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Books > Law > Jurisprudence & general issues > Legal profession > General
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Let the Future Begin
(Paperback)
Dennis W Archer, Elizabeth Ann Atkins; Edited by Catherine M. Greenspan
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On June 16, 2006, a panel of experts briefed members of the U.S.
Commission on Civil Rights on affirmative action in American law
schools. The panel convened to debate the empirical strength of the
research on the effects of racial preferences in law school
admissions and the legal and policy implications of the American
Bar Association's diversity standards. Richard Sander, professor at
University of California at Los Angeles Law School, and Richard O.
Lempert, professor at the University of Michigan Law School,
addressed the impact of racial preferences in law school admissions
on the academic performance and bar admissions of African-American
students. David Bernstein, Professor of Law at George Mason
University, and Dean Steven Smith, Chair of the American Bar
Association's Council on the Section on Legal Education and
Admissions to the Bar and Dean of the California Western School of
Law, addressed the standards by which law schools are accredited by
the Council and the Council's then proposed changes.
Despite the growing number ofAsian American and Latino/a law
students, many panethnic students still feel as if they do not
belong in this elite microcosm, which reflects the racial
inequalities in mainstream American society. While in law school,
these students-often from immigrant families, and often the first
to go to college-have to fight against racialized and gendered
stereotypes. In Incidental Racialization, Diana Pan rigorously
explores how systemic inequalities are produced and sustained in
law schools. Through interviews with more than 100 law students and
participant observations at two law schools, Pan examines how
racialization happens alongside professional socialization. She
investigates how panethnic students negotiate their identities,
race, and gender in an institutional context. She also considers
how their lived experiences factor into their student organization
association choices and career paths. Incidental Racialization
sheds light on how race operates in a law school setting for both
students of color and in the minds of white students. It also
provides broader insights regarding racial inequalities in society
in general.
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