Multimedia
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Cincinnati Law | Race and Contract Law: Teach-In on Racial Justice and the Law https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=Jd1Jm37kP70&feature=youtu.be
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Pepperdine | Race and the Law: Contracts with Dean Blake Morant https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ycNVHCI9J7o
Books from the Catalog
- Critical Race Theory byCall Number: Law Library (Myron Taylor Hall) KF4755 .B755 2014ISBN: 9780314287519Publication Date: 2014-05-19See chapter on critical race theory and contracts
- Feminist Perspectives on Contract Law byCall Number: Law Library (Myron Taylor Hall) KD1554 .M85x 2005ISBN: 9781859417423Publication Date: 2005-04-29The law of contract is ripe for feminist analysis. Despite increasing calls for the re-conceptualisation of neo-classical ways of thinking, feminist perspectives on contract tend to be marginalised in mainstream textbooks. This edited collection questions the assumptions made in such works and the ideologies that underpin them, drawing attention to the ways in which the law of contract has facilitated the virtual exclusion of women, the feminine and the private sphere from legal discourse. Contributors to this volume offer a range of ways of thinking about the subject and cover topics such as the feminine offeree, feminist perspectives on contracts in cyberspace, the forgotten world of women and contracts, restitution and feminist economic theory, the gendered power dynamics of undue influence, and the feminisation of dispute resolution.
- From Bondage to Contract byCall Number: Law Library (Myron Taylor Hall) HD8066 .S68x 1998ISBN: 0521414709Publication Date: 1998-11-13In the era of slave emancipation no ideal of freedom had greater power than that of contract. The antislavery claim was that the negation of chattel status lay in the contracts of wage labor and marriage. Signifying self-ownership, volition, and reciprocal exchange among formally equal individuals, contract became the dominant metaphor for social relations and the very symbol of freedom. This 1999 book explores how a generation of American thinkers and reformers - abolitionists, former slaves, feminists, labor advocates, jurists, moralists, and social scientists - drew on contract to condemn the evils of chattel slavery as well as to measure the virtues of free society. Their arguments over the meaning of slavery and freedom were grounded in changing circumstances of labor and home life on both sides of the Mason-Dixon line. At the heart of these arguments lay the problem of defining which realms of self and social existence could be rendered market commodities and which could not.