Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 1995 - Abstracts

Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 1995
TitleSubjectAuthors
Bringing small business development to urban neighborhoods.(Economic Justice in America's Cities: Visions and Revisions of a Movement)Social sciencesSuggs, Robert E.
Easing the fear of too much justice: a compromise proposal to revise the Racial Justice Act.Social sciencesSchoeman, Paul
Falling through the cracks: voting rights and the census.(Case Note)Social sciencesJudish, Nathan, Judish, Julia E.
Liberating the Thirteenth Amendment.Social sciencesColbert, Douglas L.
Listen to the children: the decision to transfer juveniles to adult court.Social sciencesGuttman, Catherine R.
Rounding out the table: opening an impoverished poverty discourse to community voices.(Economic Justice in America's Cities: Visions and Revisions of a Movement)Social sciencesSears, Brad
Safe enough to learn: placing an affirmative duty of protection on public schools under 42 U.S.C. section 1983.Social sciencesColson, Deborah Austern
Selling the integrity of the system of precedent: selective publication, depublication, and vacatur.Social sciencesSlavitt, Howard
Separatist religious groups and the Establishment Clause.(Case Note)Social sciencesWheeler, Alison
The color of tradition: Critical Race Theory and postmodern constitutional traditionalism.Social sciencesHayman, Robert L., Jr.
The Fourth Amendment's forcing of flawed choices: giving content to freedom for residents of public housing.(Case Note)Social sciencesGeorge, Erika R.
The search for citizen-soldiers: female cadets and the campaign against the Virginia Military Institute.(Case Note)Social sciencesKayyem, Juliette
Transforming Section 8: using federal housing subsidies to promote individual housing choice and desegregation. (Section 8 rental assistance certificates)(Economic Justice in America's Cities: Visions and Revisions of a Movement)Social sciencesTegeler, Philip D., Hanley, Michael L., Liben, Judith
Welfare reform at the limit: the futility of "ending welfare as we know it."(Economic Justice in America's Cities: Visions and Revisions of a Movement)Social sciencesBacker, Larry Cata
We make the road by walking: immigrant workers, the Workplace Project, and the struggle for social change.(Economic Justice in America's Cities: Visions and Revisions of a Movement)Social sciencesGordon, Jennifer
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