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"This book represents our efforts, and the efforts of our contributors, to center questions of inequality in the teaching, learning, and practice of civil procedure by shining a light on the ways in which civil procedure may privilege-or silence-voices in our courts"--
Civil procedure --- Critical legal studies --- Social aspects --- United States. --- Aggregation. --- Americans With Disabilities Act. --- Arbitration. --- Assimilation. --- Asymmetric decision-making. --- Bankruptcy. --- Bias. --- Child welfare. --- Children. --- Class action. --- Class actions. --- Class. --- Cognition and cognitive psychology. --- Critical feminist theory. --- Critical race theory. --- Critical. --- Deconstruction and reconstruction. --- Disability theory. --- Disability. --- Discovery. --- Disparate impact. --- Disruption. --- Domestic and “foreign” law. --- Dukes v. Wal-Mart. --- Efficiency. --- Empirical. --- Employment discrimination. --- Equality. --- Eviction. --- Excessive Force. --- Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. --- Fees. --- Fines. --- Heuristics. --- Indian Child Welfare Act. --- Indian. --- Inferences. --- Interest Convergence. --- Intersectional. --- Intersectionality. --- Judges. --- LGBTQ+. --- Local rules. --- Marginalized. --- Motion to dismiss. --- Neutrality. --- Other-ing. --- Outsiders. --- Personal Jurisdiction. --- Pleading. --- Power dynamics. --- Prison litigation. --- Prisoner. --- Pro se. --- Procedural justice. --- Proposition 8. --- Queer theory. --- Race and gender bias. --- Racial Fortuity. --- Racism. --- Recusal. --- Summary judgment. --- Systemic inequality. --- Trans-substantive. --- Transsubtantivity. --- Violence. --- commonality. --- conflicts of interest. --- debt collection. --- implicit bias. --- judicial demographics. --- low-income litigants. --- poverty law. --- queer. --- same-sex marriage.
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