This article is an attempt to start a conversation about where we find ourselves in the plight to help our most challenged public schools. It is not intended to be a comprehensive solution to the problem, but rather a hard look at how, after decades of many efforts, we are further away from the equal education contemplated by the United States Supreme Court\u27s historic decision in Brown v. Board of Education. This article does not desire to simply cast blame for the failures of our children, but to send a reminder that, as Frederick Douglass would say, we can hardly have rain without thunder and lightning. Change always comes slow in the educational setting because of the great power education creates in the most ordinary human beings. ...
This article examines the role that the courts have played in desegregating American public schools ...
This Article discusses the relationship between federal equal protection doctrine and the states\u27...
Nearly fifteen years after the passage of No Child Left Behind, the failures of our educational syst...
This article is an attempt to start a conversation about where we find ourselves in the plight to he...
This article reflects upon changes in U.S. education since the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s 1954 decision...
This Article analyzes the intersection of state constitutional law with federal equal protection, re...
As federal law continues to devolve more education policy making to states, state courts will remain...
In this article, Professor Garda explains how the separate but equal doctrine rejected in Brown be...
The United States ushered in a new era in American history on 17 May 1954 in its monumental ruling i...
Education rights cases often devolve into a farce of constitutional brinkmanship played by a miserab...
This article explores why the promise of ending our dual society, as first articulated in Brown v. B...
This Article examines reparations as a means of supporting systemic reform of public education, focu...
Article published in the Michigan State University School of Law Student Scholarship Collection
This Article focuses on how the Supreme Court\u27s conception of the public school as either an inst...
Recent data shows that two-thirds of states are funding education at lower levels than in 2008. Some...
This article examines the role that the courts have played in desegregating American public schools ...
This Article discusses the relationship between federal equal protection doctrine and the states\u27...
Nearly fifteen years after the passage of No Child Left Behind, the failures of our educational syst...
This article is an attempt to start a conversation about where we find ourselves in the plight to he...
This article reflects upon changes in U.S. education since the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s 1954 decision...
This Article analyzes the intersection of state constitutional law with federal equal protection, re...
As federal law continues to devolve more education policy making to states, state courts will remain...
In this article, Professor Garda explains how the separate but equal doctrine rejected in Brown be...
The United States ushered in a new era in American history on 17 May 1954 in its monumental ruling i...
Education rights cases often devolve into a farce of constitutional brinkmanship played by a miserab...
This article explores why the promise of ending our dual society, as first articulated in Brown v. B...
This Article examines reparations as a means of supporting systemic reform of public education, focu...
Article published in the Michigan State University School of Law Student Scholarship Collection
This Article focuses on how the Supreme Court\u27s conception of the public school as either an inst...
Recent data shows that two-thirds of states are funding education at lower levels than in 2008. Some...
This article examines the role that the courts have played in desegregating American public schools ...
This Article discusses the relationship between federal equal protection doctrine and the states\u27...
Nearly fifteen years after the passage of No Child Left Behind, the failures of our educational syst...