Anthony Farley brings a focus on class back to Critical Race Theory by exploring the intersection of race and class as a singular concept that finds its creation in the marking of difference through the primal scene of accumulation. Professor Farley\u27s Essay contends that the rule of law is the endless unfolding of that primal scene of accumulation. By choosing to pray for legal relief rather than dismantling the system, the slave chooses enslavement over freedom. Professor Farley discusses the concept of ownership as violence and explains that property rights are the means of protecting the master class until everything and everyone comes to be owned. The commodification of race and its twin concept of class through the market based syst...
This Article examines the manner in which southern courts labored to instill the legal meaning of wh...
This essay scrutinizes the persistence of inequality in the United States through a human rights len...
A common view of our present society is that it is largely egalitarian and classless. This paper pro...
Anthony Farley brings a focus on class back to Critical Race Theory by exploring the intersection of...
To commemorate the Michigan Journal of Race & Law\u27s tenth anniversary, they hosted a symposium in...
Backlash against black civil rights gains and recent public debates over the determinants of black p...
Leading legal lights weigh in on key issues of race and the law—collected in honor of one of the ori...
This chapter discusses the concept of class in an important subfield, the sociology of law. Class, a...
This essay chronicles the development of ClassCrits, an organization of US legal scholars that seeks...
Race shaped property law for everyone in the United States, and we are all the poorer for it. This t...
This Article surveys the extent and causes of racial inequality with respect to control over propert...
The theory of racial capitalism offers insights into the relationship between class and race, provid...
This essay chronicles the development of ClassCrits, an organization of US legal scholars that seeks...
The policy choices that lawyers promote will have far more significance for our children and our gra...
This essay is both personal and pedagogical. My hope is that it issues a clarion call to legal educa...
This Article examines the manner in which southern courts labored to instill the legal meaning of wh...
This essay scrutinizes the persistence of inequality in the United States through a human rights len...
A common view of our present society is that it is largely egalitarian and classless. This paper pro...
Anthony Farley brings a focus on class back to Critical Race Theory by exploring the intersection of...
To commemorate the Michigan Journal of Race & Law\u27s tenth anniversary, they hosted a symposium in...
Backlash against black civil rights gains and recent public debates over the determinants of black p...
Leading legal lights weigh in on key issues of race and the law—collected in honor of one of the ori...
This chapter discusses the concept of class in an important subfield, the sociology of law. Class, a...
This essay chronicles the development of ClassCrits, an organization of US legal scholars that seeks...
Race shaped property law for everyone in the United States, and we are all the poorer for it. This t...
This Article surveys the extent and causes of racial inequality with respect to control over propert...
The theory of racial capitalism offers insights into the relationship between class and race, provid...
This essay chronicles the development of ClassCrits, an organization of US legal scholars that seeks...
The policy choices that lawyers promote will have far more significance for our children and our gra...
This essay is both personal and pedagogical. My hope is that it issues a clarion call to legal educa...
This Article examines the manner in which southern courts labored to instill the legal meaning of wh...
This essay scrutinizes the persistence of inequality in the United States through a human rights len...
A common view of our present society is that it is largely egalitarian and classless. This paper pro...