Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- International Law (2)
- American Politics (1)
- Asian Studies (1)
- Civil Rights and Discrimination (1)
- Defense and Security Studies (1)
-
- Economic History (1)
- Economic Policy (1)
- Economics (1)
- Growth and Development (1)
- Intellectual Property Law (1)
- International Economics (1)
- International Humanitarian Law (1)
- International Relations (1)
- International Trade Law (1)
- International and Area Studies (1)
- Law and Race (1)
- Military, War, and Peace (1)
- Peace and Conflict Studies (1)
- Policy History, Theory, and Methods (1)
- Political Science (1)
- Political Theory (1)
- Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration (1)
- Public Policy (1)
- Social and Behavioral Sciences (1)
- Institution
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Law
Symposium Introduction: Walking With Destiny, Roy L. Brooks
Symposium Introduction: Walking With Destiny, Roy L. Brooks
San Diego Law Review
During the Enlightenment, the poet Robert Burns lamented, “Man’s inhumanity to man [m]akes countless thousands mourn.” Burns was looking back over centuries of human injustices—atrocities—as the empirical basis for his mournful reflection. But even now, long after the Enlightenment, we have not been able to curb our proclivity for committing atrocities. What we have been able to do after all these centuries, however, is enlarge the human capacity for redressing—repairing—the damage wrought by our atrocities. As atrocities do not appear to be ending, redress has become our destiny.
California is attempting to walk with this destiny. Our most populous state …
The Eagle’S Eye On The Rising Dragon: Why The United States Has Shifted Its View Of China, Jackson Craig Scott
The Eagle’S Eye On The Rising Dragon: Why The United States Has Shifted Its View Of China, Jackson Craig Scott
Baker Scholar Projects
Since 1978, the People’s Republic of China (PRC) has long been viewed as an economic trading partner of the United States of America (US). The PRC has grown to be an economic powerhouse, and the US directly helped with that process and still benefits from it. However, during the mid-2010’s, US rhetoric began to turn sour against the PRC. The American government rhetoric toward the PRC, beginning with the Obama administration, switched. As Trump’s administration came along, they bolstered this rhetoric from non-friendly to more or less hostile. Then, Biden’s administration strengthened Trump’s rhetoric. Over the past ten years or …
Fighting For Whiteness In Ukraine, Marissa Jackson Sow
Fighting For Whiteness In Ukraine, Marissa Jackson Sow
Law Faculty Publications
Teri McMurtry-Chubb’s Race Unequals: Overseer Contracts, White Masculinities, and the Formation of Managerial Identity in the Plantation Economy offers groundbreaking insights into the gendered economic hierarchies internal to the body politic of whiteness through its examination of the limitations that plantation overseers’ contracts in the American Deep South placed on their ability to exercise the proprietorship and contracting authority prerequisite to white identity. This Essay uses the Ukrainian campaign to be recognized as a liberal white nation, and formally become a member of the West, as a contemporary case study of how whiteness remains hegemonized and subject to the ability …