Found 3 bookmarks
Custom sorting
Lloyd Gaines and His Quest for Educational Equality | University of Missouri School of Law Research | University of Missouri School of Law Scholarship Repository
Lloyd Gaines and His Quest for Educational Equality | University of Missouri School of Law Research | University of Missouri School of Law Scholarship Repository
Lloyd Lionel Gaines applied to the University of Missouri School of Law in 1936. Despite an outstanding scholastic record, Gaines was denied admission based solely on the grounds that Missouri’s Constitution called for “separate education of the races.” Because Missouri had no public law school that admitted Black applications, state law required the state to pay Gaines’ tuition at public universities in Iowa, Kansas or Nebraska. Attorneys from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) identified Gaines’ case as a good vehicle to begin the incremental process of challenging the ignominious precedent of “separate but equal” established in Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896. Together, they sued the University of Missouri seeking an order granting him admission to its Law School.
·scholarship.law.missouri.edu·
Lloyd Gaines and His Quest for Educational Equality | University of Missouri School of Law Research | University of Missouri School of Law Scholarship Repository
Homeless advocacy - Laura Riley
Homeless advocacy - Laura Riley
"Homeless Advocacy examines the role legal advocacy plays in preventing and ending homelessness. The book provides a history of homelessness, the current state of it in the United States, context on working with unhoused populations, and analyzes the legal issues they face through a practitioner's lens. With these topics, ranging from criminalization of homelessness to employment barriers and affordable housing, the author provides a resource that will encourage and enable more people to advocate on behalf of unhoused populations and will serve as a guidepost to advance that advocacy. There are many books on poverty, but this book is different and complementary as it focuses on the unhoused population and the legal challenges unique to them. It is aimed at law students, policy, and social work students at the undergraduate and graduate levels, and individual activists. It includes narratives from practitioners and those with lived experience of being unhoused"--
·arizona-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com·
Homeless advocacy - Laura Riley
Black Americans and the Law - Berkley Law
Black Americans and the Law - Berkley Law
"American jurisprudence and law have profoundly shaped defined and constrained the lives of Black people for over 400 years. Racial inequality has extremely deep roots in American society and our Constitution statutes court cases and regulations not only bear witness to this but are often the source of it. This timeline provides an overview of some of these laws beginning with the first known case marking the legal difference between Africans and Europeans in 1640 in Virginia and continuing with laws recently introduced in the wake of the killing of George Floyd and other Black Americans. While not exhaustive the timeline focuses on a number of key legal events and actions that have structured and systematized racism in America."
·law.berkeley.edu·
Black Americans and the Law - Berkley Law