Welcoming Remarks: "The Future of Critical Race Feminism" Dean Rex R. Perschbacher - UC Davis School of Law (King Hall)
Foreword: This Bridge Called Our Backs: An Introduction to "The Future of Critical Race Feminism" Angela Onwuachi-Willig - UC Davis School of Law (King Hall)
Critical Race Feminism Lifts the Veil?: Muslim Women, France, and the Headscarf Ban Adrien Katherine Wing & Monica Nigh Smith - University of Iowa College of Law
Decentering the Firm: The Limited Liability Company and Low-Wage Immigrant Women Workers Miriam A. Cherry - Samford University, Cumberland School of Law
"Unwise," "Untimely," and "Extreme": Redefining Collegial Culture in the Workplace and Revaluing the Role of Social Change Sumi Cho - DePaul University College of Law
Against Bipolar Black Masculinity: Intersectionality, Assimilation, Identity Performance, and Hierarchy Frank Rudy Cooper - Suffolk University Law School
Black Women's Stories and the Criminal Law: Restating the Power of Narrative Mario L. Barnes - University of Miami School of Law
Deadbeat or Deadbroke: Redefining Child Support for Poor Fathers Solangel Maldonado - Seton Hall University School of Law
In the Shadow of Race: Women of Color in Health Disparities Policy Lisa C. Ikemoto - Loyola Law School
Changing the Domestic Violence (Dis)Course: Moving from White Victim to Multi-Cultureal Survivor Adele M. Morrison - Northern Illinois University College of Law
Parity/Disparity: Electoral Gender Inequality on the Tightrope of Liberal Constitutional Traditions Darren Rosenblum - Pace Law School
The Adventure(s) of Blackness in Western Culture: An Epistolary Exchange on Old and New Identity Wars Robert S. Chang & Adrienne D. Davis
A Critical Race Feminism Empirical Research Project: Sexual Harassment & the Internal Complaints Black Box Tanya Katerí Hernández - Rutgers University Law School - Newark
Defending the Future Voices of Critical Race Feminism Margaret Montoya - University of New Mexico School of Law
Interracial Marriage in the Shadows of Jim Crow: Racial Segregation as a System of Racial and Gender Subordination Reginald Oh - Texas Wesleyan School of Law