This Article revisits the debate over minority voice scholarship, particularly African-American scholarship, that raged in the late 1980s and early 1990s with the advent of critical race theory (CRT). Many critical race theorists elevated the voices of minority scholars, arguing that scholarship in the minority voice should be accorded greater legitimacy than work on race produced by white intellectuals. Many white and some African-American scholars disagreed with Crits \u27 analyses. They charged that good scholarship by African Americans should be judged as a fact-in-itself, not ghettoized or subjected to less rigorous analysis than scholarship by white academics. This Article explores the work of four current up-and-coming black legal s...
Twenty-five years ago, Professor Richard Delgado published The Imperial Scholar. The article asserte...
This article is about the discourses in law school classes in which non-white students are in classe...
The Article discusses critical race theory as a paradigm shift, and further dispels the notion that ...
This Article offers the first comprehensive account of the marginalization of the African American C...
This article introduces a theory of jurisprudential critique that has developed in African American ...
Despite the vast research on African Americans and affirmative action, little qualitative analysis h...
Critical Race Theory (CRT) emerged from two movements in legal education. One was the Critical Legal...
Over the last four years, I have taught a course in Critical Race Theory at the University of Virgin...
This essay examines the theory of individual agency that propels the central thesis in Kenneth Mack\...
This Article revisits the history of Critical Race Theory (CRT) through a prism that highlights its ...
In this Article, Professor Torres examines the meaning and content of Critical Legal Studies (CLS), ...
Harlon L. Dalton, Racial Healing: Confronting the Fear Between Blacks and Whites. New York: Doubleda...
In Kimberld Williams Crenshaw\u27s lead article in this Commentary Issue she contends that critical ...
This Article revisits the history of Critical Race Theory (CRT) through a prism that highlights its ...
Twenty-five years ago, Professor Richard Delgado published The Imperial Scholar. The article asserte...
This article is about the discourses in law school classes in which non-white students are in classe...
The Article discusses critical race theory as a paradigm shift, and further dispels the notion that ...
This Article offers the first comprehensive account of the marginalization of the African American C...
This article introduces a theory of jurisprudential critique that has developed in African American ...
Despite the vast research on African Americans and affirmative action, little qualitative analysis h...
Critical Race Theory (CRT) emerged from two movements in legal education. One was the Critical Legal...
Over the last four years, I have taught a course in Critical Race Theory at the University of Virgin...
This essay examines the theory of individual agency that propels the central thesis in Kenneth Mack\...
This Article revisits the history of Critical Race Theory (CRT) through a prism that highlights its ...
In this Article, Professor Torres examines the meaning and content of Critical Legal Studies (CLS), ...
Harlon L. Dalton, Racial Healing: Confronting the Fear Between Blacks and Whites. New York: Doubleda...
In Kimberld Williams Crenshaw\u27s lead article in this Commentary Issue she contends that critical ...
This Article revisits the history of Critical Race Theory (CRT) through a prism that highlights its ...
Twenty-five years ago, Professor Richard Delgado published The Imperial Scholar. The article asserte...
This article is about the discourses in law school classes in which non-white students are in classe...
The Article discusses critical race theory as a paradigm shift, and further dispels the notion that ...