In actions brought under a variety of federal statutes barring racial discrimination, the federal judiciary has increasingly relied upon statistical evidence in determining the existence of unlawful discrimination. This article will seek to identify the nature and extent of such reliance on statistical evidence, discuss the reasons for the increasing use of statistical evidence, analyze the significance of the increase, and explore the potential for using statistical evidence in actions by the Ohio Civil Rights Commission
This article considers case law relating to state actors and the racist practices of labor unions
Racial disparities remain a disturbing fact of American life but whether those disparities are the p...
This article is based on a pioneering empirical study of racial harassment in the workplace in which...
In actions brought under a variety of federal statutes barring racial discrimination, the federal ju...
Substantial confusion exists among lawyers, litigants and the courts about how to identify and prove...
Proving race discrimination in a criminal case using statistical evidence has been a difficult endea...
This Article provides two principal contributions to the study of wrongful convictions. First, it fi...
The jurisprudence that has developed in the last twenty-five years under Batson v. Kentucky may be f...
This Note summarizes and synthesizes developments in statistical analyses of racial profiling data a...
This article initially examines the traditional theories of proof in Title VII cases. It then discus...
In this article, I hope to contribute to the ongoing debate on how our society treats the problem of...
This Article examines theories of fact finding and rules of evidence, as well as critiques of scient...
Today’s legal civil rights struggle is in large measure the effort to retain the foundational premis...
This Article presents a straightforward and intuitive method for understanding and interpreting stat...
Last term the Supreme Court handed down three decisions in which it defined with some precision the ...
This article considers case law relating to state actors and the racist practices of labor unions
Racial disparities remain a disturbing fact of American life but whether those disparities are the p...
This article is based on a pioneering empirical study of racial harassment in the workplace in which...
In actions brought under a variety of federal statutes barring racial discrimination, the federal ju...
Substantial confusion exists among lawyers, litigants and the courts about how to identify and prove...
Proving race discrimination in a criminal case using statistical evidence has been a difficult endea...
This Article provides two principal contributions to the study of wrongful convictions. First, it fi...
The jurisprudence that has developed in the last twenty-five years under Batson v. Kentucky may be f...
This Note summarizes and synthesizes developments in statistical analyses of racial profiling data a...
This article initially examines the traditional theories of proof in Title VII cases. It then discus...
In this article, I hope to contribute to the ongoing debate on how our society treats the problem of...
This Article examines theories of fact finding and rules of evidence, as well as critiques of scient...
Today’s legal civil rights struggle is in large measure the effort to retain the foundational premis...
This Article presents a straightforward and intuitive method for understanding and interpreting stat...
Last term the Supreme Court handed down three decisions in which it defined with some precision the ...
This article considers case law relating to state actors and the racist practices of labor unions
Racial disparities remain a disturbing fact of American life but whether those disparities are the p...
This article is based on a pioneering empirical study of racial harassment in the workplace in which...