Volume 31, Issue 3
Teaching from the Left: A Conference at Harvard Law School
Introduction: Urgent Times
Maria Grahn-Farley
PART I: LEGAL EDUCATION
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Teaching from the Left in My Anecdotage
Duncan Kennedy -
The Left: In Memoriam?
Joanne Conaghan -
Legal Education and the Formation of Professional Identity: A Critical Spirituo-Humanistic—"Humanity Consciousness"—Perspective
Rhonda V. Magee -
Left Learning: Theory and Practice in Teaching from the Left in Law School
Chiwen Bao, Meagan Garland & Rachel Rebouché
PART II: CONTRACT LAW
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"You will never finish paying": Contract and Regulation, Globalization and Control
Anne Bottomley & Nathan Moore -
The Other Side of the Picket Line: Contract, Democracy, and Power in a Law School Classroom
Richard Michael Fischl
PART III: CRIMINAL LAW
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The Spirit of 1968: Toward Abolishing Terry Doctrine
Frank Rudy Cooper -
Pedagogy of the Suppressed: A Class on Race and the Death Penalty
Phyllis Goldfarb -
Reconstruction of a Lost Performance Through Literary Theory
Susanna Kim
PART IV: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
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The Anxiety of the Law Student at the Socratic Impasse—An Essay on Reductionism in Legal Education
Pierre Schlag -
Anxiety and Affirmation: Critical Legal Studies and the Critical "Tradition(s)"
Adam Gearey -
Hesitant Left
Marinos Diamantides -
Law as Trauma & Repetition
Anthony Paul Farley -
The Paradox of Hierarchy—Or Why We Always Choose the Tools of the Master's House
Zanita E. Fenton
PART V: INTERNATIONAL LAW
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One, Two, Three, Many Legal Orders: Legal Pluralism and the Cosmopolitan Dream
David Kennedy -
The Future Will Not Stop Escaping Us
Tatiana Flessas -
A View from the Left: International Economic Law
Kerry Rittich -
Notes on the General Economy of International Law & Governance
Thanos Zartaloudis