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Category: 20. Crime, criminal justice, and law
WILL001. Williams, Robert A., Jr. Vampires
Anonymous and critical race practice. Michigan Law Review
95 (February 1997): 741-65.
Publication type: Journal article
Electronic access: LEXIS-NEXIS Academic Universe
Williams gives a personal account of the difficulties
he encountered as a minority law school professor trying to obtain tenure
and maintain a suitable publishing record while his preference was to
write about Native American issues and critical race theory. He
discusses the strong influence of his Lumbee upbringing, which stressed
storytelling as well as - more significantly - understand(ing) that
you are expected to serve others through your hard work and achievements
and that acting for others is regarded as an individual responsibility
(p. 743).
He finally learned to write the right kind
of law review articles but was dissatisfied because writing them did
not allow him the time to give back to Indian people.
His solution was to integrate critical legal theory into his courses
(what he refers to as Critical Race Practice), become involved - personally
and through projects he assigned his students - in the needs and issues
of local Native Americans, and write materials such as Indian Country
newsletters, bar journal articles, and encyclopedia articles that would
reach wider audiences with the messages of Critical Race Theory.
He concludes, ...Critical Race Practice is mostly about learning
to listen to other people's stories and then finding ways to make those
stories matter in the legal system.... Understanding other people
and their stories really does matter in our efforts to achieve justice
in our postmodern multicultural world (p. 765).
Note: Author is Lumbee.
This annotation was edited on: July 14, 2003
Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net |
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