Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- COVID-19 (2)
- Contract (2)
- White supremacy (2)
- Whiteness (2)
- Bargaining power (1)
-
- Black thought (1)
- Blackness (1)
- Breach (1)
- Business Law (1)
- CRT (1)
- Contract Law (1)
- Contract law (1)
- Contracts (1)
- Critical Race Theory (1)
- Economic inequality (1)
- Exploitation (1)
- Extraction (1)
- Force Majeure (1)
- Kara Walker (1)
- MAC (1)
- MAE (1)
- Material Adverse Change (1)
- Material Adverse Effect (1)
- Mergers and Acquisitions (1)
- Natural Disasters (1)
- Pandemic (1)
- Property (1)
- Race (1)
- Social inequality (1)
- Sugar Sphinx (1)
- Publication
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Law
Integrating A Racial Capitalism Framework Into First-Year Contracts: A Pathway To Anti-Capitalist Lawyering, Chaumtoli Huq
Integrating A Racial Capitalism Framework Into First-Year Contracts: A Pathway To Anti-Capitalist Lawyering, Chaumtoli Huq
Journal of Civil Rights and Economic Development
(Excerpt)
Nationwide protests against police brutality in the summer of 2020, coupled with the high rates of COVID-19 deaths among Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC), has brought to the foreground the role of the legal system in upholding structural racism and economic inequality. This renewed focus spotlighted our legal education: what are law schools doing as the institutions that educate future lawyers to be anti-racist, so they can, in turn, create a legal profession that is anti-racist? Being anti-racist is making conscious choices to fight racism in all its forms: individual, interpersonal, institutional, and structural. Being anti-racist also …
Changes To Material Adverse Effect Clauses Following Major Events: Evidence From Covid-19, Vincent Scala
Changes To Material Adverse Effect Clauses Following Major Events: Evidence From Covid-19, Vincent Scala
St. John's Law Review
(Excerpt)
In November 2019, LVMH Moët Hennessey Louis Vuitton, the world’s leading luxury goods company, announced plans to acquire Tiffany & Company, the prominent American jeweler. The transaction was reported to be worth more than $16 billion, which would have been the largest deal ever in the luxury goods industry. Following the announcement, LVMH’s chief executive officer stated that Tiffany would “thrive for centuries to come.” Nearly ten months later, the acquisition was in shambles as the parties squared off in a legal battle in the Delaware Court of Chancery. The companies were driven to litigation over anxieties about the …
Contract Law & Racial Inequality: A Primer, Danielle Kie Hart
Contract Law & Racial Inequality: A Primer, Danielle Kie Hart
St. John's Law Review
(Excerpt)
America was founded on institutionally recognized and supported oppression, namely, slavery and conquest. So, the fact that the inequality spawned by this oppression continues to exist today should surprise absolutely no one. That said, the extent of the racialized social and economic inequality that pervades American society today is being exposed in horrifying and glaring detail, as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.
African Americans, the Latinx community, indigenous communities, and immigrants are at much greater risk of getting sick and dying from COVID-19 because of now widely-acknowledged systemic health and social inequality and inequity. More specifically, in July …
Whiteness As Contract, Marissa Jackson Sow
Whiteness As Contract, Marissa Jackson Sow
Faculty Publications
2020 forced scholars, policymakers, and activists alike to grapple with the impact of “twin pandemics”—the COVID-19 pandemic, which has devastated Black and Indigenous communities, and the scourge of structural and physical state violence against those same communities—on American society. As atrocious acts of anti-Black violence and harassment by law enforcement officers and white civilians are captured on recording devices, the gap between Black people’s human and civil rights and their living conditions has become readily apparent. Less visible human rights abuses camouflaged as private commercial matters, and thus out of the reach of the state, are also increasingly exposed as …
Whiteness As Guilt: Attacking Critical Race Theory To Redeem The Racial Contract, Marissa Jackson Sow
Whiteness As Guilt: Attacking Critical Race Theory To Redeem The Racial Contract, Marissa Jackson Sow
Faculty Publications
The year of racial justice awakening following George Floyd’s 2020 murder have been accompanied by a rise in attacks on Black thought, including Critical Race Theory, led by far-right activists who are invested in maintenance of a white supremacist status quo in the United States. This Essay uses artist Kara Walker’s 2014 Sugar Sphinx to contextualize the critiques on Critical Race Theory and other manifestations of Black intellectualism as a campaign for perpetual absolution of white guilt, and even redemption of white supremacy, that is openly embraced by white nationalists but also secretly nourished—and cherished—by the white liberal elite.