Closing Remarks

On November 20–21, 2020, the Columbia Journal of Race and Law hosted a virtual two-day symposium entitled How the Law Underdeveloped Racial Minorities in the United States. Broadly, the theory of underdevelopment looks at the standard of life in a nation as a measure of that country’s economic cond...

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Main Author: Alexis Hoag
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Columbia University Libraries 2021-06-01
Series:Columbia Journal of Race and Law
Online Access:https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/cjrl/article/view/8739
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spelling doaj-f3c4a8b402654ed1b3a9a457029779fa2021-10-06T18:53:12ZengColumbia University LibrariesColumbia Journal of Race and Law2155-24012021-06-0111210.52214/cjrl.v11i2.8739Closing RemarksAlexis Hoag On November 20–21, 2020, the Columbia Journal of Race and Law hosted a virtual two-day symposium entitled How the Law Underdeveloped Racial Minorities in the United States. Broadly, the theory of underdevelopment looks at the standard of life in a nation as a measure of that country’s economic conditions. The application of this theory in the context of the law and as a measure of the quality of life of racial minorities stems from Professor Manning Marable’s work on capitalism and the economic and social conditions of Black Americans. In her Closing Remarks, Professor Alexis Hoag provided context for the contemporary application of Professor Marable’s theory in light of current events, exploring the Coronavirus pandemic, the Black Lives Matter Movement, and the 2020 Presidential Election. She then introduced carceral abolition as a theoretical and practical framework to understand the law’s underdevelopment of Black people and to help address the criminal legal system’s disparate impact on racial minorities. https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/cjrl/article/view/8739
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
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author Alexis Hoag
spellingShingle Alexis Hoag
Closing Remarks
Columbia Journal of Race and Law
author_facet Alexis Hoag
author_sort Alexis Hoag
title Closing Remarks
title_short Closing Remarks
title_full Closing Remarks
title_fullStr Closing Remarks
title_full_unstemmed Closing Remarks
title_sort closing remarks
publisher Columbia University Libraries
series Columbia Journal of Race and Law
issn 2155-2401
publishDate 2021-06-01
description On November 20–21, 2020, the Columbia Journal of Race and Law hosted a virtual two-day symposium entitled How the Law Underdeveloped Racial Minorities in the United States. Broadly, the theory of underdevelopment looks at the standard of life in a nation as a measure of that country’s economic conditions. The application of this theory in the context of the law and as a measure of the quality of life of racial minorities stems from Professor Manning Marable’s work on capitalism and the economic and social conditions of Black Americans. In her Closing Remarks, Professor Alexis Hoag provided context for the contemporary application of Professor Marable’s theory in light of current events, exploring the Coronavirus pandemic, the Black Lives Matter Movement, and the 2020 Presidential Election. She then introduced carceral abolition as a theoretical and practical framework to understand the law’s underdevelopment of Black people and to help address the criminal legal system’s disparate impact on racial minorities.
url https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/cjrl/article/view/8739
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