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10 See e.g., Albert W. Altschuler, Law without Values: The Life, Work, and Legacy of Justice.9 See e.g., Lon Fuller, The Law in Quest of Itself (1940 Boston, Beacon Press, 1966), p. 118 Morton (.).5 Until then, I had no idea such laws had survived so long now I know that the Mississippi sterilization statute wasn’t repealed until 2008 6 – and that a 1909 Washington sterilization statute remains on the books to this day.
#BROODING OMNIPRESENCE HOW TO#
(In 1921, however, Washington introduced a new (.)ġNot long ago, 2 I was startled to read in my morning paper that legislators in North Carolina were nearing consensus on how to compensate roughly 3,000 people who had been involuntarily sterilized under the state’s eugenics laws 3 – the first of which was enacted in 1919, 4 and the most recent of which wasn’t repealed until 2003.
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This law “was undoubtedly intended to pro (.) 4 Chapter 281, Public Laws of North Carolina, Session 1919.3 Valerie Bauerlein, “State Mulls Amends for Sterilizations,” Wall Street Journal, June 10, 2011, A3.
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