About
Over the last fifty years, the Chicanx-Latinx Law Review (CLLR) has provided an essential forum for the discussion of issues affecting the Latinx community, and other marginalized communities, that mainstream law journals continue to ignore. In publishing Volume One, CLLR introduced to the nation the first legal journal that recognized how common law, statutes, legislative policy, and political propositions impact the Latinx community. The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, Nevada Supreme Court, and New Jersey Superior Court have cited CLLR.
Volume 19, Issue 1, 1998
Symposium-Difference, Solidarity and Law: Building Latina/o Communities Through LatCrit Theory
Foreword
March!
[No abstract]
Articles
Article Commentaries
All Flesh Shall See It Together
[No abstract]
Essays: Race, Ethnicity and Gender as Anti-Subordination Identities: LatCrit Perspectives
Introduction: Constructing Latina/o Identities
[No abstract]
A Vision towards Liberation
[No abstract]
Immigration and Latino Identity
[No abstract]
African-Americans, Latinos, and the Construction of Race: Toward an Epistemic Coalition
[No abstract]
Who's Afraid of Tiger Woods
[No abstract]
Language and Other Lethal Weapons: Cultural Politics and the Rites of Children as Translators of Culture
[No abstract]
Telling Stories, Telling Self: Using Narrative to Uncover Latinas' Voices and Agency in the Legal Profession
[No abstract]
American Family Law: HiStory-WhoStory
[No abstract]
Essays: Composing LatCrit Theory: Self-Critical Reflections on "Latinas/os"
Introduction: The Ties that Bind
[No abstract]
Who Are We?
[No abstract]
Essays: Religion and Spirituality in Outsider Theory: Toward a LatCrit Conversation
Falling from Grace: A Meditation on LatCrit II
[No abstract]
Disturbing the Peace
[No abstract]
The Missing Center - Cuba's Catholic Church
[No abstract]