This essay tells the story of Scottsboro, one of the most important legal events of the twentieth century, in which nine black teenagers were falsely accused of rape, sentenced to death, and twice successfully appealed their convictions to the United States Supreme Court. In addition to describing the Scottsboro episode in some detail, the essay seeks to draw some lessons from this story: Why did the Supreme Court’s first modern criminal procedure cases tend to involve southern blacks as defendants? Why did southern states seem to regress in their treatment of black criminal defendants in cases such as Scottsboro? What were the long-term ramifications of these Court decisions for the rights of black criminal defendants in the South? Why wer...
This essay advocates that prosecutors’ peremptory strikes should be eliminated in interracial capita...
Much has been written recently on African American reparations and reparations movements worldwide, ...
Scipio Jones, a prominent African-American attorney from Little Rock, represented the twelve men con...
This essay tells the story of Scottsboro, one of the most important legal events of the twentieth ce...
In civil cases that took place in southern courts from the end of the Civil War to the mid-twentieth...
No crime in American history - let alone a crime that never occurred - produced as many trials, conv...
This essay assesses black literature as a medium for working out popular understandings of America’s...
The constitutional law of state criminal procedure was born between the First and Second World Wars....
Elbert Parr Tuttle joined the federal bench in 1954, shortly after the Supreme Court decided Brown v...
This article draws on more than 600 higher court cases in eight southern states to show that African...
Schools in the South and throughout the country are resegregating. Why is this occuring, and why wer...
For years, black southerners’ ability to vote has been a key framework around which southern history...
Some one hundred and six years before the United States Supreme Court\u27s 1986 decision in Batson v...
This Essay asserts that in McCleskey v. Kemp, the Supreme Court created a problematic standard for t...
The author explains his conclusion that the Supreme Court, as a matter of conscience, considers raci...
This essay advocates that prosecutors’ peremptory strikes should be eliminated in interracial capita...
Much has been written recently on African American reparations and reparations movements worldwide, ...
Scipio Jones, a prominent African-American attorney from Little Rock, represented the twelve men con...
This essay tells the story of Scottsboro, one of the most important legal events of the twentieth ce...
In civil cases that took place in southern courts from the end of the Civil War to the mid-twentieth...
No crime in American history - let alone a crime that never occurred - produced as many trials, conv...
This essay assesses black literature as a medium for working out popular understandings of America’s...
The constitutional law of state criminal procedure was born between the First and Second World Wars....
Elbert Parr Tuttle joined the federal bench in 1954, shortly after the Supreme Court decided Brown v...
This article draws on more than 600 higher court cases in eight southern states to show that African...
Schools in the South and throughout the country are resegregating. Why is this occuring, and why wer...
For years, black southerners’ ability to vote has been a key framework around which southern history...
Some one hundred and six years before the United States Supreme Court\u27s 1986 decision in Batson v...
This Essay asserts that in McCleskey v. Kemp, the Supreme Court created a problematic standard for t...
The author explains his conclusion that the Supreme Court, as a matter of conscience, considers raci...
This essay advocates that prosecutors’ peremptory strikes should be eliminated in interracial capita...
Much has been written recently on African American reparations and reparations movements worldwide, ...
Scipio Jones, a prominent African-American attorney from Little Rock, represented the twelve men con...