Abstract
What is the role for a law journal in advancing justice? What is the role of a justice-minded practitioner in furthering legal scholarship? And what is the intersection—practically and normatively—for law journals, legal scholars, practitioners, and justice? This brief Article attempts to lay a foundation for answering these important, but oft-neglected, questions. In the following conversation, a frequent contributor to the Michigan Journal of Race & Law (MJRL) and a former Editor-in-Chief of the Journal posit some ideas on how legal scholarship engages with justice, and how race-conscious practitioners can interact with race-conscious legal scholars.
Recommended Citation
Gabriel "Jack" Chin & Adam B. Wolf,
Justice and Law Journals,
20
Mich. J. Race & L.
485
(2015).
Available at:
https://repository.law.umich.edu/mjrl/vol20/iss2/9