Search for: "State v. A. Black Crow" Results 201 - 220 of 309
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15 Jul 2009, 2:52 pm
Louis black social fraternity by characterizing the ideology of the black power movement as "Jim Crow thinking" that had nothing to offer Negroes except violence. [read post]
3 Sep 2013, 4:00 am by Devlin Hartline
Most, if not all, states have theft laws that substantially track the Model Penal Code. [read post]
23 Aug 2013, 6:41 am by Clark
Let's start with an easy example: location / observer: Jim Crow south right: right of blacks to attend school as equals social acknowledgement: false gov acknowledgement: false modern view on abstract right: true By this I mean that in the pre-Brown v Board of Ed era in Kansas, blacks did not have the right to attend school as equals according to either the social milieu in Kansas or according to the government in Kansas. [read post]
4 Jun 2014, 9:00 am by Jamie Maclaren
The ghosts of slavery and Jim Crow still haunted most places that we saw. [read post]
2 Aug 2012, 3:17 pm by Ilya Somin
Given my criteria, the Peonage Cases of the early 1900s surely rank high, as they enabled numerous southern blacks to escape a system of forced labor and did so at a time when Jim Crow racism was at its height, and the political branches of government showed little willingness to protect black rights. [read post]
29 Jun 2023, 1:34 pm by Ilya Somin
One of my black classmates at Yale Law School was the son of the attorney general of his state. [read post]
2 Oct 2022, 4:00 pm by James Romoser
In his majority opinion in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. [read post]
31 Jul 2007, 7:29 am
The pattern goes all the way back to Dred Scott, the infamous 1856 case declaring that black people could not be citizens of the nation or any state. [read post]
28 Oct 2011, 7:22 am by lawmrh
Joseph, CR 87-08901, counsel for Joseph argued that the black man’s conviction should be vacated because the State used, or failed to use, peremptory strikes on the basis of race, in violation of Batson v. [read post]
24 May 2010, 6:36 am by David Bernstein
Therefore, when it comes to the “Second Reconstruction,” liberalism proved its worth over the competing ideologies of conservatism, which focused myopically on state sovereignty, and libertarianism, which had no clue how to deal with the legacy of Jim Crow oppression. [read post]
9 Jul 2017, 2:56 am by NCC Staff
The move gutted the Privilege and Immunities Clause of its effect and kept the door open for Jim Crow laws in the South. [read post]
17 Sep 2019, 7:56 am by Alicia Maule
Ritchie and Kay Whitlock Race and the Death Penalty: The Legacy of “McCleskey v. [read post]