Richard Rothstein is a Senior Fellow at the Haas Institute and a research associate at the Economic Policy Institute, where he works on policy issues regarding education and race. He currently researches and writes about the history of government’s role in the creation of residential segregation. Rothstein was a senior fellow at the Chief Justice Earl Warren Institute on Law and Social Policy at Berkeley’s law school, until that institute closed at the end of 2015.* * http://haasinstitute.berkeley.edu/richard-rothstei
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Law Professor and Accidental Historian is a timely and important reader addressing many of the most ...
Racial segregation characterizes every metropolitan area in the U.S. and bears responsibility for ou...
Richard Rothstein, author of The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated ...
Property scholars have neither forgotten nor ignored the government\u27s role in creating and furthe...
On March 31, 2011, Professor of Law, Michael Klarman of Harvard Law School delivered the Georgetown ...
In their contribution to this symposium honoring Professor John Calmore, Professors Robert Chang and...
In the United States, following the case of Brown v. Board of Education (1954), federal judges with ...
Flier announcing a lecture presented September 20, 1995, by Martin V. Melosi, Professor of History a...
From the video archives of the Cornell Law School Heritage Project. The speaker is Rudolf Schlesinge...
The Race Relations in America Lecture Series is an outstanding opportunity for the San Francisco Bay...
The Richard J. Childress Memorial Lecture, named in honor of former Dean Richard J. Childress (1969-...
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Flagrant racism has characterized the Trump era from the onset. Beginning with the 2016 presidentia...
Is America Post-Racial in the Age of Obama? Charles Ogletree, the Harvard Law School Jesse Climen...
The courts must bear a heavy share of the burden of American racism. An outpouring of historical sch...
Law Professor and Accidental Historian is a timely and important reader addressing many of the most ...