When the first Quail calls

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Across
  1. 2. Matsuda’s concrete, substantive goal for law.
  2. 4. The bird whose call signals departure to freedom in the title.
  3. 10. A mode of legal thought criticised for ignoring real people’s lives.
  4. 11. A system of male dominance that the reading asks law to confront.
  5. 13. Matsuda’s central jurisprudential method.
  6. 16. A legal/political tradition connected to women’s struggles.
  7. 17. The sisters who publicly acknowledged their Black nephew in 1868.
  8. 18. Another constitutional ideal Matsuda connects to outsider consciousness.
Down
  1. 1. The field of legal thought Matsuda wants transformed.
  2. 3. The perspective of those outside dominant legal and social power.
  3. 5. One of the constitutional ideals Matsuda says she can make her own.
  4. 6. The combined structure of race-based domination discussed in the essay.
  5. 7. The legal space where Matsuda says one may both critique law and use it.
  6. 8. The lived condition from which concrete visions of justice emerge.
  7. 9. The language outsiders may use as a tool against injustice.
  8. 12. The anti-slavery tradition linked with feminism in the reading.
  9. 14. The strategic use of legal rights despite law’s oppressive history.
  10. 15. The ideal Matsuda critiques when it hides domination.