Challenged by adverse experiences in the first year of law school, the author of this paper uses her experience to trigger an analysis of identity discourse in the law. In Part I, she shares her experience and characterizes it as an epistemological dilemma to the traditional legal methods of identity construction. She introduces the two traditional methods of identity construction: the impartial trajectory and the categorical trajectory and briefly demonstrates that, because her experience was specific to her first year of law school at Dalhousie University, both trajectories limit her claim to knowledge. Using her own experience and others found in the literature, the author reconstructs a legal paradigm to identity. Throughout the paper, ...
This paper engages critically with the new orthodoxy holding that individuals have a right to know...
As presently constructed, equal protection doctrine is an identity based jurisprudence, meaning that...
Recent controversies over identity claims have prompted questions about who should qualify for affir...
Challenged by adverse experiences in the first year of law school, the author of this paper uses her...
Scholars from Haraway to Foucault to Freud, from Bourdieu to Erikson to Scarry have theorized identi...
Progress regarding equality and social identities has moved in a bipolar fashion: popular engagement...
This thesis argues that the legal subject is unable to exercise control over their sexual and gender...
The authors conduct an analysis of a number of first year and practitioner legal writing texts in or...
Legal actors examine identity claims with varying degrees of intensity. For instance, to be consider...
The authors conduct an analysis of a number of first year and practitioner legal writing texts in or...
Legal scholarship has long concerned itself with race, gender, and other core identities. Economics,...
The author examines three aspects of dispute resolution involving cases of physical and sexual abuse...
Individual identity is a key concept in legal classifications. However, the concept of identity has ...
Constitutional law has made a mess of the relationship between expression and equality. Much of the ...
Identity is a multifaceted concept with various meanings and interpretations. In a legal context, id...
This paper engages critically with the new orthodoxy holding that individuals have a right to know...
As presently constructed, equal protection doctrine is an identity based jurisprudence, meaning that...
Recent controversies over identity claims have prompted questions about who should qualify for affir...
Challenged by adverse experiences in the first year of law school, the author of this paper uses her...
Scholars from Haraway to Foucault to Freud, from Bourdieu to Erikson to Scarry have theorized identi...
Progress regarding equality and social identities has moved in a bipolar fashion: popular engagement...
This thesis argues that the legal subject is unable to exercise control over their sexual and gender...
The authors conduct an analysis of a number of first year and practitioner legal writing texts in or...
Legal actors examine identity claims with varying degrees of intensity. For instance, to be consider...
The authors conduct an analysis of a number of first year and practitioner legal writing texts in or...
Legal scholarship has long concerned itself with race, gender, and other core identities. Economics,...
The author examines three aspects of dispute resolution involving cases of physical and sexual abuse...
Individual identity is a key concept in legal classifications. However, the concept of identity has ...
Constitutional law has made a mess of the relationship between expression and equality. Much of the ...
Identity is a multifaceted concept with various meanings and interpretations. In a legal context, id...
This paper engages critically with the new orthodoxy holding that individuals have a right to know...
As presently constructed, equal protection doctrine is an identity based jurisprudence, meaning that...
Recent controversies over identity claims have prompted questions about who should qualify for affir...