AuthorTitleCitationDocument TypeCase StatusSummaryYearRelevancy
Diana Verm Thomson, Kayla A. Toney SACRED SPHERES: RELIGIOUS AUTONOMY AS AN INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHT 72 Catholic University Law Review 151 (Spring, 2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   How should courts resolve thorny human rights disputes that arise within religious groups? According to an emerging international consensus, they shouldn't. When a case involves sensitive internal decisions by a religious organization, such as choosing who is qualified to teach the faith, courts are increasingly taking a hands-off approach. This... 2023  
Naomi Murakawa SAY THEIR NAMES, SUPPORT THEIR KILLERS: POLICE REFORM AFTER THE 2020 BLACK LIVES MATTER UPRISINGS 69 UCLA Law Review 1430 (September, 2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Since the unprecedented Summer 2020 uprisings against policing and racism, many elites have embraced an anti-woke politics that openly celebrates law-and-order authoritarianism, heteropatriarchy, and white nationalism. This Article attends to a different but reinforcing response to the George Floyd uprisings: repression through a politics of... 2023  
F. Michael Higginbotham SHADES OF JUSTICE: RACIAL PROFILING THEN AND NOW 94 University of Colorado Law Review 533 (Spring, 2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Introduction. 533 I. Knowing Where You Come From. 534 II. The First Racial Profile. 538 III. The Presumption Continues. 541 Conclusion. 546 2023  
Adjoa A. Aiyetoro SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION OF RACE UNDERGIRDS RACISM BY PROVIDING UNDUE ADVANTAGES TO WHITE PEOPLE, DISADVANTAGING BLACK PEOPLE AND OTHER PEOPLE OF COLOR, AND VIOLATING THE HUMAN RIGHTS OF ALL PEOPLE OF COLOR 94 University of Colorado Law Review 415 (Spring, 2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   INTRODUCTION. 416 I. The Social Construction of Race and White Supremacy. 419 II. The Lethal Nature of the Construction of the Racial Hierarchy and White Supremacy. 426 A. Slavery. 426 B. Post Slavery Violence and Terrorism: The Tulsa Race Massacre. 428 C. Ending the Human and Structural Internalization of the Lie of a Racial Hierarchy and White... 2023  
Aneil Kovvali STARK CHOICES FOR CORPORATE REFORM 123 Columbia Law Review 693 (April, 2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   For decades, corporate law scholars insisted on a simple division of responsibilities. Corporations were told to focus exclusively on maximizing financial returns to shareholders while the government tended to all other concerns by adopting new regulations. As reformers challenged this orthodoxy by urging corporations to take action on pressing... 2023  
Alexander A. Boni-Saenz THE AGE OF RACISM 100 Washington University Law Review 1583 (2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   This Essay introduces the concept of aged racism, a distinct species of systemic racism characterized by its intersection with age. This subject has yet to receive significant theoretical attention in the legal scholarship, despite the social importance of both age and race and the many ways in which they are embedded in the law and legal... 2023  
Jamila Jefferson-Jones THE ANTI-WOKE AND THE BLACK AMERICAN (WAKING) DREAM 17 Florida A & M University Law Review xv (Spring, 2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   This essay, though not a direct transcript, is based largely upon the keynote address given by the author on February 24, 2023, at the The American Dream Belongs to All of Us Symposium sponsored by the Florida A&M University (FAMU) Law Review and the FAMU Hispanic American Law Student Association (HALSA) at FAMU College of Law. The author... 2023  
Samantha Rudelich THE DETROIT LAND BANK AUTHORITY: A MODERN TOOL PERPETUATING RACISM & CLASSISM IN THE CITY 30 Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy 619 (Spring, 2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Detroit has a long history of pushing out local residents and limiting their land ownership; a history rooted in racism and classism. This has led to large amounts of land in the city not under the control of residents and long-time Detroiters, but under the control of the city itself. Cities with large amounts of vacant and foreclosed land across... 2023  
Brenda D. Gibson THE HEIRS' PROPERTY PROBLEM: RACIAL CASTE ORIGINS AND SYSTEMIC EFFECTS IN THE BLACK COMMUNITY 26 CUNY Law Review 172 (Summer, 2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   I. Introduction. 173 II. The American Property Ownership Model Versus the Black Property Ownership Model. 176 A. The American Property Ownership Model. 177 B. The History of Black Property Ownership in the South. 179 III. Black Land Loss and Impediments to Black Land Ownership (and Wealth). 183 A. White Hands in Black Land Loss in the South. 185 1.... 2023  
Joshua J. Schroeder THE IMAGINATION UNBOUND: ON THE NEW ANTI-RIGHTS TRAJECTORY OF THE U.S. SUPREME COURT 50 Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly 187 (May, 2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   In the summer of 2022, the U.S. Supreme Court overruled an individual right for the first time in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Org. The Dobbs Court also suggested that several rights-affirming decisions including Loving v. Virginia, Griswold v. Connecticut, and Obergefell v. Hodges should be systematically reviewed to similarly determine their... 2023  
Leilani Stacy THE MOVEMENT FOR BLACK LIVES: A CASE STUDY OF CONSTITUTIONAL UNDERSTANDINGS OF QUALIFIED IMMUNITY AND THE ARGUMENT FOR A LEGISLATED CONSTITUTION 32 Southern California Review of Law & Social Justice 201 (Spring, 2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   C1-2TABLE OF CONTENTS I. INTRODUCTION. 202 II. A BRIEF HISTORY OF QUALIFIED IMMUNITY JURISPRUDENCE AND RECENT CALLS FOR ITS END. 205 III. AN OVERVIEW OF BLM AS A SOCIAL MOVEMENT AND POSITION ON QUALIFIED IMMUNITY. 209 IV. EXISTING THEORIES OF SOCIAL MOVEMENTS' INFLUENCE ON THE CONSTITUTION. 213 A. Frameworks to Help Guide an Understanding of the... 2023  
Megan Buechler THE NEVER-ENDING DROUGHT FOR BLACK FARMERS: THE LASTING EFFECTS OF PIGFORD AND THE CONTINUANCE OF USDA DISCRIMINATION 61 University of Louisville Law Review 223 (Spring, 2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The government may have admitted guilt and wrote a check but that is not what these farmers wanted. They wanted to be heard. They wanted their stories to be told, they wanted to protect future generations, Black and White, from ever letting this happen again. --Greg A. Francis Forty acres and a mule--William Sherman promised this redistribution... 2023  
Erin Bloom , Lisa K. Dicker THE POLITICS OF JUSTICE: ANALYZING THE POLITICIZATION OF TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE PROCESSES 38 Ohio State Journal on Dispute Resolution 303 (2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   I. Introduction A. About Transitional Justice B. The Risks of Politicization II. Politicization of the Transitional Justice Narrative A. Competing Narratives B. Compromised Narratives C. Defining Victims and Perpetrators D. Conclusion III. Political Interests in Designing Transitional Justice Processes A. Selecting the Mechanisms B. Determining the... 2023  
Joseph William Singer THE RIGHT TO HAVE PROPERTY 10 Texas A&M Law Review 713 (Summer, 2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Laura Underkuffler has kindly commented on my progressive, social-relations approach to property and property law. I feel humbled, honored, and seen. She notices the core moral commitments manifested in that work. She focuses on my scholarship on discrimination in public accommodations, the violent dispossession and persisting sovereignty of Native... 2023  
Lisa J. Laplante THE WILD WEST OF COMPANY-LEVEL GRIEVANCE MECHANISMS: DRAWING NORMATIVE BORDERS TO PATROL THE PRIVATIZATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS REMEDIES 64 Harvard International Law Journal 311 (Spring, 2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   This Article is the first to present a normative framework that challenges the privatization of remedies established by corporations to resolve human rights violations which they contribute to or cause. The need to draw such normative borders responds to an unprecedented innovation of ordinary company complaint mechanisms to handle human rights... 2023  
Tiffany D. Atkins THESE BRUTAL INDIGNITIES: THE CASE FOR CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY IN BLACK AMERICA 111 Kentucky Law Journal 61 (2022-2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   L1-2Table of Contents . R361. L1-2Abstract . R362. L1-2Introduction . R363. I. The Historical Evidence. 66 A. Origins of Genocide. 68 B. Claims of Genocide. 69 i. Killing of Members of the Group. 69 ii. Causing Serious Mental Harm to Members Through Psychological Terror. 73 iii. Economic Genocide. 75 iv. Conspiracy to Commit Genocide Through... 2023  
Todd J. Clark , Caleb Gregory Conrad , André Douglas Pond Cummings , Honorable Amy Dunn Johnson TRAUMA-INFORMED POLICING: THE IMPACT OF ADULT AND CHILDHOOD TRAUMA ON LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS 73 Case Western Reserve Law Review 843 (Spring, 2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Introduction. 845 I. The Science of Trauma. 846 A. Trauma on the Brain. 847 B. Childhood Trauma and the ACE Study. 849 C. Trauma and Psychopathology. 853 D. Childhood Trauma and Epigenetics. 854 E. The Criminal Justice System as a Cause of Trauma. 856 F. Protective Factors and the Science of PACEs. 857 G. Double Trauma: Black Police Officers. 858... 2023  
Lindsay Sain Jones , Goldburn P. Maynard, Jr. UNFULFILLED PROMISES OF THE FINTECH REVOLUTION 111 California Law Review 801 (June, 2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   While financial technology (fintech) has the potential to make financial services more accessible and affordable, hope that technology alone can solve the complex issue of wealth inequality is misplaced. After all, fintech companies are still subject to the same market forces as traditional financial institutions, with little incentive to address... 2023  
American Law Reports ALR Federal 2d Validity, Construction, and Application of § 6700 of the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C.A. § 6700) Imposing Civil Penalties for Promoting Abusive Tax Shelters 36 A.L.R. Fed. 2d 377 (Originally published in 2009) (2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The promotion of abusive tax shelters has wide-reaching effects in our society, including the liability of taxpayers who rely on the promoters' false or fraudulent tax advice, dissipation of the courts' time by continual litigation over frivolous theories, and loss of tax revenues to the government. Section 6700 of the Internal Revenue Code (I.R.C.... 2023  
Ruben Carranza WHAT JEJU 4.3 SURVIVORS AND FAMILIES CAN LEARN FROM THE GLOBAL SOUTH IN SEEKING JUSTICE FROM AN EMPIRE 52 Southwestern Law Review 126 (2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Discovered by the soldiers, I was dragged out into the street, and the sky was filled with smoke as the village burned. Bang, bang, bang, I heard gunshots, and the heads I saw were gone. I wish I could forget the sin, but I remember when I close my eyes as if it was yesterday. An 8-year-old girl has become an 80-year-old woman, who still has not... 2023  
Charisa Smith WHEN COVID CAPITALISM SILENCES CHILDREN 71 University of Kansas Law Review 553 (May, 2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The lingering COVID-19 pandemic has ushered in policy developments that mar child and family wellbeing while effectively suppressing U.S. children in civic life. Although the prevailing framework for child-parent-state conflicts already antagonized families and disenfranchised youth, COVID Capitalism threatens to silence children on virtually... 2023  
Mikayla Mangle WHEN THE LEGAL SYSTEM WAS DESIGNED TO WORK AGAINST YOU, HOW CAN IT EVER WORK FOR YOU? RETHINKING HEIRS PROPERTY REFORM 17 Charleston Law Review 541 (Spring, 2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   INTRODUCTION. 541 I. AMERICA'S DISCRIMINATORY PAST NEVER LEFT: HOW JIM CROW ERA LAWS HELPED LEAD TO THE CREATION OF HEIRS PROPERTY. 545 A. An Empty Promise of Homeownership to Black Americans Throughout History. 546 B. When Past Discrimination Lingers: How Racially Discriminatory Laws and Tactics Created Heirs Property. 554 II. CURRENT REFORMS TO... 2023  
Sonia M. Gipson Rankin WOULD YOU MAKE IT TO THE FUTURE? TEACHING RACE IN AN ASSISTED REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGIES AND THE LAW CLASSROOM 56 Family Law Quarterly 1 (2022-2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Would you make it to the future? For the last five years, I have started my Assisted Reproductive Technology (ART) lecture in Family Law with this question. Students take the query seriously. They ponder their lived experiences such as home training, medical history, education, financial well-being, personality traits, work ethic, and social graces... 2023  
Charisa Smith YOUTH VISIONS AND EMPOWERMENT: RECONSTRUCTION THROUGH REVOLUTION 75 Rutgers University Law Review 825 (Spring, 2023) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   We've had this idea of growing up thinking, what the heck is this? What the heck is going on? .. [T]his isn't right. This is crazy. We need a whole new system .. OK, you guys might have been raised to think that this system benefits you, but you've been brainwashed. Let us give it to you straight. --Lily Mandel at age seventeen, organizer at Bucks... 2023  
  2023 CA S.B. 490 (NS) 2023 California Senate Bill No. 490, California 2023-2024 Regular Session (8/22/2023) Legislation (Proposed & Enacted)   SUMMARY: An act to amend Section 8301.7 of add Part 14 (commencing with Section 16000) to Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, relating to state government, and declaring the urgency thereof, to take effect immediately. government. AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY AUGUST 22, 2023 SENATE BILL No. 490 Introduced by Senator Bradford February 14, 2023 An act to amend Section 8301.7 of add Part 14 (commencing with Section 16000) to Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, relating to state government, and declaring the urgency thereof, to take effect immediately. government. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S... 2023  
Chairman Mendelson 2023 DC L.R. 412 (NS) 2023 Washington DC Legislative Resolution No. 412, Washington DC Council Period Twenty-Five (9/19/2023) Legislation (Proposed & Enacted)   SUMMARY: To reappoint Ms. Nkechi Taifa to the Corrections Information Council Governing Board. ________________________ Chairman Phil Mendelson A PROPOSED RESOLUTION ______________________ IN THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA ______________________ To reappoint Ms. Nkechi Taifa to the Corrections Information Council Governing Board. RESOLVED, BY THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, That this resolution may be cited as the Corrections Information Council Governing Board Nkechi Taifa Reappointment Resolution of 2023". Sec. 2. The Council of the District of Columbia reappoints: Ms...." 2023  
  § 1:35. A philosophical and policy overview of constitutional and statutory civil rights law principles-Examples of the tension between the process and outcome theories-A case study in process versus outcome theory: The Metro Broadcasting decision FCIVRTACTS § 1:35 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   One recent Supreme Court decision, Metro Broadcasting, Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission, crystallizes the entire debate between the process and outcome notions of equality. The Metro Broadcasting decision is worth holding up to close examination as a detailed case study 2022  
  § 13:9. Other civil rights legislation GOVDISCRIM Government Discrimination: Equal Protection Law and Litigation 13:9 (2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Civil rights legislation, in addition to the laws summarized above, provides both criminal and civil causes of action where federal statutory and constitutional rights are abridged. It is also possible to sue federal officials directly under the Constitution. The most significant civil cause of action provision is § 1983. The provision, which... 2022  
Martin D. Carr, Ann Taylor Schwing § 25:63. Tolling for persons disabled or affected by war or great cruelty CAAFDEF Expert Series 25:63 (2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Section 354 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: When a person is, by reason of the existence of a state of war, under a disability to commence an action, the time of the continuance of such disability is not part of the period limited for the commencement of the action whether such cause of action shall have accrued prior to or during the... 2022  
Penelope Andrews A COMMISSION ON RECOGNITION AND RECONSTRUCTION FOR THE UNITED STATES: ILLUSORY OR INSPIRATIONAL? 66 New York Law School Law Review 359 (2021/2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The United States remains a deeply divided society, with the fault line continuing to be that of race and racism. Of course, this is not new, as W. E. B. Du Bois famously noted more than a century ago that the problem of the color line would be the central issue of the United States in the twentieth century. And so it remains today. The statistics... 2022  
Kim Oosterlinck , Ugo Panizza , W. Mark C. Weidemaier , Mitu Gulati A DEBT OF DISHONOR 102 Boston University Law Review 1247 (May, 2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   In 1825, France conditioned its grant of recognition to the new nation of Haiti on the payment of 150 million francs plus trade benefits. The payments were, at least in part, compensation for the losses that French plantation owners suffered, a key part of which was the loss of enslaved Haitians, who took their freedom via revolution. France has... 2022  
Steven Sacco ABOLISHING CITIZENSHIP: RESOLVING THE IRRECONCILABILITY BETWEEN "SOIL" AND "BLOOD" POLITICAL MEMBERSHIP AND ANTI-RACIST DEMOCRACY 36 Georgetown Immigration Law Journal 693 (Winter, 2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 694 II. Citizenship as Racism and Anti-Democracy. 698 A. Citizenship as Race. 698 1. Race Becomes Citizenship. 700 2. Citizenship Becomes Race. 711 3. Citizenship Racializes Citizens. 714 B. Citizenship as Anti-Democracy. 718 1. Citizenship Is Anti-Egalitarian. 718 a. Citizenship Is a Caste System. 718 b.... 2022  
Kiah Duggins ABOLITION AND INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS: TAIWAN'S AFFIRMATION OF BLACK AMERICAN ABOLITIONIST MOVEMENTS 57 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 361 (Summer, 2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   America's use of police to maintain a social order that protects the interests of white upper-class citizens is similar to Taiwan's use of a police state to protect the interests of its authoritarian regime from 1945-1987. America's history and international positionality are vastly different from Taiwan's. However, grassroots movements that... 2022  
Stephanie Bornstein CONFRONTING THE RACIAL PAY GAP 75 Vanderbilt Law Review 1401 (October, 2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   For several decades, a small body of legal scholarship has addressed the gender pay gap, which compares the median full-time earnings of women and men. More recently, legal scholars have begun to address the racial wealth gap, which measures racial disparities in family economic security and wealth accumulation. Yet a crucial component of both the... 2022  
The HLS Conference Organizers CRITICAL RACE THEORY: INSIDE AND BEYOND THE IVORY TOWER 69 UCLA Law Review Discourse 118 (2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The history of Critical Race Theory (CRT) is inextricably intertwined with the history of student activism on law school campuses. This activism was sparked in resistance to the dominant legal education system and with the goal of cultivating alternative spaces where law students could learn how to tackle and dismantle the seemingly permanent... 2022  
Sherally Munshi DISPOSSESSION: AN AMERICAN PROPERTY LAW TRADITION 110 Georgetown Law Journal 1021 (May, 2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Universities and law schools have begun to purge the symbols of conquest and slavery from their crests and campuses, but they have yet to come to terms with their role in reproducing the material and ideological conditions of settler colonialism and racial capitalism. This Article considers the role the property law tradition has played in shaping... 2022  
Shirin Sinnar HATE CRIMES, TERRORISM, AND THE FRAMING OF WHITE SUPREMACIST VIOLENCE 110 California Law Review 489 (April, 2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Even before the assault on the Capitol on January 6, 2021, a rising chorus of policymakers and pundits had called for treating White supremacist violence as terrorism. After multiple mass shootings motivated by White supremacist ideology, commentators argued that the hate crime label failed to convey the political nature of the violence or... 2022  
Kelsey Goldman LETTING THE CAT OUT OF THE BAG: HOW LACK OF ACCESS TO ANIMAL COMPANIONSHIP AND HUSBANDRY FOSTERS INEQUALITY FOR BLACK AMERICANS 12 UC Irvine Law Review 693 (February, 2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Throughout American history, animals have been used by those in power to harm and terrorize Black Americans. While state-sanctioned use of slave-patrol and police dogs have been a commonly discussed issue, there has been little to no analysis on the harms Black Americans have faced from the systemic deprivation of animal companionship and... 2022  
Larry Alexander MICHAEL PERRY AND DISPROPORTIONATE RACIAL IMPACT 23 Journal of Contemporary Legal Issues 469 (2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   C1-2Table of Contents I. The Disparate Impact Theory of Racial Discrimination. 470 II. Assessing the Merits of Michael's DRI Theory. 474 III. Disproportionate Racial Impact and Twenty-First Century Racial Politics. 478 2022  
Joseph Blocher, Mitu Gulati NAVASSA: PROPERTY, SOVEREIGNTY, AND THE LAW OF THE TERRITORIES 131 Yale Law Journal 2390 (June, 2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The United States acquired its first overseas territory--Navassa Island, near Haiti--by conceptualizing it as a kind of property to be owned, rather than a piece of sovereign territory to be governed. The story of Navassa shows how competing conceptions of property and sovereignty are an important and underappreciated part of the law of the... 2022  
William Montgomery POLLUTER DISGORGES: CLIMATE ACCOUNTABILITY AND THE LAW OF UNJUST ENRICHMENT 35 Tulane Environmental Law Journal 165 (Summer, 2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   I. Introduction. 165 II. A Brief History of Restitution and Unjust Enrichment. 166 A. Broad and Narrow Conceptions of Unjust Enrichment. 166 B. The Third Restatement and the Modern Restitution Revival. 170 III. Two Paths to Restitutionary Remedies in Climate Litigation. 173 A. Background: The Second Wave of Climate Nuisance Litigation. 174 1.... 2022  
Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum PROHIBITING SLAVERY & THE SLAVE TRADE 63 Virginia Journal of International Law 51 (Fall, 2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Slavery and the slave trade stubbornly persist in our time, but they receive insufficient attention in international human rights law. Even when courts adjudicate slavery violations, they often fail to characterize slave trade conduct that nearly always precedes slavery. Courts also characterize acts that meet the definition of slavery or the slave... 2022  
Yuvraj Joshi RACIAL JUSTICE AND PEACE 110 Georgetown Law Journal 1325 (June, 2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The United States recently saw the largest racial justice protests in its history. An estimated 15 to 26 million people took to the streets over the police killings of Breonna Taylor, Tony McDade, George Floyd, and countless other Black people. This Article explores how these protests and their chants of No Justice! No Peace! should lead us to... 2022  
Marbre Stahly-Butts , Amna A. Akbar REFORMS FOR RADICALS? AN ABOLITIONIST FRAMEWORK 68 UCLA Law Review 1544 (February, 2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   This Article draws on prison abolitionist organizing, campaigns, and intellectual work around the country to offer a framework for thinking about radical reforms rooted in an abolitionist framework. A radical reform (1) shrinks the system doing harm; (2) relies on modes of political, economic, and social organization that contradict prevailing... 2022  
Timothy Webster SOUTH KOREA SHATTERS THE PARADIGM: CORPORATE LIABILITY, HISTORICAL ACCOUNTABILITY, AND THE SECOND WORLD WAR 26 UCLA Journal of International Law and Foreign Affairs 123 (Fall/Winter, 2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   South Korea is currently revising its interpretation of Japanese colonialism, and the fallout from World War II more generally. In 2018, the Supreme Court of South Korea issued two opinions that staked new ground in this process of legal revision. First, by holding Japanese multinational enterprises legally liable for events that took place in the... 2022  
Brandon Hasbrouck THE ANTIRACIST CONSTITUTION 102 Boston University Law Review 87 (February, 2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Our Constitution, as it is and as it has been interpreted by our courts, serves white supremacy. The twin projects of abolition and reconstruction remain incomplete, derailed first by openly hostile institutions, then by the subtler lie that a colorblind Constitution would bring about the end of racism. Yet, in its debut in Supreme Court... 2022  
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) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   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  
Emily R. Larrabee VIOLENCE IN THE NAME OF THE CONFEDERACY: AMERICA'S FAILURE TO DEFEAT THE LOST CAUSE 14 Drexel Law Review 451 (2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Since the immediate aftermath of the American Civil War, the United States has been plagued with its violent consequences. Following the Civil War, there was a rise of neo-Confederate hate groups who preached the Lost Cause ideology. To this day, these groups continue to plague the United States. The failure to invalidate the Lost Cause ideology,... 2022  
Goldburn P. Maynard Jr., David Gamage WAGE ENSLAVEMENT: HOW THE TAX SYSTEM HOLDS BACK HISTORICALLY DISADVANTAGED GROUPS OF AMERICANS 110 Kentucky Law Journal 665 (2021-2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Table of Contents. 665 Abstract. 665 Introduction. 666 I. Intersections of Racial Injustices and Wealth Inequality in America. 667 A. How Wealth Is Different from Income and Why It Matters. 668 B. The Frustratingly Persistent Racial Wealth Gap. 671 i. Consumption Patterns and Savings. 674 ii. Income. 675 iii. Education. 675 iv. Asset Holdings. 676... 2022  
Richard Spradlin ZONING, NATURAL RESOURCES, AND RECLAMATION: OPPORTUNITIES FOR ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE IN A FLOWERING INDUSTRY 23 Vermont Journal of Environmental Law 374 (Summer, 2022) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Introduction. 375 I. Racialized Criminalization and Attempted Restoration. 377 A. Criminalization. 377 B. Legalization. 379 1. Canna-colonialism. 379 II. Relationship Between the Environment and Cannabis Cultivation/Production. 383 III. EJ and Cannabis: Considerations and Opportunities. 389 A. Zoning, Licensing, and Community Rebuilding. 390 B.... 2022  
6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23