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Session Submission Type: Paper Session (90 minute)
This session examines the role of the state and the legal profession across diverse contexts, from revolutionary Cuba to contemporary U.S. law firms.
Neutralizing Advocacy: Organizational Marginalization and the Erosion of the Legal Profession within the U.S. Immigration Bureaucracy - Catherine Louise Crooke, University of California-Los Angeles
Persistent Gender and Racial Inequality in U.S. Law Firms – Longitudinal Evidence from the MCCA Survey - Xiwen Huang, Washington University in St. Louis
The Forgotten Lucha Legal in Revolutionary Cuba (1952-1959): Strategic Litigation, Petitions, and Judicial Activism - Amalia Perez Martin, California State University-Sacramento
Blind Spots and Blowback: The Contemporary Refusal of Women’s Rights under Title IX - Celene Raymer Reynolds, Indiana University Bloomington; Elizabeth A. Armstrong, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor; Sandra R. Levitsky, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor