Dialectic UCLA Law Review
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We explore current legal issues through the critical lens of the UCLA Law Review.
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Episode 9.1: Race, Professionalism, and White Supremacy with Leah Goodridge
Welcome to the inaugural episode of Dialectic volume 72! In this episode, host Kyler McVoy and guest Leah Goodridge discuss the racial dynamics of professionalism and its origins in settler-colonial and white supremacist ideologies, expanding on Leah's recently published essay: Professionalism as a Racial Construct.
Professionalism as a Racial Construct: https://www.uclalawreview.org/professionalism-as-a-racial-construct/
More from Leah Goodrige:
X: @leahfrombklyn
Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/leah-goodridge/
SXSW Panel:
Forecasting Workplace: The Changing Landscape of DEI
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Episode 8.2: Professor Sanford Williams: Friends, Family, and the FCC
Go behind the scenes with UCLA Law lecturer and telecoms expert Sanford S. Williams, who has worked at the FCC since 1999 and is currently Special Adviser to the FCC Chairwoman and a Deputy Managing Director of the FCC.
Episode transcripts are available on our website. -
Episode 8.1: Desert Flower: Bibi Barba, Aboriginal Art Theft, and the IGC
In 2012, Australian Aboriginal artist Bibi Barba Googled herself. She found an entire boutique hotel designed in her image.
Episode transcripts are available on our website.
Music by Podington Bear and the Free Music Archive. -
Episode 7.5: Tribal Sovereignty, Decolonization, and Abolition with Grace Carson
In this episode, Grace Carson discusses the intersections of abolition theory and decolonization theory, and how Tribes should reconsider systems of punishment and instead create systems of care and liberation as outlined in her article, Tribal Sovereignty, Decolonization, and Abolition: Why Tribes Should Reconsider Punishment, which will be punished in December 2022.
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Episode 7.4: Beyond the Schoolhouse Doors: Anti-Black Racism and the Exclusion of Black Caregivers with Paige Joki and Thalia Gonzalez
This work, calls upon the civil rights and education justice communities to expand their vision of school discipline law and policy reform to include the often ignored, yet deeply impacted lives of parents, caregivers, and families. Deploying what critical race theorists define as storytelling or counter-narratives, the authors share Nyla’s story to bring forward an all too common deployment of education laws—flown under a banner of safety, order, maintenance, and well- being of school communities—that reinforce anti-Black racism.
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Episode 7.3: Exploring Music Law with Professor Susan Genco
In this episode, we sit down with UCLA Law Professor Susan Genco to learn more about her illustrious career in the music industry and discuss contemporary issues in music law.