HARVARD Latino LAW REVIEW

Volume 8, Spring 2005

Articles

1

Driving While Brown: A Proposal for Ending Racial Profiling in Emerging Latino Communities

Anthony E. Mucchetti

pdf

33

Blend It, Don’t End It: Affirmative Action and the Texas Ten Percent Plan After Grutter and Gratz

Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF) et al

pdf

Conference

93

The Seventh Annual Harvard Latino Law, Business, and Public Policy Conference:
Investing in Our Future
April 15–17, 2004

 

pdf

Book Reviews

141

The Boundaries of Free Speech

Alexander Tsesis

pdf

163

Broadening Support for Bilingual Education

Jennifer L. Chong

pdf

 

Editorial Staff

The full text of articles from this issue is available on this website in HTML and in PDF format; PDF format requires Adobe Acrobat Reader, which is available free of charge.

Editors-in-Chief
Angela Michelle Johnson
Xavier Morales

Submissions Editor
José Javier Rodríguez

Managing Editor
Berta Altagracia Matos

Executive Editor
Roger Pao

Article Editors
José Raúl Alcántar
Wenona Benally
Daniel F. Benavides
Alexandra Chirinos
Jeremie Dufault
E. Garry Grundy III
Rachel Gurvich
Jean Kosela
Kathleen McArthur
Jesse Newmark
Juan Lazaro Peña
Marie C. Scott
David Segrera
Brad Siegele

Harvard Latino Law Review
Publications Center, Harvard Law School
1541 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02138
(617) 496-8282
hllr@law.harvard.edu
http://www.law.harvard.edu/students/orgs/llr/
ISSN 1542-460X

The Harvard Latino Law Review is a journal dedicated to providing a forum for the scholarly discussion of legal issues affecting Latinos and Latinas in the United States.  It is published annually by Harvard Law School students.

Permission to Copy: The articles in this issue may be reproduced and distributed, in whole or in part, by nonprofit institutions for educational purposes including distribution to students, provided that the copies are distributed at or below cost and identify the author, the Harvard Latino Law Review, the volume, the number of the first page, and the year of the article’s publication.

We at the journal recognize that the term “Latino” in Harvard Latino Law Review raises gender and Spanish grammar issues. Taking this into consideration, we continue to use “Latino” in the journal’s name while giving future members the discretion to change the title.


Comments and questions? Please contact us
Last modified: October 01, 2009. RSS info