Tulsa Law Review
(2022) Volume 57, Number 1 (2022) Tulsa Race Massacre Symposium Issue
Front Matter
Bearing Witness
Recipe For A Massacre: Tulsa 1921
Quraysh Ali Lansana
Introduction—The Remains of the Day: Tulsa 1921:2021
Tamara R. Piety
The 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre
Robert Turner
Tulsa Race Massacre Symposium Keynote Speech
Suzette Malveaux
Putting Tulsa in Context
Racial Capitalism and Race Massacres: Tulsa's Black Wall Street and Elaine's Sharecroppers
andré douglas pond cummings and Kalvin Graham
"A Solemn Promise Kept": The 1919 Elaine Race Riot and the Broadening of Habeus Corpus 100 Years Later
Thomas D. Holland and Michael R. Dolski
Were it Not for Tulsa: How the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Influenced the Desegregation of the American Educational System
Gail S. Stephenson
Probing the Causes and Interrogating the Law
The Law's Failures: Common Threads of Racial Injustice from Tulsa to Greensboro to the Present
Mary Louise Frampton
Juridical Intimidation From Greenwood Onward: Systemic Racism, Economic Terror, and a Call for Curative Court Reform
Amos N. Jones
Black Assets Matter
Keeva Terry
The Moral Dilemma of 20th Century Interracial Rape
Russell L. Christopher
Looking Forward
Empowering Black Wealth in the Shadow of the Tulsa Race Massacre
Lynne Marie Kohm, Katrina Sumner, and Peyton Farley
Connections Between Black Wall Street and Oklahoma's All-Black Towns
Warigia M. Bowman
Reparations, Constitutionality and the Model of Civil Damages
Guha Krishnamurthi and Peter Salib
Ellison Visits Greenwood, 1921
Quraysh Ali Lansana