Russell Robinson Joins Faculty as CREJ Visiting Professor
Russell Robinson鈥攐ne of the few scholars in the country focused on the intersection of race, sexuality, and the law鈥攈as joined the UC Law SF Center for Racial and Economic Justice (CREJ) as its inaugural Wiley Manuel Visiting Scholar and Professor. His arrival signifies a pivotal step in realizing the vision for CREJ, launched in February 2020 and led by professors Alina Ball and Shauna Marshall.
Robinson said students who enroll in his class this fall on Race, Sexuality & Law will have a unique opportunity to think deeply about how their sense of self has been shaped by racist stereotypes in the news media and in their personal lives. He developed the course while teaching at UCLA Law and brought it to Berkeley Law in 2010.
鈥淪tudents are bringing their life experiences with race, gender, and sexuality to the class and hopefully leaving with a different lens,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檝e had white students leave my class with a whole new perspective on how race impacts their lives.鈥
Robinson鈥檚 course also aims to set the record straight about critical race theory at a moment when an increasing number of legislatures across the country are trying to ban its use in K-12 classrooms.
鈥淚t鈥檚 an opportunity to learn the truth about critical race theory as opposed to the distortion on social media and Fox News,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 painful to hear people distort CRT. It鈥檚 not racism against white people. It is a mode of legal analysis for understanding the ways we are divided based on race and proposes ways to dismantle racism.鈥
Ball said Robinson鈥檚 presence will enrich the UC Law SF community. 鈥淗e is the preeminent scholar on issues of race, sexuality, and the law,鈥 she said. 鈥淐REJ is not just bringing a fabulous scholar in residence, but we鈥檙e bringing the best in the field. I hope students recognize this unique opportunity and take advantage of it by engaging with him.鈥
Besides teaching the course, Robinson will deliver a campus-wide lecture. He will also mentor CREJ Visiting Assistant Professor Evelyn Rangel, a budding scholar exploring the enforcement and policing of documentation status and its discriminatory impacts on citizens and noncitizens of color.
Ball said she knows firsthand that Robinson will be a great mentor at UC Law SF. When she was a student at UCLA Law, he was on the faculty and provided edits to her first law review article, on community economic development. Both Ball and Robinson started as corporate lawyers before transitioning into academia. 鈥淗is patience, encouragement, and steadfast belief in our talent was truly transformative, as I believe it will be for students in his course this fall,鈥 Ball said.
Robinson earned his J.D.聽 from Harvard Law in 1995 and clerked for Judge Dorothy Nelson of the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and Justice Stephen Breyer of the U.S. Supreme Court.
Recently published works include 鈥溾楶laying it Safe鈥 with Empirical Evidence: Selective Use of Social Science in Supreme Court Cases About Racial Justice and Marriage Equality,鈥 112 Northwestern Law Rev.聽1565聽(2018); 鈥淟GBT Equality and Sexual Racism,鈥澛86 Fordham L. Rev. 2739聽(2018); 鈥淭he Afterlife of Homophobia,鈥澛60 Ariz. L. Rev. 213聽(2018); and 鈥淯nequal Protection,鈥澛67 Stan. L. Rev.听(2015).
Marshall said Robinson is a welcome addition to the school: 鈥淎s our nation grapples with the enduring effects of a system built, in part, on genocide, slavery and racism, Professor Robinson鈥檚 visit brings to the UC Law SF community the voice of one of the nation鈥檚 premier race and sexuality scholars. His writings not only help us understand our troubling legacy, but they deconstruct the myths surrounding that history.鈥