Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies, 2010,
Vol.1.2
|
Author
|
Title
|
number
|
Page to Page
|
Reem Segev
|
IS the Criminal Law (so) Special? Comments
on Douglas Husak's Theory of Criminalization
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
3-20
|
Miriam Gur-Arye
|
Comments on Douglas Husak's
Overcriminalization
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
21-34
|
Gideon Yaffe
|
Harmfulness, Wrongfulness, Lesser Evils and
Risk- Creation: A Comment on Douglas Husak's Overcriminalization
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
35-47
|
Douglas Husak
|
Repaying The Scholar's Compliment
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
48-70
|
Adam Hofri-Winogradow
|
Comments on David Rabban's Law's History
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
72-80
|
Ron Harris
|
The Politics of Historical Narratives:
Comment on David Rabban's Law's History
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
81-87
|
Assaf Likhovski
|
Comments on David Rabban's Law's History
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
88-95
|
Roy Kreitner
|
Heroes, Anti- heroes, And Villains
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
96-105
|
David M. Rabban
|
Reconsidering Law's History: A Response TO
The Symposium Comments
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
106-136
|
Alon Harel
|
The Vices of Epistemic Institutionalism
|
No.1
December
|
pp.
5-14
|
Rivka Weill
|
Can We Reason About Reason? On Adrian
Vermeule's Law and the Limits of Reason
|
No.1
December
|
pp.
15-31
|
Ori Aronson
|
Getting It Right: Institutional Design and
Epistemic Competence in Law and the Limits of Reason
|
No.1
December
|
pp.
32-46
|
Adrian Vermeule
|
The Limits of Epistemic Legalism: A Reply
|
No.1
December
|
pp.
47-35
|
Shlomi Segall
|
Will in the World: Kymlicka's Global
Odyssey
|
No.1
December
|
pp.
55-63
|
Chaim Gans
|
On Kymlicka's Multicultural Odysseys
|
No.1
December
|
pp.
64-70
|
Ruth Gavison
|
Kymlicka's Multicultural Odysseys- A
Comment
|
No.1
December
|
pp.
71-90
|
Will Kymlicka
|
Reply
|
No.1
December
|
pp.
91-101
|
Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies, 2011,
Vol.3
|
Author
|
Title
|
number
|
Page to Page
|
Alon Harel
|
Is Pornography a Speech or an Act and does
it Matter?
|
No.1
August
|
pp.
5-14
|
Hagit Benbaji
|
Why Does Projection Matter to
Objectification?
|
No.1
August
|
pp.
15-27
|
Yuval Eylon
|
Sexual Value
|
No.1
August
|
pp.
28-37
|
Rae Langton
|
Response
|
No.1
August
|
pp.
38-52
|
Avihay Dorfman
|
Humane Consequentialism: A Critical Note on
Eyal Zamir & Barak Medina, Law, Economics, and Morality (2010)
|
No.1
August
|
pp.
54-74
|
Larry Alexander
|
Deontological Constraints in a
Consequentialist World: A Comment on Law, Economics and Morality
|
No.1
August
|
pp.
75-90
|
Ariel Porat
|
Eyal Zamir and Barak Medina, Law,
Economics, and Morality
|
No.1
August
|
pp.
91-106
|
Eyal Zamir, Barak Medina
|
Law, Economics, and Morality: Response to
Critiques
|
No.1
August
|
pp.
107-146
|
Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies, 2012,
Vol.4,5,6
|
Author
|
Title
|
number
|
Page to Page
|
Andreas Paulus
|
National Courts and the International Rule
of Law- Remarks on the Book by Andr Nollkaemper
|
No.1
April
|
pp.
5-18
|
Paul B. Stephan
|
Rethinking the International Rule of Law:
The Homogeneity Fallacy and International Law's Threat to Itself
|
No.1
April
|
pp.
19-41
|
Eyal Benvenisti
|
Comments on the Systemic Vision of National
Courts as part of an International Rule of Law
|
No.1
April
|
pp.
42-49
|
Yuval Shany
|
An Old House with New Bricks or a New House
of Old Cards? On National Courts, the International Rule of Law and the Power
of Legal Imagination
|
No.1
April
|
pp.
50-66
|
Andre Nollkaemper
|
A Response to the Reviewers
|
No.1
April
|
pp.
67-80
|
Miriam Gur-Arye
|
On John Gardner's Justifications and
Excuses
|
No.1
April
|
pp.
82-92
|
Leora Dahan-Katz
|
Justification, Rationality and Morality in
John Gardner's Offences and Defences
|
No.1
April
|
pp.
93-104
|
Daniel Statman
|
Gardner on the Wrongness of Rape
|
No.1
April
|
pp.
105-109
|
John Gardner
|
In Defence of Offences and Defences
|
No.1
April
|
pp.
110-128
|
Or Bassok
|
How to Investigate the Social Imaginary
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
2- 11
|
Lior Barshack
|
Political Theology and the Authenticity of
Modern Experience
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
12- 27
|
Paul W. Kahn
|
Political Theology Defended
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
28- 46
|
Reem Segev
|
Consequentialism, Responsibility, and
Retribution: Comments on Victor Tadros Theory of Punishment
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
48 -61
|
Kimberley Brownlee
|
What are the Duties in the Duty View?
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
62-74
|
Liat Levanon
|
Punishment, Duty, and Self Defense: A
Comment on Victor Tadros The Ends of Harm
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
75- 88
|
Victor Tadros
|
Replies
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
89- 109
|
Mitchell N. Berman
|
Attempts, in Language and in Law
|
No.1
December
|
pp.
1- 19
|
David Enoch
|
Comment on Yaffe s Attempts
|
No.1
December
|
pp.
20 -35
|
Leora Dahan-Katz
|
Questioning the Normative Relevance of
Philosophy of Action in Gideon Yaffe s Attempts
|
No.1
December
|
pp.
36 -50
|
Gideon Yaffe
|
The Legal Importance of Trying: Reply to
Enoch, Dahan-Katz, and Berman
|
No.1
December
|
pp.
51- 78
|
Jack M. Balkin
|
Room for Maneuver: Julie Cohen s Theory of
Freedom in the Information State
|
No.1
December
|
pp.
79 -95
|
Niva Elkin-Koren
|
Affordances of Freedom: Theorizing the
Rights of Users in the Digital Era
|
No.1
December
|
pp.
96- 109
|
Steven Wilf
|
The Once and Future Networked Self
|
No.1
December
|
pp.
110- 119
|
Tal Z. Zarsky
|
Mining the Networked Self
|
No.1
December
|
pp.
120- 136
|
Julie E. Cohen
|
Power/play: Discussion of Configuring the
Networked Self
|
No.1
December
|
pp.
137- 149
|
Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies, 2013,
Vol.7-8
|
Author
|
Title
|
number
|
Page to Page
|
Barak Medina
|
Foundational Originalism? On Jack Balkin s
Living Originalism
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
1- 16
|
Lawrence B. Solum
|
Construction and Constraint: Discussion of
Living Originalism
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
17- 34
|
Reem Segev
|
The Argument for (Living) Originalism:
Comments on Jack Balkin s Theory of Constitutional Interpretation
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
35- 41
|
Randy E. Barnett
|
Welcome to the New Originalism: A Comment
on Jack Balkin's Living Originalism
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
42- 48
|
Gideon Sapir
|
Living Originalism - The Jewish Version
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
49- 56
|
Jack M. Balkin
|
Must we be Faithful to Original Meaning?
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
57- 86
|
Guy Davidov
|
The (Incomplete) Purposive Revolution: A
Comment on The Legal Construction of Personal Work Relations
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
87- 98
|
Brian Langille
|
A Question of Balance in The Legal
Construction of Personal Work Relations
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
99- 111
|
Sandra Fredman, Judy Fudge
|
The Legal Construction of Personal Work
Relations and Gender
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
112- 122
|
Guy Mundlak
|
Taking Path Dependence Seriously: Discussion
of The Legal Construction of Personal Work Relations
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
123- 134
|
Simon Deakin
|
What Exactly is Happening to the Contract
of Employment? Reflections on Mark Freedland and Nicola Kountouris s Legal
Construction of Personal Work Relations
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
135- 144
|
Mark Freedland, Nicola Kountouris
|
The Legal Construction of Personal Work
Relations as a Continuing Pursuit
|
No.1
June
|
pp.
145- 157
|
David Enoch
|
On Analogies, Disanalogies, and Moral
Philosophy: A Comment on John Mikhail s Elements of Moral Cognition
|
No.1
|
pp. 1-25
|
Emmanuel Chemla, Paul Egre, Philippe
Schlenker
|
Moral Judgments and Semantic Judgments: A
Case Study (Comments on Mikhail)
|
No.1
|
pp. 26-43
|
Aaron Zimmerman
|
Mikhail's Naturalized Moral Rationalism
|
No.1
|
pp. 44-65
|
John Mikhail
|
New Perspectives on Moral Cognition: Reply
to Zimmerman, Enoch, and Chemla, Egre, and Schlenker
|
No.1
|
pp. 66-114
|
Alon Harel
|
Human Rights and the Common Good: A
Critique
|
No.1
|
pp. 115-124
|
Daniel Schwartz
|
Perfectionism and Subsidiarity: Comments on
John Finnis Human Rights and the Common Good
|
No.1
|
pp. 125-135
|
Simon Hope
|
The Basic Goods and the "Lawlike"
Use of Reason: Comments on Human Rights and the Common Good
|
No.1
|
pp. 136-146
|
John Finnis
|
A Response to Harel, Hope, and Schwartz
|
No.1
|
pp. 147-166
|
Ori J. Herstein
|
Responsibility in Negligence: Discussion of
From Normativity to Responsibility
|
No.1
|
pp. 167-184
|
Ulrike Heuer
|
The Reasons that Can't be Followed: Comment
on Joseph Raz's From Normativity to Responsibility
|
No.1
|
pp. 185-198
|
Ruth Chang
|
Raz on Reasons, Reason, and Rationality: On
Raz s From Normativity to Responsibility
|
No.1
|
pp. 199-219
|
Joseph Raz
|
On Normativity and Responsibility:
Responses
|
No.1
|
pp. 220-234
|
Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies, 2014,
Vol.9-10
|
Author
|
Title
|
number
|
Page to Page
|
Donald McRae
|
The World Trade Organization and
International Investment Law: Converging Systems- Can the Case for
Convergence be Made?
|
No.1
|
pp. 13-23
|
Tomer Broude
|
Toward an Economic Approach to the
Consolidation of International Trade Regulation and International Investment
Law
|
No.1
|
pp. 24-35
|
Jurgen Kurtz
|
Charting the Future of the Twin Pillars of
International Economic Law
|
No.1
|
pp. 36-51
|
Doron Teichman
|
Too Little, Too Much, Not Just Right:
Seduction by Contract and the Desirable Scope of Contract Regulation
|
No.1
|
pp. 52-71
|
Shmuel I. Becher, Tal Z. Zarsky
|
Seduction by Disclosure: Comments on
Seduction by Contract
|
No.1
|
pp. 72-86
|
Richard A. Epstein
|
Behavioral Error, Misguided Regulation, and
Technical Innovation: Some Observations about Oren Bar- Gill's Seduction by
Contract
|
No.1
|
pp. 87-94
|
Oren Bar-Gill
|
Seduction by Contract: A Response to
Critics
|
No.1
|
pp. 95-103
|
Stephen E. Shay
|
Theory, Complications, and Policy: Daniel
Shaviro's Fixing U.S. International Taxation
|
No.1
|
pp. 104-115
|
Yariv Brauner
|
Daniel N. Shaviro's Fixing U.S.
International Taxation
|
No.1
|
pp. 116-124
|
Fadi Shaheen
|
On Fixing U.S. International Taxation
|
No.1
|
pp. 125-131
|
Daniel Shaviro
|
Response to Comments on Fixing U.S.
International Taxation
|
No.1
|
pp. 132-142
|
Tamar Kricheli Katz
|
Discussion of Kasper Lippert- Rasmussen's
Born Free and Equal? A Philosophical Inquiry into the Nature of
Discrimination
|
No.1
|
pp. 143-150
|
Saul Smilansky
|
Just Harmful? A Response to Kasper Lippert-
Rasmussen s Born Free and Equal? A Philosophical Inquiry into the Nature of
Discrimination
|
No.1
|
pp. 151-157
|
Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen
|
Response to Kricheli- Katz and Smilansky on
Born Free and Equal? A Philosophical Inquiry into the Nature of
Discrimination
|
No.1
|
pp. 158-172
|
Dan Priel
|
Lon Fuller's Political Jurisprudence of
Freedom
|
No.1
|
pp. 18-45
|
Timothy Endicott
|
Interpretation and Indeterminacy: Comments
on Andrei Marmor s Philosophy of Law
|
No.1
|
pp. 46-56
|
Maris Kopcke Tinture
|
Method and Substance in Marmor's Philosophy
of Law
|
No.1
|
pp. 57-67
|
Grant Lamond
|
Legal Systems and the Rule of Recognition:
Discussion of Marmor's Philosophy of Law
|
No.1
|
pp. 68-80
|
Jeremy Waldron
|
Arguing about the Normativity of
Jurisprudence: Comments on Andrei Marmor s Philosophy of Law
|
No.1
|
pp. 81-92
|
Andrei Marmor
|
Philosophy of Law: Reply to Critics
|
No.1
|
pp. 93-110
|
Mordechai Kremnitzer
|
Is Proportionality an Effective Protector
of Human Rights? Proportionality and Constitutional Culture by Moshe Cohen-
Eliya, Iddo Porat- a Critique
|
No.1
|
pp. 111-122
|
Kai Moller
|
Authority and Intent in U.S. Constitutional
Culture
|
No.1
|
pp. 123-136
|
Adam Shinar
|
Method and Culture in American
Constitutional Law: A Critique of Proportionality and Constitutional Culture
|
No.1
|
pp. 137-158
|
Moshe Cohen-Eliya, Iddo Porat
|
Reply to Commentators on Proportionality
and Constitutional Culture
|
No.1
|
pp. 159-174
|
Virgilio Afonso da Silva
|
How Global is Global Constitutionalism?:
Comments on Kai Moller's The Global Model of Constitutional Rights
|
No.1
|
pp. 175-186
|
Alon Harel
|
Do Legal Rights Matter? Comments on The
Global Model of Constitutional Rights
|
No.1
|
pp. 187-192
|
Iddo Porat
|
The Global Model of Rights and Exclusionary
Reasons: Comments on Kai Moller s The Global Model of Constitutional Rights
|
No.1
|
pp. 193-205
|
Kai Moller
|
The Global Model of Constitutional Rights:
A Response to Afonso da Silva, Harel, and Porat
|
No.1
|
pp. 206-223
|
Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies, 2015,
Vol.11-12
|
Author
|
Title
|
number
|
Page to Page
|
Anna-Maria Marshall
|
Reflections on Cause Lawyering, Courts, and
Social Change: A Comment on Lawyering for the Rule of Law
|
No.1
|
pp. 6-14
|
Charles R. Epp
|
The Key Role of Government Lawyers:
Discussion of Lawyering for the Rule of Law
|
No.1
|
pp. 15-19
|
Gad Barzilai
|
Can Government Lawyers Save Us? A Comment
on Lawyering for the Rule of Law
|
No.1
|
pp. 20-25
|
Edward L. Rubin
|
Administrative Litigation and the Rule of
Law in Israel and the United States: A Comment on Lawyering for the Rule of
Law
|
No.1
|
pp. 26-41
|
Yoav Dotan
|
Lawyering for 'The Rule of Law' or
'Lawyering for the Court'?- A Response to Barzilai, Epp, Rubin, and Marshall
|
No.1
|
pp. 42-50
|
Margaret Jane Radin
|
Less Than I Wanted To Know: The Submerged
Issues in More Than I Wanted To Know
|
No.1
|
pp. 51-62
|
Florencia Marotta-Wurgler
|
Even More Than You Wanted to Know About the
Failures of Disclosure
|
No.1
|
pp. 63-74
|
Oren Bar-Gill
|
Defending (Smart) Disclosure: A Comment on
More Than You Wanted to Know
|
No.1
|
pp. 75-82
|
Omri Ben-Shahar, Carl E. Schneider
|
Coping with the Failure of Mandated
Disclosure
|
No.1
|
pp. 83-93
|
Christopher Essert
|
How Law Matters in Why Law Matters
|
No.1
|
pp. 1-9
|
Arthur Ripstein
|
Standing, Value, and the Theory of Rights:
Discussion of Why Law Matters
|
No.1
|
pp. 10-20
|
Assaf Sharon
|
What is Law Worth? Discussion of Why Law
Matters
|
No.1
|
pp. 21-31
|
David Estlund
|
Comments on Alon Harel, Why Law Matters
|
No.1
|
pp. 32-40
|
Alon Harel
|
Why (Despite Powerful Reservations) Law
Matters: Reply to Comments on Why Law Matters
|
No.1
|
pp. 41-57
|
Daniel Attas
|
Liberal Neutrality and Cultural Rights: A
Comment on Alan Patten s Equal Recognition
|
No.1
|
pp. 58-65
|
Chaim Gans
|
On Patten's Theory of Minority Rights A
Comment on Equal Recognition: The Moral Foundations of Minority Rights
|
No.1
|
pp. 66-80
|
Aurelia Bardon
|
Some Comments about the Object and
Realization of Neutrality as Fair Treatment in Alan Patten s Equal
Recognition
|
No.1
|
pp. 81-90
|
Alan Patten
|
The Moral Foundations of Minority Rights: A
Reply to Attas, Bardon, and Gans
|
No.1
|
pp. 91-104
|
Shmuel I. Becher, Tal Z. Zarsky
|
Online Consumer Contracts: No One Reads,
but Does Anyone Care? Comments on Florencia Marotta- Wurgler's Studies
|
No.1
|
pp. 105-120
|
Asaf Zussman
|
Comments on Three Papers by Florencia
Marotta- Wurgler
|
No.1
|
pp. 121-127
|
Lisa Bernstein, Hagay Volvovsky
|
Not What you Wanted to Know: The Real Deal
and the Paper Deal in Consumer Contracts- Comment on the Work of Florencia
Marotta- Wurgler
|
No.1
|
pp. 128-136
|
Eyal Zamir, Yuval Farkash
|
Standard Form Contracts: Empirical Studies,
Normative Implications, and the Fragmentation of Legal Scholarship Comments
on Florencia Marotta- Wurgler's Studies
|
No.1
|
pp. 137-170
|
Florencia Marotta-Wurgler
|
What We've Learned From Software License
Agreements: A Response to Comments
|
No.1
|
pp. 171-182
|
Ronen Avraham
|
Decoding Cooter and Porat: A Discussion of
Getting Incentives Right
|
No.1
|
pp. 183-201
|
Ronen Perry
|
Getting Incentives Righter: A Comment on
Getting Incentives Right
|
No.1
|
pp. 202-227
|
Henrik Lando
|
Discussion of Getting Incentives Right
|
No.1
|
pp. 228-236
|
Robert Cooter, Ariel Porat
|
Getting Incentives Right- Responding to
Critics
|
No.1
|
pp. 237-249
|
Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies, 2016,
Vol 13-14
|
Author
|
Title
|
number
|
Page to Page
|
Rivka Weill
|
Constitutional Statutes or Overriding the
Court- On Bruce Ackerman's We the People: The Civil Rights Revolution
|
No.1
|
pp. 1-18
|
Alessandro Ferrara
|
Constitution and Context: Reflections on
Ackerman's The Civil Rights Revolution
|
No.1
|
pp. 19-30
|
Alon Harel
|
Why Constitutional Law Matters? Between
Popular Sovereignty and Reason: Comments on We the People vol 3. The Civil
Rights Revolution
|
No.1
|
pp. 31-38
|
Avihay Dorfman
|
Two Comments on Bruce Ackerman, We the
People: The Civil Rights Revolution
|
No.1
|
pp. 39-46
|
Bruce Ackerman
|
Reactionary Constitutional Moments: Further
Thoughts on The Civil Rights Revolution
|
No.1
|
pp. 47-58
|
Sandy Steel
|
Saving Private Wrongs
|
No.1
|
pp. 1-21
|
Nicolas Cornell
|
Ripstein's Buttery Rights: Comments on
'Private Wrongs'
|
No.1
|
pp. 22-36
|
Hanoch Dagan, Avihay Dorfman
|
Against Private Law Escapism: Comment on
Arthur Ripstein, Private Wrongs
|
No.1
|
pp. 37-51
|
John Gardner
|
Private Authority in Ripstein's Private
Wrongs
|
No.1
|
pp. 52-63
|
Arthur Ripstein
|
Private Authority and the Role of Rights: A
Reply
|
No.1
|
pp. 64-86
|
Arudra Burra
|
Another Look at the Revisionist Challenge
to Liberty
|
No.1
|
pp. 87-101
|
Avishai Margalit
|
Autonomy: Errors and Manipulation
|
No.1
|
pp. 102-112
|
Daniel Viehoff
|
On Authority, Legitimacy, and Service:
Discussion of The Morality of Freedom
|
No.1
|
pp. 113-124
|
Assaf Sharon
|
Equality, Fairness, and Egalitarian Goods:
Revisiting the Anti- Egalitarian Argument in The Morality of Freedom
|
No.1
|
pp. 125-134
|
Jonathan Quong
|
Disagreement, Equality, and The Exclusion
of Ideals: A Comment on The Morality of Freedom
|
No.1
|
pp. 135-146
|
Japa Pallikkathayil
|
Revisiting the Interest Theory of Rights:
Discussion of The Morality of Freedom
|
No.1
|
pp. 147-157
|
Michael Otsuka
|
Why Even Diminishing Principles of
Entitlement Must Be Regulated by Strictly Egalitarian Principles: Discussion
of Morality of Freedom
|
No.1
|
pp. 158-168
|
Joseph Raz
|
Comments on The Morality of Freedom
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No.1
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pp. 169-181
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Yael Berda
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Even when you win, you lose: How
Criminalizing Hate made Everyday Racism Legitimate. Comment on "From
Slave Abuse to Hate Crime"
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No.1
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pp. 182-191
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Ekow N. Yankah
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The Failure of "Rights" in Racial
Justice: Comments on From Slave Abuse to Hate Crime by Ely Aaronson
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No.1
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pp. 192-203
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Jonathan Simon
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Pro- Black Criminalization and the
Legitimation of Criminal Law in Modern Societies: A Comment on Aaronson's
From Slave Abuse to Hate Crime
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No.1
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pp. 204-213
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Ely Aaronson
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Racial Violence and the Politics of Criminalization
Reform: Response to Comments on From Slave Abuse to Hate Crime
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No.1
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pp. 214-221
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