This article will examine the history of the use of a person's race in the legal system, particularly in criminal cases, and detail how the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals' decision in Saldano I and IH represents a radical departure from historical precedent concerning the prohibition the use of race in determining a person's fate
The constitutional law of state criminal procedure was born between the First and Second World Wars....
This article chronicles the Burger Court\u27s inability to fashion a suitable remedy for racism in t...
For over thirty-five years, the Supreme Court has grappled with the controversial issue of affirmati...
This article examines the historical use of a person’s race in the legal system, more specifically i...
This article discusses the tension between individualized justice and equality in death penalty case...
Proving race discrimination in a criminal case using statistical evidence has been a difficult endea...
Some one hundred and six years before the United States Supreme Court\u27s 1986 decision in Batson v...
In this book chapter, published in TRAYVON MARTIN, RACE, AND AMERICAN JUSTICE: WRITING WRONG (Sense ...
This article discusses the Supreme Court\u27s failure to provide a clear and effective remedy for di...
This article examines the effect of the race of the victim on legal decision making in capital and n...
This note identifies the overwhelming influence of how the race of the victim and the defendant affe...
Statistical studies showing unconscious racial bias in capital selection matter under the eighth ame...
This Article evaluates the constitutional feasibility of using race-based remedies to address racial...
This Article addresses the Supreme Court\u27s application of the Equal Protection Clause to the sele...
This article examines prosecutorial discretion and argues it is a major cause of racial inequality i...
The constitutional law of state criminal procedure was born between the First and Second World Wars....
This article chronicles the Burger Court\u27s inability to fashion a suitable remedy for racism in t...
For over thirty-five years, the Supreme Court has grappled with the controversial issue of affirmati...
This article examines the historical use of a person’s race in the legal system, more specifically i...
This article discusses the tension between individualized justice and equality in death penalty case...
Proving race discrimination in a criminal case using statistical evidence has been a difficult endea...
Some one hundred and six years before the United States Supreme Court\u27s 1986 decision in Batson v...
In this book chapter, published in TRAYVON MARTIN, RACE, AND AMERICAN JUSTICE: WRITING WRONG (Sense ...
This article discusses the Supreme Court\u27s failure to provide a clear and effective remedy for di...
This article examines the effect of the race of the victim on legal decision making in capital and n...
This note identifies the overwhelming influence of how the race of the victim and the defendant affe...
Statistical studies showing unconscious racial bias in capital selection matter under the eighth ame...
This Article evaluates the constitutional feasibility of using race-based remedies to address racial...
This Article addresses the Supreme Court\u27s application of the Equal Protection Clause to the sele...
This article examines prosecutorial discretion and argues it is a major cause of racial inequality i...
The constitutional law of state criminal procedure was born between the First and Second World Wars....
This article chronicles the Burger Court\u27s inability to fashion a suitable remedy for racism in t...
For over thirty-five years, the Supreme Court has grappled with the controversial issue of affirmati...