Michigan Journal of Race & Law
Encyclopedia
The Michigan Journal of Race & Law is a student-run civil rights journal published at the University of Michigan Law School
University of Michigan Law School
The University of Michigan Law School is the law school of the University of Michigan, in Ann Arbor. Founded in 1859, the school has an enrollment of about 1,200 students, most of whom are seeking Juris Doctor or Master of Laws degrees, although the school also offers a Doctor of Juridical...

. It has published articles by such authors as Anita Hill
Anita Hill
Anita Faye Hill is an American attorney and academic—presently a professor of social policy, law and women's studies at Brandeis University's Heller School for Social Policy and Management. She became a national figure in 1991 when she alleged that U.S. Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas had...

. The Journal publishes semiannually and holds numerous film series and critical race theory events, and holds symposia on issues related to the intersection of race and law.

History of the Journal

In the fall of 1993, four third-year law students at the University of Michigan Law School, Heather Martinez, Eddy Meng, Leslie Newman, and Dan Varner, reconstituted the then-defunct minority scholarship reading group as the Critical Race Theory Reading Group. The Reading Group gave its participants, individually and collectively, the opportunity to read many of the authors who inspired them and made meaningful their experiences in law school. The Reading Group also provided a forum — and even a home — in which to explore issues of racial inequality, issues that were pervasive in the minds and lives of the students, but strangely absent in the traditional law school environment.

By the following year, the Reading Group participants had come to recognize the monthly discussions of critical race scholarship as a necessary component of legal education, but it somehow was not enough. There were two options available at that time to further promote and advance discourse on issues relating to race and law. One involved lobbying the existing law journals to adequately address issues of racial inequality in their publication. This avenue included advocating that the existing journals alter their membership policies to increase the number of students of color on their staffs. Yet this option brought with it the limitations inherent in attempting to operate within the parameters of preexisting institutions. The other option — which ultimately turned out to be the most viable and desirable — was to form a new journal that adequately recognized the voices of people of color and that was dedicated unequivocally to discussing issues of racial inequality in the law.

The Journal planned a symposium, Toward a New Civil Rights Vision, to bring together practitioners, scholars, students, and activists to address critical issues relating to race and law. The symposium, held on October 13 and 14, 1995, explored contemporary social and legal issues, with an eye toward constructing, practically and theoretically, a civil rights jurisprudence for the 21st century. The symposium spurred lively discussions and generated several papers and student notes. Several of the papers presented at the conference, along with additional contributions from other authors, were printed in the inaugural volume of the Michigan Journal of Race & Law.

The Guide

To encourage diversity in legal scholarship, the Journal published The Guide http://students.law.umich.edu/mjrl/guide/Guide.pdf for how to break into legal scholarship.

External links

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