AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearKeywords in Title or Summary
Angela Onwuachi-Willig THE CRT OF BLACK LIVES MATTER 66 Saint Louis University Law Journal 663 (Summer, 2022) Critical Race Theory (CRT), or at least its principles, stands at the core of most prominent social movements of today--from the resurgence of the #MeToo Movement, which was founded by a Black woman, Tarana Burke, to the Black Lives Matter Movement, which was founded by three Black women: Opal Tometi, Alicia Garza, and Patrisse Cullors. In fact,... 2022  
Shannon Malone Gonzalez , Samantha J. Simon , Katie Kaufman Rogers THE DIVERSITY OFFICER: POLICE OFFICERS' AND BLACK WOMEN CIVILIANS' EPISTEMOLOGIES OF RACE AND RACISM IN POLICING 56 Law and Society Review 477 (September, 2022) Diversifying police forces has been suggested to improve police-minority relations amidst national uprisings against police violence. Yet, little research investigates how police and black civilians--two groups invoked in discourse on police-minority relations--understand the function of diversity interventions. We draw on 100 in-depth... 2022  
Anthony J. Gaughan The Dynamics of Democratic Breakdown: A Case Study of the American Civil War 11 British Journal of American Legal Studies 113 (Spring, 2022) The 2020 election raised fundamental questions about the future of American democracy. Although the Democratic presidential nominee Joseph Biden won a decisive victory in the Electoral College and the popular vote, President Donald Trump refused to accept defeat. For weeks after the election, Trump falsely claimed that Democrats had stolen the... 2022  
Khiara M. Bridges THE DYSGENIC STATE: ENVIRONMENTAL INJUSTICE AND DISABILITY-SELECTIVE ABORTION BANS 110 California Law Review 297 (April, 2022) Disability-selective abortion bans are laws that prohibit individuals from terminating a pregnancy because the fetus has been diagnosed with a health impairment. Many environmental toxins--to which low-income people and people of color disproportionately are exposed--are known to cause impairments in fetuses. When the fact of environmental... 2022  
Gabriel J. Chin *, Anna Ratner ** THE END OF CALIFORNIA'S ANTI-ASIAN ALIEN LAND LAW: A CASE STUDY IN REPARATIONS AND TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE 29 Asian American Law Journal 17 (2022) For nearly a century, California law embodied a rabid anti-Asian policy, which included school segregation, discriminatory law enforcement, a prohibition on marriage with Whites, denial of voting rights, and imposition of many other hardships. The Alien Land Law was a California innovation, copied in over a dozen other states. The Alien Land Law,... 2022 Yes
Brendan Williams THE EXPENDABLES: HISPANIC WORKERS IN THE U.S. DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC 13 Alabama Civil Rights & Civil Liberties Law Review 119 (2021-2022) I. Essential Work. 121 II. Health Care Inequities. 127 III. White Privilege and Opposition to COVID-19 Safeguards. 136 IV. Conclusion. 141 2022 Yes
Abby Coté THE EXPLOITATION OF REGULATORY GAPS: EXPLORING HOW INTERNATIONAL AID WORKERS PREY ON WEAKNESSES IN UGANDA'S LAWS TO HARM CHILDREN AND HOW TO STOP THEM 30 Michigan State International Law Review 81 (2022) In light of a growing awareness of international aid workers and volunteers exploiting vulnerable children, additional regulations governing these international actors are needed. Uganda provides a prime example of the issues that occur when such international nongovernmental (NGO) volunteers and aid workers are under-regulated, and when white... 2022 Yes
André Douglas Pond Cummings THE FARCICAL SAMARITAN'S DILEMMA 35 Journal of Civil Rights & Economic Development 219 (Spring, 2022) [T]he hypothesis is that modern man has become incapable of making the choices that are required to prevent his exploitation by predators of his own species [.] This article explores one of the foundational pillar theories of Law and Economics and specifically Public Choice Theory as espoused by Nobel Laureate James M. Buchanan: the Samaritan's... 2022  
Rabia Belt THE FAT PRISONERS' DILEMMA: SLOW VIOLENCE, INTERSECTIONALITY, AND A DISABILITY RIGHTS FRAMEWORK FOR THE FUTURE 110 Georgetown Law Journal 785 (April, 2022) America is having a reckoning on mass incarceration. Events such as George Floyd's killing, COVID behind bars, and Black Lives Matter have punctured our collective consciousness. Advocates and scholars alike are pushing U.S. society to examine the costs--financial, psychic, social--of putting millions of people behind bars. Despite this... 2022  
Robert J. McWhirter THE FIFTEENTH AMENDMENT 58-JUN Arizona Attorney 44 (June, 2022) The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. The Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation. --The Fifteenth Amendment The Supreme Court was a disaster for Black Americans and... 2022  
Sarah Moore Johnson , Raymond C. Odom THE FORGOTTEN 40 ACRES: HOW REAL PROPERTY, PROBATE & TAX LAWS CONTRIBUTED TO THE RACIAL WEALTH GAP AND HOW TAX POLICY COULD REPAIR IT 57 Real Property, Trust and Estate Law Journal 1 (Spring, 2022) Authors' Synopsis: American racial history has been intertwined with land and wealth since the dawn of our nation. Slavery and the country's continued policies of institutionalized racism have resulted in a median ten-to-one wealth disparity between White and Black Americans. Throughout history, reparations have been a recognized method for... 2022 Yes
Taleed El-Sabawi, Jennifer Oliva THE INFLUENCE OF WHITE EXCEPTIONALISM ON DRUG WAR DISCOURSE 94 Temple Law Review 649 (Summer, 2022) For much of its history, the United States has adopted a punitive approach to escalating overdose rates and addiction through the prohibition or stringent regulation of drugs deemed dangerous or habit forming. The policy tools used to support this approach rely on criminal punishment for the possession and sale of such substances and are based on... 2022 Yes
Deborah R. Gerhardt THE LAST BREAKFAST WITH AUNT JEMIMA AND ITS IMPACT ON TRADEMARK THEORY 45 Columbia Journal of Law & the Arts 231 (Winter, 2022) The generally-accepted law and economics theory of trademarks fails to explain why a brand owner would ever walk away from a trademark that generates financially lucrative returns. In 2020, that is exactly what happened again and again as brand owners pledged to abandon racially explicit marks in the weeks following George Floyd's murder. As... 2022  
Etienne C. Toussaint THE MISEDUCATION OF PUBLIC CITIZENS 29 Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy 287 (Spring, 2022) The American Bar Association Model Rules of Professional Conduct calls upon lawyers, as public citizens, to embrace a special responsibility for the quality of justice in the legal profession and in society. Yet, some law professors have historically adopted a formalistic and doctrinally neutral approach to law teaching that elides critical... 2022  
Pitrina Gilger THE MODERN SECOND AMENDMENT: A PROGRESSIVE APPROACH TO LIMITING INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS UNDER THE SECOND AMENDMENT 31 Southern California Interdisciplinary Law Journal 403 (Winter, 2022) When a country with less than five percent of the world's population has nearly half of the world's privately owned guns and makes up nearly a third of the world's mass shootings, it's time to stop saying guns make us safer. DaShanne Stokes Gun ownership is a protected American right under the Second Amendment, which the Supreme Court has... 2022  
Janel A. George THE MYTH OF MERIT: THE FIGHT OF THE FAIRFAX COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD AND THE NEW FRONT OF MASSIVE RESISTANCE 49 Fordham Urban Law Journal 1091 (October, 2022) Introduction. 1091 I. The Consequences of Colorblindness. 1095 A. Retreat and Resegregation: The Gradual Erosion of Brown. 1095 B. Parents Involved and Race-Neutral Policies. 1100 II. The Battle for TJ. 1103 A. The Nation's Top Public High School Struggles to Diversify. 1103 B. George Floyd and Thomas Jefferson: Past and Present Collide. 1109 III.... 2022  
Khaled Ali Beydoun THE NEW STATE OF SURVEILLANCE: SOCIETIES OF SUBJUGATION 79 Washington and Lee Law Review 769 (Spring, 2022) Foundational surveillance studies theory has largely been shaped in line with the experiences of white subjects in western capitalist societies. Formative scholars, most notably Michel Foucault and Gilles Deleuze, theorized that the advancement of surveillance technology tempers the State's reliance on mass discipline and corporal punishment. Legal... 2022 Yes
I. India Thusi THE PATHOLOGICAL WHITENESS OF PROSECUTION 110 California Law Review 795 (June, 2022) Criminal law scholarship suffers from a Whiteness problem. While scholars appear to be increasingly concerned with the racial disparities within the criminal legal system, the scholarship's focus tends to be on the marginalized communities and the various discriminatory outcomes they experience as a result of the system. Scholars frequently mention... 2022 Yes
John M. Kang THE POLITICAL URGENCY OF BLACK MANHOOD: FREDERICK DOUGLASS ON CONSTITUTIONAL THEORY 52 New Mexico Law Review 341 (Summer, 2022) How did Frederick Douglass--one who was born a slave, one who had been denied all formal education, one who had been sundered from his family, one who had been starved, tortured, and, on occasion, nearly killed--manage to muster the courage to do something as bold as challenge the United States Supreme Court? This Article suggests that Douglass, in... 2022  
William Stoll THE PROBLEM WITH CONFEDERATE MONUMENTS: STATE LAWS AS BARRIERS FOR REMOVAL AND METHODS AVAILABLE TO LOCALITIES 26 U.C. Davis Social Justice Law Review 91 (Winter, 2022) Introduction. 93 I. The Spread and Protection of Southern Monuments. 95 A. The History and Background of Confederate Monuments. 95 B. State Efforts to Maintain and Protect Confederate Monuments. 98 II. Despite Claims to the Contrary, Slavery Was the Primary Cause of the Civil War. 103 A. Primary Source Documents from the Confederacy and its... 2022  
Kate Levine THE PROGRESSIVE LOVE AFFAIR WITH THE CARCERAL STATE 120 Michigan Law Review 1225 (April, 2022) The Feminist War on Crime: The Unexpected Role of Women's Liberation in Mass Incarceration. By Aya Gruber. Oakland: University of California Press. 2020. Pp. xii, 288. Cloth, $29.95; paper, $24.95. Famed feminist attorney Gloria Allred, pictured above, has a wide smile as she holds up a sign displaying the sentence given to movie mogul and sexual... 2022  
Michael Milov-Cordoba THE RACIAL INJUSTICE AND POLITICAL PROCESS FAILURE OF PROSECUTORIAL MALAPPORTIONMENT 97 New York University Law Review 402 (April, 2022) District attorneys are responsible for the vast majority of criminal prosecutions in the United States, and most of them are elected by the public from prosecutorial districts. Yet these districts are massively malapportioned, giving rural, disproportionately white voters significantly more voting power over their district attorneys than urban... 2022 Yes
Ann F. Thomas THE RACIAL WEALTH GAP AND THE TAX BENEFITS OF HOMEOWNERSHIP 66 New York Law School Law Review 247 (2021/2022) The Black/white racial wealth gap in the United States is huge. It is persistent. And it has changed very little since the 1960s. In 2019, before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and some fifty-five years after landmark civil rights legislation intended to equalize access to housing, education, and employment, the net assets of the median Black... 2022 Yes
Amy J. Cohen THE RISE AND FALL AND RISE AGAIN OF INFORMAL JUSTICE AND THE DEATH OF ADR 54 Connecticut Law Review 197 (March, 2022) Today, the field of alternative dispute resolution (ADR) is often conceptualized and taught as an apolitical, institutional practice designed to enhance the effective and efficient settlement of legal disputes. But this was not always the case. In the 1970s, scholars imagined mediation as a technique of social and political transformation: a... 2022  
Raquel Muñiz , Maria Lewis , Grace Cavanaugh , Melissa Woolsey THE SOCIAL CONTEXT OF THE LAW: A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF RELIANCE INTERESTS IN THE DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY v. REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA 95 Southern California Law Review 857 (April, 2022) In 2020, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on the Department of Homeland Security v. Regents of the University of California case. The case concerned the rescission of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) policy, an issue that sparked the interest of a wide range of amicus curiae, including those in support of the policy. Using Critical... 2022  
Michele Goodwin THE THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT'S PUNISHMENT CLAUSE: A SPECTACLE OF SLAVERY UNWILLING TO DIE 57 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 47 (Summer, 2022) C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 48 I. The Historical Nexus of Old Slavery to Modern Slavery through the Thirteenth Amendment. 53 A. The Historical Underpinnings of the Slavery Loophole. 53 1. Indentured Servitude v. Slavery in the Thirteenth Amendment Debate. 59 2. The Meaning of Property in the Thirteenth Amendment Debate. 62 3. Originalism... 2022  
Jessica Dixon Weaver THE TIES THAT BIND: WHAT PAULI MURRAY TEACHES US ABOUT RACE, FAMILY, SLAVERY, AND INEQUALITY 55 Family Law Quarterly 293 (2021-2022) Pauli Murray is an unsung American hero. She was a civil rights activist, a feminist, a lawyer, a book author, a poet, a professor, and a priest. She was a trailblazer--the first Black person to earn a doctorate in law from Yale University, one of the co-founders of the National Organization of Women (N.O.W.), and the first African American female... 2022  
Kara W. Swanson THE TULSA RACE MASSACRE OF 1921: A LESSON IN THE LAW OF TRESPASS 54 Connecticut Law Review 1005 (July, 2022) The Connecticut Law Review Symposium poses the question: History and the Tulsa Race Massacre: What's the Law Got to Do With It? In one sense, the answer to the question is easy. Since 1921, Black Tulsans have been looking to law and lawyers to address the harms inflicted during the Tulsa Race Massacre, albeit with little success. I was asked to... 2022  
Vania Blaiklock, Esq. THE UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES OF THE COURT'S RELIGIOUS FREEDOM REVOLUTION: A HISTORY OF WHITE SUPREMACY AND PRIVATE CHRISTIAN CHURCH SCHOOLS 117 Northwestern University Law Review Online 46 (9/26/2022) Abstract--Although private church schools have historically received less attention than charter schools and other private nonsectarian schools in public discourse, in recent years, the Supreme Court's First Amendment jurisprudence has allowed private church schools to make great strides in achieving state funding. At a time where public education... 2022 Yes
Kindaka Sanders THE WATCHMAN'S TIME TO KILL: THE RIGHT TO VIGILANTE JUSTICE IN THE JIM CROW SOUTH 25 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 355 (Spring, 2022) C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 355 A. Vigilante Justice. 363 B. Birth and Background of the 14th Amendment. 375 II. An Uninterrupted History of Un-Protection. 382 A. Federal Betrayal. 383 B. White Supremacy and White Impunity. 384 1. Jim Crow Massacres. 385 2. Jim Crow Lynchings. 388 3. Injustice on the Jury. 390 III. The Fourteenth... 2022 Yes
Ruth Colker THE WHITE SUPREMACIST CONSTITUTION 2022 Utah Law Review 651 (2022) The United States Constitution is a document that, during every era, has helped further white supremacy. White supremacy constitutes a political, economic and cultural system in which whites overwhelmingly control power and material resources, conscious and unconscious ideas of white superiority and entitlement are widespread, and relations of... 2022 Yes
Prof. Sandra L. Rierson, Melanie H. Schwimmer THE WILMINGTON MASSACRE AND COUP OF 1898 AND THE SEARCH FOR RESTORATIVE JUSTICE 14 Elon Law Review 117 (2022) I. Introduction. 118 II. North Carolina's Ethnic Cleansing: The Wilmington Massacre and Coup of 1898. 121 A. The Establishment and Rise of Wilmington. 122 B. Wilmington's Thriving Black Middle Class and the Ephemeral Success of Reconstruction. 124 C. White Backlash and Democrats' Plot to Overthrow the Fusionist Government. 128 D. Death and... 2022 Yes
Martha S. Jones THICK WOMEN AND THE THIN NINETEENTH AMENDMENT 20 Georgetown Journal of Law & Public Policy 1 (Winter, 2022) The Nineteenth Amendment's centennial year--2020--got started long before the calendar date arrived. The staging of laser light shows, the design of floats, the organization of speeches and symposia, and the unveiling of monuments in that year required efforts that began long before, all in anticipation of marking 100 years of a Constitution that... 2022  
Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw THIS IS NOT A DRILL: THE WAR AGAINST ANTIRACIST TEACHING IN AMERICA 68 UCLA Law Review 1702 (February, 2022) On January 5, 2022, Professor Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw received the 2021 Triennial Award for Lifetime Service to Legal Education and the Legal Profession from the Association of American Law Schools (AALS). In this modified acceptance speech delivered at the 2022 AALS Awards Ceremony, she reflects on the path that brought her to this moment and... 2022  
Dr. Angélica Guevara TO BE, OR NOT TO BE, WILL LONG COVID BE REASONABLY ACCOMMODATED IS THE QUESTION 23 Minnesota Journal of Law, Science & Technology 253 (2/17/2022) To be, or not to be, that is the reasonable accommodation question: whether Long COVID will be reasonably accommodated now that it is covered under disability antidiscrimination law. Some manifestations of Long COVID will certainly be considered disabilities under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). However, even if it is considered a... 2022  
Khrystan Nicole Policarpio, Grecia Orozco TOGETHER BUT UNEQUAL: HOW THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC EXACERBATED THE INEQUITIES HARMING MINORITY LAW STUDENTS 55 U.C. Davis Law Review Online 91 (May, 2022) C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 93 I. The Law School Institutional Structure. 95 A. Law School Admissions Have Numerous Structural Hurdles for Minority Law Students. 96 1. LSAT. 96 2. Law School Rankings. 99 B. Law Schools Continue to Uphold White Supremacy in the Classroom. 101 C. Minority Law School Graduates Continue to Face Structural... 2022 Yes
Sandra L. Rierson TRACING THE ROOTS OF THE THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT 91 UMKC Law Review 57 (Fall, 2022) The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice. The quotation above belongs to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who delivered the line several times, including during a speech given in Montgomery, Alabama, at the completion of a protest march that began in Selma. That march came to define the Civil Rights Movement, as Black... 2022  
Melvin J. Kelley IV TRADING PLACES OR CHANGING SPACES? AT THE CROSSROADS OF DEFINING AND REDRESSING SEGREGATION 54 Connecticut Law Review 845 (July, 2022) Segregation rates have remained stagnant in many regions of the United States since the passage of the federal Fair Housing Act (FHA) in 1968 and experts expect them to increase in large metropolitan areas. Consequently, poor Blacks will be subjected to the extreme deprivation of group life chances that characterize racially and economically... 2022  
C. Scott Holmes , Amelia O'Rourke-Owens TRESPASSING ON WHITE SUPREMACY: THE LEGACY OF ESTABLISHMENT WHITE SUPREMACY IN NORTH CAROLINA 100 North Carolina Law Review Forum 149 (2022) White supremacy offers a unifying framework for understanding the legal history of North Carolina, the current legal regime of the state, and the actions of the state in responding to protests demanding redress from that insidious history. We provide a history of the First Reconstruction in the state, the leading role of white lawyers in the... 2022 Yes
Michael Vitiello TRUMP'S LEGACY: THE LONG-TERM RISKS TO AMERICAN DEMOCRACY 26 Lewis & Clark Law Review 467 (2022) While President Trump was extreme in his contempt for legal and political norms, his presidency was consistent with the direction in which the Republican Party has moved over the past several decades. Strategies put in place by Trump and other Republicans, along with institutional aspects of our country's democracy, assure the Republican Party's... 2022  
Tiffany R. Wright, Ciarra N. Carr, Jade W.P. Gasek TRUTH AND RECONCILIATION: THE KU KLUX KLAN HEARINGS OF 1871 AND THE GENESIS OF SECTION 1983 126 Dickinson Law Review 685 (Spring, 2022) Over the course of seven months in 1871, Congress did something extraordinary for the time: It listened to Black people. At hearings in Washington, D.C. and throughout the former Confederate states, Black women and men--who just six years earlier were enslaved and barred from testifying in Southern courts-- appeared before Congress to tell their... 2022  
Philip T.K. Daniel, J.D., Ed.D. , Jeffrey C. Sun, J.D., Ph.D. TWO CASES, TWO DIFFERENT FREEDOMS: STUDENT FREE SPEECH THROUGH SOCIAL MEDIA AND THE RIGHTS OF MINORITIZED STUDENTS 27 Texas Journal on Civil Liberties & Civil Rights 179 (Spring, 2022) Introduction. 179 I. Balancing Student Free Speech And Maintaining Order In Schools. 183 II. The Limits Of Freedom On Minoritized Students. 186 III. When Language Is Considered A Threat. 190 A. Discerning An Actual Threat. 191 B. Applying The True Threat Inquiry To Bell. 196 IV. Evaluating Speech With A Liberating Systems Lens. 201 A. Accounting... 2022  
Marissa Jackson Sow UKRAINIAN REFUGEES, RACE, AND INTERNATIONAL LAW'S CHOICE BETWEEN ORDER AND JUSTICE 116 American Journal of International Law 698 (October, 2022) The resurgence of racist rhetoric and policies concerning people fleeing the war in Ukraine serves as a reminder that the ostensible goals of the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and 1967 Protocol are regularly eschewed by states making decisions about how to allocate grants of asylum. This Essay makes the claim that racial... 2022  
Matthew L.M. Fletcher UNCOMFORTABLE TRUTHS ABOUT SOVEREIGNTY AND WEALTH 27 Roger Williams University Law Review 288 (Spring, 2022) In 2007 my brother, Zeke Fletcher, represented the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians (GTB). He observed a public meeting in Whitewater Township, Grand Traverse County, Michigan. The meeting was concerned with the Department of the Interior's planned acquisition of lands in trust for GTB's benefit in an area where the tribe already... 2022 Yes
Olúf<>mi O. Táíwò, Georgetown University, olufemi.taiwo@georgetown.edu VICE SIGNALING 22 Journal of Ethics & Social Philosophy 295 (September, 2022) I'm going to say this and I mean--down to my subatomic particles--what I say. And I actually don't care what anyone might think about it: I don't give a FUCK about Justine Damond and what happened to her. I don't give a fuck because most white people didn't give a fuck when police murdered seven-year-old Aiyana Stanley-Jones as she lay on a couch,... 2022 Yes
Emily R. Larrabee VIOLENCE IN THE NAME OF THE CONFEDERACY: AMERICA'S FAILURE TO DEFEAT THE LOST CAUSE 14 Drexel Law Review 451 (2022) 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  
Daniel R. Ortiz VOTING RIGHTS AND THE 1971 VIRGINIA CONSTITUTION 37 Journal of Law & Politics 155 (Spring, 2022) Mr. Glass: Mr. President, in the midst of differing contentions and suggested perplexities, there stands out the uncontroverted fact that the article of suffrage which the Convention will today adopt does not necessarily deprive a single white man of the ballot, but will inevitably cut from the existing electorate four-fifths of the negro voters.... 2022 Yes
Paul Finkelman VOTING RIGHTS, DEMOCRACY, AND THE CONSTITUTION AFTER JANUARY 6, 2021 82 Louisiana Law Review 483 (Winter, 2022) C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 484 I. Will Changing the Rules Change the Outcomes?. 486 II. Violent Vote Suppression in the South. 493 III. Legal Subterfuge and Black Vote Suppression. 494 IV. Historical Suppression of Voters Through Legal Mechanisms. 497 V. Black Voting Rights from the Revolutionary Era to the Eve of World War I. 498 VI.... 2022  
Alexandra L. Raleigh WE CAN'T BREATHE: REIMAGINING EQUAL PROTECTION AS A COLLECTIVE RIGHT 72 Case Western Reserve Law Review 785 (Spring, 2022) George Floyd couldn't breathe. We can't either. We live in fear. Fear of walking outside. Wearing a hoodie. Going for a jog. Sleeping in our own home. Existing. Every day, a new hashtag. Every hour, a new injustice. Every second, more pain. We don't deserve to live like this--and we continue to fight until white supremacy no longer permeates every... 2022 Yes
Barbara Kritchevsky WELCOMING LAKEESHA AND VINCENZO TO THE RESTATEMENT OF TORTS 100 Nebraska Law Review 637 (2022) C1-2TABLE OF CONTENTS I. Introduction. 637 II. Names in the Restatements. 646 A. Illustrations in the Restatements of Torts. 648 B. Naming Actors in Other Legal Writing. 656 III. We've Been Here Before: Lessons from the Struggles for Gender Equality. 662 IV. Implicit Bias and the Myth of Neutrality. 671 A. The Myth of Neutrality. 672 B. Implicit... 2022  
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