New voices of future lawyers are particularly important in the area of civil rights because racial problems are theirs to confront in the next decades. Teaching techniques developed by Paulo Freire have facilitated the enlistment of students in the racial struggle. By these techniques teachers, as well as students, learn through sharing, and students become active participants, rather than passive observers, in the learning process. The educational process, Freire counsels, \u27\u27must begin with the solution of the teacher-student contradiction, by reconciling the poles of the contradiction so that both are simultaneously teachers and students. In the fall of 1988, two dozen students enrolled in a Harvard Law School seminar Civil Rights ...
WE MUST DISMANTLE all barriers at once! \u27 No, go slow! These were two of the opposing cries hea...
Despite the vast research on African Americans and affirmative action, little qualitative analysis h...
This paper addresses the historical developments in the legal struggle for racial equality. Examinin...
In 1992 had been teaching for four years at the University of Pennsylvania Law School. I taught voti...
The relatively recent development of jurisprudence and pedagogy in the areas of critical legal studi...
It seems to me that by drawing on the myth of Prometheus, Harry Arthurs has struck an important chor...
A response and critizism of Are Law Schools Racist?: A Talk with Richard Delgad
It is both an honor and a pleasure to write the Foreword for this issue of the National Black Law Jo...
Professor McGee addresses the endeavor of Black Americans--their struggle against discrimination and...
Leading legal lights weigh in on key issues of race and the law—collected in honor of one of the ori...
Flagrant racism has characterized the Trump era from the onset. Beginning with the 2016 presidentia...
The struggle by black people to obtain freedom, justice, and dignity is as old as this nation. At ti...
Twenty-five years ago, law schools were in the developing stages of a pitched battle for the future ...
In their contribution to this symposium honoring Professor John Calmore, Professors Robert Chang and...
In the United States, following the case of Brown v. Board of Education (1954), federal judges with ...
WE MUST DISMANTLE all barriers at once! \u27 No, go slow! These were two of the opposing cries hea...
Despite the vast research on African Americans and affirmative action, little qualitative analysis h...
This paper addresses the historical developments in the legal struggle for racial equality. Examinin...
In 1992 had been teaching for four years at the University of Pennsylvania Law School. I taught voti...
The relatively recent development of jurisprudence and pedagogy in the areas of critical legal studi...
It seems to me that by drawing on the myth of Prometheus, Harry Arthurs has struck an important chor...
A response and critizism of Are Law Schools Racist?: A Talk with Richard Delgad
It is both an honor and a pleasure to write the Foreword for this issue of the National Black Law Jo...
Professor McGee addresses the endeavor of Black Americans--their struggle against discrimination and...
Leading legal lights weigh in on key issues of race and the law—collected in honor of one of the ori...
Flagrant racism has characterized the Trump era from the onset. Beginning with the 2016 presidentia...
The struggle by black people to obtain freedom, justice, and dignity is as old as this nation. At ti...
Twenty-five years ago, law schools were in the developing stages of a pitched battle for the future ...
In their contribution to this symposium honoring Professor John Calmore, Professors Robert Chang and...
In the United States, following the case of Brown v. Board of Education (1954), federal judges with ...
WE MUST DISMANTLE all barriers at once! \u27 No, go slow! These were two of the opposing cries hea...
Despite the vast research on African Americans and affirmative action, little qualitative analysis h...
This paper addresses the historical developments in the legal struggle for racial equality. Examinin...