Various groups of people have been the victims of oppression throughout time and across national borders and cultures. Many forms of oppression continue to exist all over the world today, including in the United States. I have been particularly concerned with oppression on the basis of race. The responses to oppression have taken many forms, ranging from passivity and acquiescence to rebellion. Much of the response, however, takes place between these extremes, often in the form of ongoing collective action by more or less organized groups. Broadly speaking, these actions have come to be known as social movements, and they have been the subject of a great deal of scholarly examination. Through this scholarship, we have learned much about the...
Around the world, a global legal empowerment movement is transforming the way in which people access...
Linking critical legal thinking to constitutional scholarship and a practical tradition of US lawye...
In one of the most striking developments in American legal scholarship over the past quarter century...
Various groups of people have been the victims of oppression throughout time and across national bor...
The question of whether lawyers help or hurt social movements has been hotly debated by legal schola...
In recent years, there has been a surge in grassroots organizing and activism, creating new possibil...
There is increasing recognition that the ableist trope “Justice is Blind” is a decades-long gaslight...
The first Part of this Article poses a descriptive, sociological-type model of the multifaceted infl...
This article examines the relation between movement lawyering and American legal theory, explores th...
Much of the literature on social movements centers on cyclical theories of political opportunity. Wh...
The NAACP’s early successes with test-case litigation created a model for using law as a social move...
Double Oppression (DO) is a phenomenon that encompasses the experience of individuals facing interse...
All social movements have, at one point or another in their development, been confronted with the qu...
Seeking to engage with scholars and activists who call for lawyer solidarity with social movements, ...
A Review of Rebellious Lawyering: One Chicano\u27s Vision of Progressive Law Practice by Gerald P. ...
Around the world, a global legal empowerment movement is transforming the way in which people access...
Linking critical legal thinking to constitutional scholarship and a practical tradition of US lawye...
In one of the most striking developments in American legal scholarship over the past quarter century...
Various groups of people have been the victims of oppression throughout time and across national bor...
The question of whether lawyers help or hurt social movements has been hotly debated by legal schola...
In recent years, there has been a surge in grassroots organizing and activism, creating new possibil...
There is increasing recognition that the ableist trope “Justice is Blind” is a decades-long gaslight...
The first Part of this Article poses a descriptive, sociological-type model of the multifaceted infl...
This article examines the relation between movement lawyering and American legal theory, explores th...
Much of the literature on social movements centers on cyclical theories of political opportunity. Wh...
The NAACP’s early successes with test-case litigation created a model for using law as a social move...
Double Oppression (DO) is a phenomenon that encompasses the experience of individuals facing interse...
All social movements have, at one point or another in their development, been confronted with the qu...
Seeking to engage with scholars and activists who call for lawyer solidarity with social movements, ...
A Review of Rebellious Lawyering: One Chicano\u27s Vision of Progressive Law Practice by Gerald P. ...
Around the world, a global legal empowerment movement is transforming the way in which people access...
Linking critical legal thinking to constitutional scholarship and a practical tradition of US lawye...
In one of the most striking developments in American legal scholarship over the past quarter century...