This article confronts the serious implications of a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision, Alexander v. Sandoval, which eliminated an important legal avenue for civil rights plaintiffs. For over 35 years, individuals have been allowed to bring lawsuits directly challenging violations of rights set forth in the federal regulations implementing Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Because these actions could be grounded in proof of disparate impact, rather than discriminatory intent, they allowed for some claims that could not go forward under other legal authorities, such as the Fourteenth Amendment. While the author concludes by identifying key remaining options, he highlights the real damage done by this decision
This Article identifies the most important issues which must be dealt with after Monell v, Departmen...
this article is organized as follows. To orient readers on what is at stake, Section I provides a br...
This article argues that the Third Circuit, and the courts that have implicitly approved private dis...
This article confronts the serious implications of a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision, Alexander v...
The Supreme Court in Alexander v. Sandoval limited plaintiffs\u27 ability to challenge racially ineq...
Environmental justice litigants have used federal courts to challenge actions on the part of federal...
As the Civil Rights Act of 1964 turns fifty, antidiscrimination law has become unfashionable. Civil ...
The United States Supreme Court promulgated the 1983 amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Proced...
This article contends that, for purposes of settling the law, courts entertaining civil rights lawsu...
This Article accepts Richard Epstein\u27s premise that civil rights laws have become corrupt set for...
This Article will explore the origins of the Court’s color-blind interpretation of the Fourteenth Am...
The United States Supreme Court’s discourse on discrimination affects how fundamental civil rights -...
More than most lawsuits, school desegregation cases touch basic economic interests and deep-seated p...
Modern civil rights policy is, as the late Justice Scalia warned, at “war.” On the one hand, some la...
This Article suggests that the U.S. Supreme Court, through its decisions in cases alleging race disc...
This Article identifies the most important issues which must be dealt with after Monell v, Departmen...
this article is organized as follows. To orient readers on what is at stake, Section I provides a br...
This article argues that the Third Circuit, and the courts that have implicitly approved private dis...
This article confronts the serious implications of a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision, Alexander v...
The Supreme Court in Alexander v. Sandoval limited plaintiffs\u27 ability to challenge racially ineq...
Environmental justice litigants have used federal courts to challenge actions on the part of federal...
As the Civil Rights Act of 1964 turns fifty, antidiscrimination law has become unfashionable. Civil ...
The United States Supreme Court promulgated the 1983 amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Proced...
This article contends that, for purposes of settling the law, courts entertaining civil rights lawsu...
This Article accepts Richard Epstein\u27s premise that civil rights laws have become corrupt set for...
This Article will explore the origins of the Court’s color-blind interpretation of the Fourteenth Am...
The United States Supreme Court’s discourse on discrimination affects how fundamental civil rights -...
More than most lawsuits, school desegregation cases touch basic economic interests and deep-seated p...
Modern civil rights policy is, as the late Justice Scalia warned, at “war.” On the one hand, some la...
This Article suggests that the U.S. Supreme Court, through its decisions in cases alleging race disc...
This Article identifies the most important issues which must be dealt with after Monell v, Departmen...
this article is organized as follows. To orient readers on what is at stake, Section I provides a br...
This article argues that the Third Circuit, and the courts that have implicitly approved private dis...