ABOUT THE
JOURNAL
The Berkeley Journal of African-American Law & Policy (BJALP)(formerly the African-American Law & Policy Report) is published annually each
spring by students at the University of California, Berkeley School of
Law (Boalt Hall). The JOURNAL was founded in 1992 and is a forum for scholars,
practitioners and students to address law and policy issues relating specifically
to the African-American community and people of color, generally.
Our Mandate:
BJALP is dedicated to addressing legal and policy issues that
affect the African-American community and people of color in general.
BJALP deals with such matters as constitutional law, criminal
justice, civil rights, African-American participation in the political
process, the death penalty, fair housing, economic development in the
African-American community, African and
Caribbean
immigration to the United States,
health issues that affect African Americans, as well as issues affecting
Africa and the African diaspora.
Our
History:
The
African-American Law & Policy Report (ALPR) was
founded at the University of California, Berkeley School of Law (Boalt
Hall) in 1992 to provide an alternative forum to address legal and policy
issues of concern to African Americans. But, its roots hearken back to
the Black Law Journal (presently the National Black Law Journal)
established in 1971 at UCLA School of Law.
The Black
Law Journal represented a collaborative effort, with students at
other schools occasionally publishing individual issues of the Black
Law Journal with the assistance of UCLA and their home law schools.
In 1987, UCLA and Boalt Hall published a joint issue of the Black
Law Journal. Just five years later, with the founding of ALPR,
students at Boalt expanded and institutionalized their roles as contributors
to black legal scholarship.
In 1994,
the first volume of the African-American Law & Policy Report
was published. At that time, ALPR was one of only three black
law journals in the nation. Those three journals occupied a unique space
in legal academia because they attended to scholarship and topics that
were otherwise ignored. The Editors-in-Chief of ALPR’s
inaugural issue, Mario Barnes and Angela Watkins, recognized that “if
the stories of minority scholars were widely accepted and published in
majority law journals, if the problems strangling minority communities
were often the focus of scholarly discourse, then we probably would not
need this journal.” We need this journal now as much as then.
The 1996
passage of Proposition 209 marked the end of race-conscious admissions
in California’s public schools. Proposition 209 paved the way for
the re-segregation of higher education and hampered the possibility of
a healthy and striving black law journal. In 1997, Boalt Hall enrolled
one black student. That same year, ALPR published its third volume.
The conspicuous absence of African Americans at Boalt had a debilitating
effect on ALPR, making regular publication difficult. For the
next several years ALPR departed from its normal annual publication schedule
and published only two volumes both of which were in collaboration with
other law journals on campus.
In 2003,
we published our first independent volume since the passage of Proposition
209. Although the publication was not without difficulty, it signified
the rebirth of the African-American Law & Policy Report.
In Spring 2004, we followed with Volume 6 -the Reparations issue- while
producing a national symposium: The Role of Law & Policy: Africa,
the Caribbean, and the United States. In Spring 2005, we published Volume 7--our most far-reaching issue to date. For example, our lead article by Professors Kevin Johnson and Angela Onwuachi-Willig responds to a Stanford Law Review article by Professor Richard Sander attacking affirmative action policies that are designed to enhance admissions rates of African Americans at elite law schools.
In fall 2005, we changed our name to the Berkeley Journal of African-American Law & Policy.
Our past several volumes clearly illustrate that BJALP has decisively reclaimed
its rightful place as one of the preeminent scholarly journals for and
about the African-American community.
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