The rights revolution revisited : institutional perspectives on the private enforcement of civil rights in the U.S. /
| Corporate Author: | |
|---|---|
| Other Authors: | |
| Format: | eBook |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
New York, NY :
Cambridge University Press,
2018.
|
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | Connect to the full text of this electronic book |
Table of Contents:
- Reassessing the rights revolution / Lynda G. Dodd
- Approaches to enforcing the rights revolution: private civil rights litigation and the American bureaucracy / Quinn Mulroy
- Mobilizing rights at the agency level: the first interpretations of Title VII's sex provision / Jennifer Woodward
- Motivating litigants to enforce public goods: evidence from employment, housing, and voting discrimination policy / Paul Gardner
- Regulatory rights: civil rights agencies, courts, and the entrenchment of language rights / Ming Hsu Chen
- Sexual harassment and the evolving civil rights state / R. Shep Melnick
- The civil rights template and the Americans with Disabilities Act: a sociolegal perspective on the promise and limits of individual rights / Thomas F. Burke and Jeb Barnes
- Retrenching civil rights litigation: why the court succeeded where Congress failed / Stephen B. Burbank and Sean Farhang
- The contours of the Supreme Court's civil rights counterrevolution / Lynda G. Dodd
- Constraining aid, retrenching access: legal services after the rights revolution / Sarah Staszak
- Rationalizing rights: political control of litigation / David Freeman Engstrom
- The future of private enforcement of civil rights / Lynda G. Dodd.