Groundbreaking Women in Law: Ellen Ash Peters, Dorothy Wright Nelson, Joan Miday Krauskopf
The first fourteen women law professors in America who paved the way for Herma Hill Kay and Ruth Bader Ginsburg and all of those who followed.
Read More >The first fourteen women law professors in America who paved the way for Herma Hill Kay and Ruth Bader Ginsburg and all of those who followed.
Read More >The first fourteen women law professors in America who paved the way for Herma Hill Kay and Ruth Bader Ginsburg and all of those who followed.
Read More >The first fourteen women law professors in America who paved the way for Herma Hill Kay and Ruth Bader Ginsburg and all of those who followed.
Read More >This guest post is part of our #SCMS2021 conference series. Visit our virtual exhibit to learn more. In this video, scholar Samantha Sheppard offers a sneak peek at her book, Sporting Blackness: Race, Embodiment, …
Read More >“For the upcoming issue we have several timely reflections; on the dangers of conflating Arab and Muslim peoples, on the capitol insurrection, and on Martin Luther King’s legacy in the context of Black Lives Matter”
Read More >By Haidee Wasson, author of Everyday Movies: Portable Film Projectors and the Transformation of American Culture This guest post is part of our #SCMS2021 conference series. Visit our virtual exhibit to learn more. Have …
Read More >The first fourteen women law professors in America who paved the way for Herma Hill Kay and Ruth Bader Ginsburg and all of those who followed.
Read More >By Stephen Tuffnell, author of Made in Britain: Emigration and Nation in Nineteenth-Century America London’s underground map is now globally ubiquitous. Part electrical schematic, part Mondrian neo-plasticism it is perhaps one of …
Read More >By Dave Roediger, author of Coloured White: Transcending the Racial Past “Smear Campaign” originated in a pair of talks I gave in 2000, one at Bowling Green State University in Ohio and …
Read More >“Movement that centers on providing racial justice for Black people must always be unapologetically Black. In our work, we articulate that in an environment that is highly racialized, we must realize the limits of white support, specifically if such approval is conditional on factors such as racial resentment.”
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