TIME |
90 University of Chicago Law Review 1625 (October, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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Racial time describes how inequality shapes people's experiences and perceptions of time. This Article reviews the multidisciplinary literature on racial time and then demonstrates how Black activists have made claims about time that challenge prevailing norms. While white majorities often view racial justice measures as both too late and too soon,... |
2023 |
| R. Drew Smith, Ph.D. |
RACIAL-ETHNIC HARM AND HEALING: COMPARATIVE NATIONAL MECHANISMS FOR SOCIAL REMORSE AND REPAIR |
17 Liberty University Law Review 487 (Spring, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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Today a sharp divide exists between Americans. Although they agree that racial harm occurred in this country's history, they disagree about the extent of harm to be acknowledged and the means of repair to achieve justice and social healing. The United States' history of (attempted) racial reconciliation includes initiatives by white Christians... |
2023 |
| Helen Hershkoff, Fred Smith, Jr. |
RECONSTRUCTING KLEIN |
90 University of Chicago Law Review 2101 (December, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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This Article interrogates the conventional understanding of United States v. Klein, a Reconstruction Era decision that concerned Congress's effort to remove appellate jurisdiction from the Supreme Court in a lawsuit seeking compensation for abandoned property confiscated by the United States during the Civil War. Scholars often celebrate the... |
2023 |
| Greg Robinson |
REDRESS IN CANADA AND ITS HUMAN RIGHTS LEGACY |
52 Southwestern Law Review 81 (2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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Eric Yamamoto's book Healing the Persisting Wounds of Historic Injustice: United States, South Korea and the Jeju 4.3 Tragedy is valuable not only for the study it provides of the tragic events in South Korea and its aftermath, but also for the insight it offers into the larger questions at play: How do we come to terms with historic injustice? How... |
2023 |
| Henry J. Richardson III |
REFLECTIONS ON RACE AND THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF INTERNATIONAL LAW |
117 AJIL Unbound 31 (2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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The American Society of International Law (ASIL) is a globally important American professional nongovernmental organization, organized by and for international lawyers as a learned society, and influential in its legal interpretations. For its first sixty years, it excluded African Americans. Subsequently, African Americans were allowed incremental... |
2023 |
| Shirley LaVarco |
REIMAGINING THE VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN ACT FROM A TRANSFORMATIVE JUSTICE PERSPECTIVE: DECARCERATION AND FINANCIAL REPARATIONS FOR CRIMINALIZED SURVIVORS OF SEXUAL AND GENDER-BASED VIOLENCE |
98 New York University Law Review 912 (June, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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While the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) has long been venerated as a major legislative victory for those subjected to sexual and gender-based violence (S/GBV), VAWA is less often understood as the funding boon that it is for police, prosecutors, and prisons. A growing literature on the harms of carceral feminism has shown that VAWA has never... |
2023 |
| Phyllis C. Taite |
REMEDIATING INJUSTICES FOR BLACK LAND LOSS: TAKING THE NEXT STEP TO PROTECT HEIRS' PROPERTY |
10 Belmont Law Review 301 (Spring, 2023) |
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Introduction. 301 I. Inequalities in Land Ownership. 303 A. Black Land Loss. 303 B. Eminent Domain, Neighborhood Blight, and Gentrification. 304 C. Restrictive Covenants, Redlining, and Blockbusting. 308 II. Heirs' Property and Black Land Loss. 310 A. The Problematic Nature of Heirs' Property. 310 B. The Reach of The Uniform Partition of Heirs'... |
2023 |
| Darryl Heller |
REPARATIONS AND RESTORATIVE JUSTICE: A PATH TO RACIAL HEALING |
20 Hastings Race and Poverty Law Journal 37 (Spring, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 37 Reparations as a response to racial injustice. 39 Restorative Justice: A New Paradigm for Reparations. 44 Accountability, Reparations, and Restorative Justice. 47 Conclusion. 51 |
2023 |
| Darryl Heller |
REPARATIONS AND RESTORATIVE JUSTICE: A PATH TO RACIAL HEALING |
34 Hastings Journal on Gender and the Law 37 (Spring, 2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 37 Reparations as a response to racial injustice. 39 Restorative Justice: A New Paradigm for Reparations. 44 Accountability, Reparations, and Restorative Justice. 47 Conclusion. 51 |
2023 |
| Keeshea Turner Roberts |
REPARATIONS CAN MITIGATE WEALTH INEQUITY |
48 Human Rights 20 (2023) |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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Thousands of people marched and protested locally, nationally, and globally in the days and weeks after the senseless murder of George Floyd at the hands of a Minneapolis, Minnesota, police officer. This murder, more than other murders, seemed to compel an internal examination of what it means to be an American in the midst of continued racial... |
2023 |