This Article argues that the current moment invites reconsideration of these critiques. The rise of new social movements—from marriage equality to Black Lives Matter to the recent mobilization against President Trump’s immigration order—and the response of a new generation of movement lawyers eager to lend support has refocused attention on the appropriate role that lawyers should play in advancing progressive social change. Rather than fall back on familiar critical themes, the time is ripe for developing a new affirmative vision
The rise of social movements in US legal scholarship is a current response to an age-old problem in ...
This essay was influenced by a class on Law and Social Movements that Professors Guinier and Torres ...
This Article examines Perry v. Brown, the federal lawsuit challenging Proposition 8, through a socia...
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...
This Article explores an important development in American legal theory and practice over the past d...
Seeking to engage with scholars and activists who call for lawyer solidarity with social movements, ...
In one of the most striking developments in American legal scholarship over the past quarter century...
The first Part of this Article poses a descriptive, sociological-type model of the multifaceted infl...
This essay takes a new look at legal ethics issues salient to movement lawyers who maintain a sust...
The role of lawyers in social change movements is more important than ever as communities mobilize a...
In this article the author argues that the aims, contexts, and methods of client activism are paramo...
This Article suggests that although civil litigation remains a viable tool, the vanishing trial has ...
There is increasing recognition that the ableist trope “Justice is Blind” is a decades-long gaslight...
This article analyzes two questions that are raised by Professor Yamamoto\u27s provocative article. ...
The rise of social movements in US legal scholarship is a current response to an age-old problem in ...
This essay was influenced by a class on Law and Social Movements that Professors Guinier and Torres ...
This Article examines Perry v. Brown, the federal lawsuit challenging Proposition 8, through a socia...
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...
This Article explores an important development in American legal theory and practice over the past d...
Seeking to engage with scholars and activists who call for lawyer solidarity with social movements, ...
In one of the most striking developments in American legal scholarship over the past quarter century...
The first Part of this Article poses a descriptive, sociological-type model of the multifaceted infl...
This essay takes a new look at legal ethics issues salient to movement lawyers who maintain a sust...
The role of lawyers in social change movements is more important than ever as communities mobilize a...
In this article the author argues that the aims, contexts, and methods of client activism are paramo...
This Article suggests that although civil litigation remains a viable tool, the vanishing trial has ...
There is increasing recognition that the ableist trope “Justice is Blind” is a decades-long gaslight...
This article analyzes two questions that are raised by Professor Yamamoto\u27s provocative article. ...
The rise of social movements in US legal scholarship is a current response to an age-old problem in ...
This essay was influenced by a class on Law and Social Movements that Professors Guinier and Torres ...
This Article examines Perry v. Brown, the federal lawsuit challenging Proposition 8, through a socia...