This Article contends that segregationist justifications for miscegenation and segregation laws shows that those laws effectively imposed a legal duty on whites to adhere to cultural norms of endogamy. Dominant social groups enforce rules of endogamy—the cultural practice of encouraging people to marry within their own social group—to protect the dominant status of their individual members and of the social group in general. Thus, laws prohibiting interracial marriages regulated white desire in order to protect the dominant status of whites as a group. The Loving Court, therefore, ultimately was correct in declaring that miscegenation laws denied blacks equal protection. Part II of this Article discusses miscegenation laws and the Loving ...
This Article engages in a critical comparative analysis of the recent history and likely future traj...
This article first examines the miscegenation paradigm in terms of a seven-point conceptual framewor...
This Article is an invited special projects paper for the Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law R...
This Article contends that segregationist justifications for miscegenation and segregation laws show...
Systemic discrimination against minority groups in the United States’ justice system has been unremi...
This Essay works through essentialist language to reveal the multidimensional nature of racial segre...
Fifty years after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Loving v. Virginia that prohibitions against inter...
This Article marks the 40th anniversary of Loving v. Virginia- the landmark decision that responded ...
Part I of this Article introduces a brief discussion of the history of antimiscegenation laws and, s...
Part I analyzes the Loving decision striking down antimiscegenation laws and examines the segregatio...
This Article examines the view, championed by Justice Scalia, that traditionalism can and should pla...
This Article engages in a critical comparative analysis of the recent history and likely future traj...
In Part I of the Article, I examine early cases in which the Court described segregation as a form o...
In this essay, Professor Siegel examines efforts to reform racial and gender status law in the ninet...
For over a century, many Americans believed that interracial marriage was unnatural. From the late 1...
This Article engages in a critical comparative analysis of the recent history and likely future traj...
This article first examines the miscegenation paradigm in terms of a seven-point conceptual framewor...
This Article is an invited special projects paper for the Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law R...
This Article contends that segregationist justifications for miscegenation and segregation laws show...
Systemic discrimination against minority groups in the United States’ justice system has been unremi...
This Essay works through essentialist language to reveal the multidimensional nature of racial segre...
Fifty years after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Loving v. Virginia that prohibitions against inter...
This Article marks the 40th anniversary of Loving v. Virginia- the landmark decision that responded ...
Part I of this Article introduces a brief discussion of the history of antimiscegenation laws and, s...
Part I analyzes the Loving decision striking down antimiscegenation laws and examines the segregatio...
This Article examines the view, championed by Justice Scalia, that traditionalism can and should pla...
This Article engages in a critical comparative analysis of the recent history and likely future traj...
In Part I of the Article, I examine early cases in which the Court described segregation as a form o...
In this essay, Professor Siegel examines efforts to reform racial and gender status law in the ninet...
For over a century, many Americans believed that interracial marriage was unnatural. From the late 1...
This Article engages in a critical comparative analysis of the recent history and likely future traj...
This article first examines the miscegenation paradigm in terms of a seven-point conceptual framewor...
This Article is an invited special projects paper for the Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law R...