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Joy Milligan (University of Virginia) - Racism, the American State, and the Constitution: Can the Harms Be Repaired?

Jan 19, 2022 | 04:00 PM c.t. - 06:00 PM

Rinvorlesung WS21/22 - Lecture #11

Pasts, Presents and Futures of (In-)Equality in the US

Pasts, Presents and Futures of (In-)Equality in the US

Joy Milligan is a Professor of Law at the University of Virginia studies the intersection of law and inequality, with a particular focus on race-based economic inequality. Her scholarship is interdisciplinary, drawing on social science theory and methods, and has been published in the Yale Law Journal, Virginia Law Review, UCLA Law Review, NYU Law Review, Annual Review of Law & Social Science, and the Journal of Legal Education. Her current work examines the legal and political struggles over federal administrators’ long-term role in extending racial segregation.   Before entering academia, Milligan practiced civil rights law at the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund Inc., where she was a Skadden Fellow, and clerked for Judge A. Wallace Tashima of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. Milligan is a member of the state bars of California and New York. She graduated magna cum laude from New York University Law School, where she was a Furman Scholar and Fellow, and an articles editor of the NYU Law Review. She earned a Ph.D. in jurisprudence and social policy from the University of California, Berkeley, with a focus on race, politics and legal history. She also holds an M.P.A. from Princeton University and an A.B. in social studies, magna cum laude, from Harvard-Radcliffe. Before attending law school, Milligan spent several years founding a nonprofit bicycle recycling project in the northwest Dominican Republic.

 


The Ringvorlesung of the Winter Semester 2021/2022 is an online course and can be attended via Cisco WebEx Meetings at the scheduled time indicated above by clicking here.

 You may find the complete program of the Ringvorlesung WS21/22 in the Downloads section below.