The Law Unbound!: A Richard Delgado Reader

Summary
This book offers the best and most influential writings of Richard Delgado, one of the founding figures of the critical race theory movement and one of the earliest scholars to address the harms of hate speech. With excerpts from his classic law review articles, conversations with his famous alter ego Rodrigo Crenshaw, and comments on the vicissitudes of academic life, this book spans topics such as hate speech, affirmative action, the war on terror, the endangered status of black men, and the place of Latino/as in the civil rights equation.
Similar Books
-
Reflections on the Revolution in France
by Edmund Burke
-
On the Emancipation of Women
by Vladimir Lenin
-
A History of Barbados
by Hilary McD. Beckles
-
Rachel Carson's Silent Spring: Words that changed the World
by Alex MacGillivray
-
The Early Greeks
by R.J. Hopper
-
Sergii Bulgakov: Towards a Russian Political Theology
by Rowan Williams
-
The Russian Revolution: 1917-1921
by Ronald Kowalski
-
The Russian Revolution
by Ronald Kowalski
-
Race and Racism in Literature
by Charles E. Wilson
-
The Oxford Companion to American History
by Thomas H. Johnson
-
Historians & Race: Autobiography and the Writing of History
by Paul A. Cimbala
-
Working People of California
by Daniel Cornford
-
Boris Pasternak: Volume 1, 1890–1928: A Literary Biography
by Christopher Barnes
-
Boris Pasternak: A Literary Biography, Vol. 1, 1890-1928
by Christopher Barnes
-
The Art of the Impossible
by Boris Berezovsky
-
The Anti-Corn League
by Norman McCord
-
Law Unbound!
by Richard Delgado
-
Rethinking Ukrainian History
by Ivan L. Rudnytsky
-
-
Recovering the U.S. Hispanic Literary Heritage
by Erlinda Gonzáles-Berry
-
Nation, Ideas, Identities: Essays in Honour of Ramsay Cook
by Michael D. Behiels
-
-
From Gorky to Pasternak: Six Writers in Soviet Russia
by Helen Muchnic
-
-