Search for: "White v. Crow" Results 241 - 260 of 359
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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]
25 Nov 2008, 9:17 am
Jury nullification was also used frequently in the Jim Crow South to thwart the prosecutions of Ku Klux Klan members and other whites who had intimidated, attacked, and murdered blacks. [read post]
29 Jun 2023, 1:34 pm by Ilya Somin
She is obviously right that blacks are on average worse off than whites on various social and economic dimensions, and that the legacy of slavery, Jim Crow, and other discrimination is a large part of the reason why. [read post]
15 Nov 2013, 8:40 am by Gritsforbreakfast
Coke's inauguration restored Democratic control in Texas.Imagine if, upon receipt of the Supreme Court order in Bush v. [read post]
26 Aug 2020, 8:44 pm by ernst
  In that year she published “The Rise and Fall of Unconscionability as the ‘Law of the Poor,’” which placed Williams v. [read post]
18 Mar 2017, 12:53 pm by Stephen Griffin
  The white “redeemer” governments that took over had few resources and slashed state budgets. [read post]
4 Feb 2010, 7:35 am by Erin Miller
”  More significant was his draft opinion in Regents of the University of California v. [read post]
15 Jun 2007, 5:37 pm
It is something to think about.We can't sign off without commenting briefly on the US Supreme Court's decision in Bowles v. [read post]
9 Apr 2007, 5:54 am
Indeed, his racism illustrates how white supremacy, prevalent in slavery and Jim Crow segregation, persists in jokes, musical lyrics and popular culture. [read post]
21 May 2010, 11:24 am by Randy Barnett
I think the better analysis of the Thirteenth Amendment was explained by Justice Harlan in his dissenting opinions in the Civil Rights Cases and Plessy v. [read post]
24 May 2010, 6:36 am by David Bernstein
Wagner was willing to remove an antidiscrimination provision from the Wagner Act to placate the AFL, which wanted to use its new power to exclude blacks, FDR was unwilling to support anti-lynching legislation, and so on (more examples can be found in my Only One Place of Redress book)—and 1964, when a significant majority of the white public supported Brown v. [read post]