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Full-Text Articles in Law and Race
This Bridge Called Our Backs: An Introduction To “The Future Of Critical Race Feminism”, Angela Onwuachi-Willig
This Bridge Called Our Backs: An Introduction To “The Future Of Critical Race Feminism”, Angela Onwuachi-Willig
Faculty Scholarship
On April 1, 2005, the U.C. Davis Law Review hosted in its annual symposium an extremely distinguished group of scholars, who addressed central theories of Critical Race Feminism (“CRF”) in a daylong series of inspiring, thought-provoking, cutting-edge, and captivating presentations. The panelists at the symposium — in front of a packed room of students, professors, and local residents — delved into issues as diverse as the unique role of immigrant women in community economic development, societal failure to deal with domestic violence from a multidimensional perspective, the proposal of a contractual good faith claim based on Professors Devon Carbado and …
The Trial Of Bigger Thomas: Race, Gender, And Trespass, Bennett Capers
The Trial Of Bigger Thomas: Race, Gender, And Trespass, Bennett Capers
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Defending The Future Voices Of Critical Race Feminism, Margaret E. Montoya
Defending The Future Voices Of Critical Race Feminism, Margaret E. Montoya
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Latcrit At Ten Years, Margaret E. Montoya
Denial, Antoinette M. Sedillo Lopez
On Justitia, Race, Gender, And Blindness, Bennett Capers
On Justitia, Race, Gender, And Blindness, Bennett Capers
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
The Architecture Of Inclusion: Advancing Workplace Equity In Higher Education, Susan Sturm
The Architecture Of Inclusion: Advancing Workplace Equity In Higher Education, Susan Sturm
Faculty Scholarship
The path to workplace'equality has become a difficult one to navigate. No one can safely rely upon the strategies developed in the 1960s and 1970s to integrate workplaces. Employers face legal and political challenges both for failing to diversify their workplaces and for diversity efforts to overcome that failure. Civil rights and women's rights advocates battle to hold on to the litigation victories of the past, even as they acknowledge judicial remedies' shrinking availability and limited efficacy in addressing many aspects of current-day equality. Anti-discrimination regulators contend with inadequate resources to carry out their traditional enforcement activities, as well as …