LatCrit: From Critical Legal Theory to Academic Activism
English
By (author): Francisco Valdes Steven W. Bender
Examines LatCrits emergence as a scholarly and activist community within and beyond the US legal academy
Emerging from the US legal academy in 1995, LatCrit theory is a genre of critical outsider jurisprudencea vital hub of contemporary scholarship that includes Feminist Legal Theory and Critical Race Theory, among other critical schools of legal knowledge. Its basic goals have been: (1) to develop a critical, activist, and inter-disciplinary discourse on law and society affecting Latinas/os/x, and (2) to foster both the development of coalitional theory and practice as well as the accessibility of this knowledge to agents of social and legal transformative change.
This slim volume tells the story of LatCrits growth and influence as a scholarly and activist community. Francisco Valdes and Steven W. Bender offer a living example of how critical outsider academics can organize long-term collective action, both in law and society, that will help those similarly inclined to better organize themselves. Part roadmap, part historical record, and part a path forward, LatCrit: From Critical Legal Theory to Academic Activismshows that with coalition, collaboration, and community, social transformation can take root.