Over at the Faculty Lounge, Al Brophy (University of North Carolina) has posted the contents of the
North Carolina Law Review's symposium on race trials. Cribbing from his post, here's the TOC:
Richard Delgado, Precious Knowledge: State Bans on Ethnic Studies, Book Traffickers (Librotraficantes), and a New Type of Race Trial
Cynthia Lee, Making Race Salient: Trayvon Martin and Implicit Bias in a Not Yet Post-Racial Society
Kevin R. Johnson and Joanna E. Cuevas Ingram, Anatomy of a Modern-Day Lynching: The Relationship Between Hate Crimes Against Latina/os and the Debate Over Immigration Reform
Gabriel J. "Jack" Chin, Cindy Hwang Chiang, and Shirley S. Park, The Lost Brown v. Board of Education of Immigration Law
Ariela Gross, & Alejandro De La Fuente, Slaves, Free Blacks, and Race in the Legal Regimes of Cuba, Louisiana, and Virginia: A Comparison
Martha S. Jones, Hughes v. Jackson: Race and Rights Beyond Dred Scott
Steven Lubet, Execution in Virginia, 1859: The Trials of Green and Copeland
Alfred L. Brophy, The Nat Turner Trials