Law school curricula and dominant pedagogical approaches reinforce the sense of entitlement and privilege that individuals from historically privileged groups enjoy in the law school context. In this article, the author attempts to show how particular critical pedagogical practices have the potential to reinforce a politics of identity that does little to shift relations of power between white students and students racialized as "Other," leaving "white" privilege intact. She concludes with some suggestions for how law professors and law students can work towards displacing relations of power both inside and outside the classroom¾relations that privilege certain groups of people over others-through the creation of a "common social terrain" t...
Law schools, both innovative and traditional, cutting edge and hidebound, demand and therefore teach...
Conventional wisdom holds that the principal task of a law school is to teach law students to think...
Amidst the surge of national conversations about race and racism, law schools, which educate decisio...
Law school curricula and dominant pedagogical approaches reinforce the sense of entitlement and priv...
There is resounding consensus that diversity in legal education is a priority. Yet, North American l...
This essay begins and ends with Fisher II, the most recent addition to the law on diversity in admis...
Many of today’s law students experience a triple-threat. They suffer from the solo status that accom...
This paper assesses the recent proliferation of diversity and inclusion claims in law schools across...
When students enter law school, they embody the intersection between law and culture, and law school...
Law students of color typically avoid seeking the mentorship of white law professors, largely white ...
The scene, drawn from memory, is a first-year law school classroom. It is the early 1980s and the cl...
Given that law schools are in a unique position to adequately address racism, how can law schools an...
Numerous challenges in educating about issues of privilege have been documented in the academic lite...
This article addresses the compelling interest states have in the educational benefit of diversity i...
The purpose of this article is to explore ways to integrate into the classroom the Marxist perspecti...
Law schools, both innovative and traditional, cutting edge and hidebound, demand and therefore teach...
Conventional wisdom holds that the principal task of a law school is to teach law students to think...
Amidst the surge of national conversations about race and racism, law schools, which educate decisio...
Law school curricula and dominant pedagogical approaches reinforce the sense of entitlement and priv...
There is resounding consensus that diversity in legal education is a priority. Yet, North American l...
This essay begins and ends with Fisher II, the most recent addition to the law on diversity in admis...
Many of today’s law students experience a triple-threat. They suffer from the solo status that accom...
This paper assesses the recent proliferation of diversity and inclusion claims in law schools across...
When students enter law school, they embody the intersection between law and culture, and law school...
Law students of color typically avoid seeking the mentorship of white law professors, largely white ...
The scene, drawn from memory, is a first-year law school classroom. It is the early 1980s and the cl...
Given that law schools are in a unique position to adequately address racism, how can law schools an...
Numerous challenges in educating about issues of privilege have been documented in the academic lite...
This article addresses the compelling interest states have in the educational benefit of diversity i...
The purpose of this article is to explore ways to integrate into the classroom the Marxist perspecti...
Law schools, both innovative and traditional, cutting edge and hidebound, demand and therefore teach...
Conventional wisdom holds that the principal task of a law school is to teach law students to think...
Amidst the surge of national conversations about race and racism, law schools, which educate decisio...