Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Affirmative action (1)
- Anglo culture (1)
- Constitutional Convention (1)
- Economical hierarchies (1)
- Enlightenment thinkers (1)
-
- Federal constitution (1)
- Founding Fathers (1)
- Great Law of Peace (1)
- Iroquois Confederacy (1)
- Iroquois culture (1)
- Male dominance (1)
- Matriarchal aspects (1)
- Minorities (1)
- Natural law (1)
- Nineteenth amendment (1)
- Participatory democracies (1)
- Patriarchal American model (1)
- Private property (1)
- Race and law (1)
- Rights of women (1)
- Role models (1)
- Universal suffrage (1)
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Law and Race
Affirmative Action As A Majoritarian Device: Or, Do You Really Want To Be A Role Model?, Richard Delgado
Affirmative Action As A Majoritarian Device: Or, Do You Really Want To Be A Role Model?, Richard Delgado
Michigan Law Review
Have you ever noticed how affirmative action occupies a place in our system of law and politics far out of proportion to its effects in the real world? Liberals love talking about and sitting on committees that define, oversee, defend, and give shape to it. Conservatives are attached to the concept for different reasons: they can rail against it, declare it lacking in virtue and principle, and use it to rally the troops. Affirmative action is something they love to hate. The program also generates a great deal of paper, conversation, and jobs probably more of the latter for persons …
The Iroquois Great Law Of Peace And The United States Constitution: How The Founding Fathers Ignored The Clan Mothers, Renée Jacobs
The Iroquois Great Law Of Peace And The United States Constitution: How The Founding Fathers Ignored The Clan Mothers, Renée Jacobs
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.