Article contents
Remarks by Elizabeth M. Iglesias
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2017
Abstract
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- Copyright © American Society of International Law 1999
References
1 LatCrit is an abbreviation for “Latina/o Critical Legal Theory.” APACrit refers to “Asian Pacific American Critical Legal Theory.” LatCrit scholarship has exploded in the last four years. See, e.g., Symposium, Difference, Solidarity and Law: Building Latina/o Communities through LatCrit Theory, 19 Chicano-Latino L. Rev. 1 (1998)Google Scholar; Symposium, International Law, Human Rights and LatCrit Theory, 28 U. Miami Inter-Am. L. Rev. 1 (1997)Google Scholar; Symposium, LatCrit Theory, Latinas/os and the Law, 85 Cal. L. Rev. 1087 (1997)Google Scholar, 10 La Raza L. J. 1 (1998); Colloquium, Representing Latina/o Communities: Critical Race Theory and Practice, 9 Larazal. J.S 1 (1996)Google Scholar; Symposium, LatCrit Theory: Naming and Launching a New Discourse of Critical Legal Scholarship, 2 Harv. Latino L. Rev. 1 (1997)Google Scholar; Symposium, Comparative Latinas/os: Identity, Law and Policy in LatCrit Theory, 53 U. Miami L. Rev. and 4 Google Scholar U. Tex. Hispanic L. J. (forthcoming 1999); Symposium, Rotating Centers, Expanding Frontiers: LatCrit Theory and Marginal Intersections, 33 U. C Davis L. Rev. (Forthcoming 1999)Google Scholar. This impressive record of LatCrit theory includes important contributions by numerous Apacrit scholars, whose work is also reflected in an impressive and growing body of scholarship. See, e.g., Symposium, The Long Shadow of Korematsu, 40 B.C. L. Rev. (1998)Google Scholar; Colloquy, Keith Aoki,, The Scholarship of Reconstruction and the Politics of Backlash, 81 Iowa L. Rev. 1467 (1996)Google Scholar; Symposium, Citizenship and its Discontents: Centering the Immigrant in the Inter/National Imagination (Part I), 76 Or. L. Rev. 207 (1997)Google Scholar; Symposium, Citizenship and Its Discontents: Centering the Immigrant in the Inter/National Imagination (Part II), 76 Or. L. Rev. 457 (1997)Google Scholar.
2 Both Nail and Twail are Jurisprudential Movements that Originated in Efforts to Introduce the Theoretical Frameworks and Methodologies of Critical Legal Studies into the Analysis of International and Comparative Law. See, e.g., Kennedy, David & Tennant, Chris, New Approaches to International Law: A Bibliography, 35 Harv. Int’l L.J. 417 (1994)Google Scholar; Symposium, New Approaches to Comparative Law, 1997 Utahl. Rev. 255 Google Scholar.
3 The LatCrit Iv program description can be found at http://nersp.nerdc.ufl.edu/~malavet/latcrit/conferen/lciVsubs.htm.
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