Dean Angela Onwuachi-Willig Gives Keynote for the Annual Childress Lecture
This year's Childress Memorial Lecture, held on Oct. 8, 2021, was hosted by the Saint Louis University Law Journal and Saint Louis University School of Law in cooperation with the Saint Louis University Department of African American Studies and organized by Prof. Chad Flanders and 3L Dylan Ashdown, managing editor of Childress Memorial Issue 2021-22.
Angela Onwuachi-Willig, Dean and Ryan Roth Gallo & Ernest J. Gallo Professor of Law, Boston University School of Law, was the keynote speaker.
In her address, Dean Onwuachi-Willig discussed the importance of critical-race theory in the law.
鈥淭he decision to make critical race theory this year鈥檚 topic for the symposium is not one that we should overlook,鈥 said Onwuachi-Willig. 鈥淚n a context in which a full-scale attack has been launched against critical race theory to undermine and discredit the field as divisive and as my co-editors and I point out in the forthcoming book, Critical Race Judgments, as being beyond all reason.鈥
She attributed the successes of recent protests and movements like 鈥#MeToo鈥 and 鈥#BlackLivesMatter鈥 to two factors: the emergence of critical-race theory; and the emergence of social media and its impact on the resource mobilization component on social movement making.
鈥淣ot only have we have given them a language and an expectation for what they should expect and demand to achieve equality, but also the theoretical framework for establishing and building the movements and solutions to achieve that vision.鈥
She discussed the meaningful role of critical-race theory in the Black Lives Matter movement and shaping ideas behind the movement, classical sociological models and social movement theory, the informal and formal means in which people form social movements, and the emergence of social media helping to create new avenues of communication, outreach, and movement making to those who have not previously had access to power and traditional media outlets.
Dean Onwuachi-Willig covered the development of the Black Lives Matter movement from inception, and the means of using Twitter as a means to rewrite stock narratives with counternarratives.
Speaking of the Twitter campaign, 鈥#IfTheyGunnedMeDown鈥 she said, 鈥淭his campaign offered a sharp and persuasive critique on how Black victims get demonized in the media through chosen representations of their character. In this critique, Black tweeters posted two contrasting pictures of themselves, suggesting that the more sympathetic photograph, often from a graduation, military service ceremony, or church would be the photograph the media would choose to ignore, instead choosing to publish a more stereotypical or negative image that provided only one limited snapshot of their lives.鈥
Following her address, the first panel discussed 鈥淧erspectives on Critical-Race Theory鈥 with: Danielle M. Conway, Dean and Donald J. Farage Professor of Law at Penn State Dickinson Law; Mario Barnes, Toni Rembe Dean, University of Washington School of Law; and Christopher Tinson, Associate Professor; Chair, African American Studies, Saint Louis University.
A second panel explored 鈥淐ritical-Race Theory and the Crisis in Criminal Justice鈥 with: David Niven, associate professor, University of Cincinnati; Ngozi Okidegbe, assistant professor of law, Cardozo School of Law, Yeshiva University; and, Anthony Farley, James Campbell Matthews Distinguished Professor of Jurisprudence, Albany Law School.
By Ashlynn Zapolski (1L), communications assistant