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