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- Volume 82, Issue 1
- Compulsory Whiteness: Towards a Middle Eastern Legal Scholarship
Compulsory Whiteness: Towards a Middle Eastern Legal Scholarship
- By John Tehranian
- Published 03/10/2007
- Volume 82, Issue 1
- Print Version (PDF):
- Towards a Middle Eastern Legal Scholarship.pdf
John Tehranian
Associate Professor, University of Utah, S.J. Quinney College of Law. A.B., Harvard University; J.D., Yale Law School.
View all articles by John Tehranian
This Article focuses on the difficulties posed by the classification of Middle-Eastern-Americans as "white" under most state and federal programs. The classification is particularly problematic for those seeking to use anti-discrimination laws and remedial action programs to quell the rise in discrimination against Middle-Eastern-Americans in the post-9/11 world. Additionally, the classification makes it difficult to gather accurate statistics regarding such discrimination, given the difficulties in separating information about Middle-Eastern-Americans from the white majority. Professor Tehranian also addresses general constructs of race, in hopes of provoking a critical dialogue about legal issues relevant to Middle-Eastern-Americans.
Issue Contents
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Compulsory Whiteness: Towards a Middle Eastern Legal Scholarship

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