For a hundred years after the first Black student entered an American law school in 1868, Blacks were barely visible in law schools. Starting in the late 1960s, they made modest gains in enrollment. Black representation in law school peaked within a decade, and leveled off by the mid-1970s. This enrollment plateau continued until the mid-1980s, when signs appeared that Blacks might again become a rarity in law schools. This article focuses on the barriers to Blacks\u27 entry into law school from the nineteenth century, when law schools came into prominence, until the present. An examination of the structural and racial forces explains why so few Blacks entered, and a disproportionately few continue to enter law school. The article proceeds ...
Professor McGee discusses the Black legal community\u27s fight from the 1930s through the 1950s that...
In the spring of 1965, only one African American student and no Latino students attended the Univers...
In past years, almost all of America\u27s black lawyers came from historically black colleges and un...
In this Article, using a wide array of published and unpublished data, researchers attempt to docume...
This paper argues that Black people who aspire to be lawyers endure marginalized existences, which s...
The purpose of this research is to examine the process of acquiring a law school education through a...
Over the past few years, law schools have been dealing with a drastic and, so far, unyielding declin...
African-American\u27 and Mexican-American enrollment in law schools has declined sharply since 1993....
In an article in Stanford Law Review, Richard Sander argues that the practice of American law school...
This article examines two obstacles that African-Americans currently face in obtaining admission to ...
Among the innumerable challenges facing law schools today, perhaps none of them are more challenging...
Recent data of the legal profession have raised red flags about the lack of diversity in the field a...
In this Article, Professor Greenberg argues that law schools claim to treat African American student...
This article is a response to Richard H. Sander\u27s article, A Systemic Analysis of Affirmative Act...
In the modern era efforts at recruitment, selection, admission and retention of minorities to law sc...
Professor McGee discusses the Black legal community\u27s fight from the 1930s through the 1950s that...
In the spring of 1965, only one African American student and no Latino students attended the Univers...
In past years, almost all of America\u27s black lawyers came from historically black colleges and un...
In this Article, using a wide array of published and unpublished data, researchers attempt to docume...
This paper argues that Black people who aspire to be lawyers endure marginalized existences, which s...
The purpose of this research is to examine the process of acquiring a law school education through a...
Over the past few years, law schools have been dealing with a drastic and, so far, unyielding declin...
African-American\u27 and Mexican-American enrollment in law schools has declined sharply since 1993....
In an article in Stanford Law Review, Richard Sander argues that the practice of American law school...
This article examines two obstacles that African-Americans currently face in obtaining admission to ...
Among the innumerable challenges facing law schools today, perhaps none of them are more challenging...
Recent data of the legal profession have raised red flags about the lack of diversity in the field a...
In this Article, Professor Greenberg argues that law schools claim to treat African American student...
This article is a response to Richard H. Sander\u27s article, A Systemic Analysis of Affirmative Act...
In the modern era efforts at recruitment, selection, admission and retention of minorities to law sc...
Professor McGee discusses the Black legal community\u27s fight from the 1930s through the 1950s that...
In the spring of 1965, only one African American student and no Latino students attended the Univers...
In past years, almost all of America\u27s black lawyers came from historically black colleges and un...