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Articles 1 - 30 of 99
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Strengthening The Guard: The Use Of Gps Surveillance To Enforce Domestic Violence Protection Orders, Amanda Rhodes
Strengthening The Guard: The Use Of Gps Surveillance To Enforce Domestic Violence Protection Orders, Amanda Rhodes
Amanda Rhodes
This essay examines the use of GPS surveillance in enforcing domestic violence protection orders. Part I explores the rationale for using GPS surveillance in domestic violence situations. Part II addresses the primary constitutional concerns associated with GPS monitoring in the domestic violence context. Finally, Part III discusses the effectiveness of GPS surveillance in domestic violence cases.
Planting People, Growing Justice: The Three Pillars Of New Social Justice Lawyering, Artika Renee Tyner
Planting People, Growing Justice: The Three Pillars Of New Social Justice Lawyering, Artika Renee Tyner
Artika Renee Tyner
This article explores the tools that lawyers can employ to build and sustain social change. These tools add a new dimension to scholarly research in the field by focusing on the role of lawyers as leaders as they seek to influence processes of social change, transform systems, and empower others to lead. This Article draws upon principles of social justice lawyering, which acknowledge that lawyers have a fiduciary duty to create equal justice under the law. It combines these frameworks with leadership theoretical perspectives since there is a dearth of research available on the role of lawyers as leaders in …
No Remedy For This Wrong? Analyzing The Appropriate Remedy For Violations Of California Penal Code § 834c, Jared W. Olen
No Remedy For This Wrong? Analyzing The Appropriate Remedy For Violations Of California Penal Code § 834c, Jared W. Olen
Jared W. Olen
Article 36(1)(b) of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations provides that a foreign national of a state-party has the right to have her consulate notified of her arrest upon detention. Many United Supreme Court and other federal courts have grappled with issues stemming from that right, including whether the treaty creates privately-enforceable rights. However, California was unique in that it enacted California Penal Code § 834c, which codifies as state law the right to consular notification.
While this codification precludes much discussion about privately-enforceable rights, the statute is, however, silent on what remedy should be applied if law enforcement violate …
Keeping Secrets: An Alternative To The Economic Penalty Enhancement Act, Brittani N. Baldwin
Keeping Secrets: An Alternative To The Economic Penalty Enhancement Act, Brittani N. Baldwin
Brittani N. Baldwin
No abstract provided.
Playing The Race Card: White Americans’ Sense Of Victimization In Response To Affirmative Action, Brett Hammon
Playing The Race Card: White Americans’ Sense Of Victimization In Response To Affirmative Action, Brett Hammon
Brett Hammon
“They marched on Washington to reclaim civil rights. They complained of voter intimidation at the polls. They called for ethnic studies programs to promote racial pride. They are, some say, the new face of racial oppression in this nation -- and their faces are White.”a A 2011 poll indicates that Whites have now come to view anti-White bias as a bigger problem than anti-Black bias.b Based on recent Supreme Court opinions, most of the Justices apparently agree that Whites are today’s true victims, as the Court has continued to steadfastly stand up for the rights of White plaintiffs against discrimination …
Pirate Accessory Liability – Developing A Modern Legal Regime Governing Incitement And Intentional Facilitation Of Maritime Piracy, Roger L. Phillips
Pirate Accessory Liability – Developing A Modern Legal Regime Governing Incitement And Intentional Facilitation Of Maritime Piracy, Roger L. Phillips
Roger L Phillips
Despite the exponential growth of piracy off the coast of Somalia since 2008, there have been no prosecutions of those who have profited most from ransom proceeds; that is crime bosses and pirate financiers. As U.S. courts begin to charge higher-level pirates, they must ascertain the status of customary international law as reflected in the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea. UNCLOS includes two forms of accessory liability suited to such prosecutions, but a number of ambiguities remain in the interpretation of these forms of liability. These lacunae cannot be explained by reference to the plain terms of …
Defying Gravity: The Development Of Standards By States In The International Prosecution Of International Atrocity Crimes, Matthew H. Charity
Defying Gravity: The Development Of Standards By States In The International Prosecution Of International Atrocity Crimes, Matthew H. Charity
Matthew H Charity
The number of nations that have signed and ratified the Rome Treaty of the International Criminal Court continues to expand, but the number of cases prosecuted remains fairly small. One issue that defies resolution is the place of complementarity in the post-conflict jurisdictional decisions of the I.C.C. and national tribunals. Although the Rome Statute crystallizes definitions of core international crimes, the interpretation of processes leaving jurisdiction with the nation or allowing jurisdiction to the I.C.C. continues to lack structure.
One step that some states have taken in implementing legislation and processes in support of jurisdiction over I.C.C. core crimes is …
Get Busy Living Or Get Busy Dying: Waiting For The Death Penalty, A Comparison Of The Appeals Process In The United States And The People’S Republic Of China, Derrick Yan Kit Wong
Get Busy Living Or Get Busy Dying: Waiting For The Death Penalty, A Comparison Of The Appeals Process In The United States And The People’S Republic Of China, Derrick Yan Kit Wong
Derrick Wong
This paper looks at the death penalty in the United States and China with a comparison of the judicial system in each country. The paper examines the speed at which China processes their death penalty cases and the delay in the US system. The purpose of the paper is to show that because of the delays in the US system, the financial burden to the taxpayer is increased and is not viewed as deterrence. If the US were to adopt a portion of the Chinese judicial system efficiency without sacrificing due process, then the death penalty can be a deterrent …
Ncaa Football, Domestic Violence, And The Need For Reform, Hugo Israel Ortega
Ncaa Football, Domestic Violence, And The Need For Reform, Hugo Israel Ortega
Hugo I Ortega
Because a disproportionate number of student-athletes abuse partners, the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) should adopt a new policy to adequately address the problem. The NCAA does not currently have a policy in place to deal with student athletes who commit domestic violence. Universities have failed to take the initiative or demonstrate leadership in handling these cases without any guidance or uniformity, which has led to significant problems. Several obstacles remain in the way of adopting a new policy. First, NCAA Football is a billion dollar business. Taking star athletes off the field for conduct relating to domestic violence could …
Race And The Death Penalty: An Empirical Assessment Of First Degree Murder Convictions In Tennessee After Gregg V. Georgia, John M. Scheb Ii, Hemant K. Sharma, David J. Houston, Kristin Wagers
Race And The Death Penalty: An Empirical Assessment Of First Degree Murder Convictions In Tennessee After Gregg V. Georgia, John M. Scheb Ii, Hemant K. Sharma, David J. Houston, Kristin Wagers
John M Scheb II
We analyze over 1,000 first-degree murder convictions in the state of Tennessee from 1977 through 2007 to determine if either “race-of-defendant” or “race-of-victim” effects are present when it comes to the application of capital punishment. We control for numerous factors related to the demographics of offender and victim, as well as the circumstances of the crime itself and the availability of evidence. Our primary findings note that prosecutors are more likely to seek a death sentence when a victim is white, but we also find that juries are not affected by the race of the victim. We also find no …
Remapping The Path Forward: Toward A Systemic View Of Forensic Science Reform And Oversight, Jennifer E. Laurin
Remapping The Path Forward: Toward A Systemic View Of Forensic Science Reform And Oversight, Jennifer E. Laurin
Jennifer E. Laurin
The 2009 report of the National Academy of Sciences on the state of forensic science in the American criminal justice system has fundamentally altered the landscape for scientific evidence in the criminal process, and is now setting the terms for the future of forensic science reform and practice. But the accomplishments of the Report must not obscure the vast terrain that remains untouched by the path of reform that it charts. This Article aims to illuminate a critical and currently neglected feature of that territory, namely, the manner in which police and prosecutors, as upstream users of forensic science, select …
Remapping The Path Forward: Toward A Systemic View Of Forensic Science Reform And Oversight, Jennifer E. Laurin
Remapping The Path Forward: Toward A Systemic View Of Forensic Science Reform And Oversight, Jennifer E. Laurin
Jennifer E. Laurin
The 2009 report of the National Academy of Sciences on the state of forensic science in the American criminal justice system has fundamentally altered the landscape for scientific evidence in the criminal process, and is now setting the terms for the future of forensic science reform and practice. But the accomplishments of the Report must not obscure the vast terrain that remains untouched by the path of reform that it charts. This Article aims to illuminate a critical and currently neglected feature of that territory, namely, the manner in which police and prosecutors, as upstream users of forensic science, select …
Chinese Homicide Law, Irrationality And Incremental Change, Michael Vitiello
Chinese Homicide Law, Irrationality And Incremental Change, Michael Vitiello
Michael Vitiello
Abstract: Chinese Homicide Law, Irrationality and Incremental Change This article begins with a striking hypothetical: “Having learned that his wife was having an affair, the defendant mulled over his options. After deliberation, he decided to shoot her and her lover. Sneaking up on them as they sat together in an isolated area, the defendant shot each in the chest. Because they were far from the nearest city, they received no first aid and both bled to death. Charged with first degree murder, the defendant has asked you to represent him. In your first interview, the defendant explains that he did …
A Decade Of Progress: Promising Models For Children In The Turkish Juvenile Justice System, Brenda Mckinney, Lauren Salins
A Decade Of Progress: Promising Models For Children In The Turkish Juvenile Justice System, Brenda Mckinney, Lauren Salins
Brenda A McKinney
In the past decade, Turkey has improved its approach to dealing with children in conflict with the law and moved the country closer to a system that ensures all children have the chance they deserve to strive for a better future. This paper focuses on two promising reforms that have been instituted in Turkey and that have the potential for improving juvenile justice systems in the rest of the world. They are: 1) open model incarceration and 2) diversion. While this paper also addresses challenges inherent in these models and discusses broader issues in the Turkish juvenile justice system that …
Applying Method To The Madness: The Right To Court Appointed Guardians Ad Litem And Counsel For The Mentally Ill In Immigration Proceedings, Amelia Wilson
Amelia Wilson
A unique dilemma facing immigration judges (IJs) and practitioners today is how to address the acute problem of mentally ill respondents appearing pro se in immigration removal proceedings. Mentally ill respondents are more likely to face deportation from a position of indigence and detention, both of which create substantial barriers to obtaining counsel. Even where represented, the mentally ill are less able to contribute to their own defense or understand the proceedings against them. This lack of meaningful participation has cascading deleterious effects on respondents themselves, but also on our already overburdened immigration courts by creating docket delays, prolonged detention, …
A Shot In Arm: Can Chemical Castration Statutes Cure Sex Offenders Legally And Ethically?, Robert Watters
A Shot In Arm: Can Chemical Castration Statutes Cure Sex Offenders Legally And Ethically?, Robert Watters
Robert Watters
At least seven states currently have sex offender castration statutes. This article examines the legal and ethical appropriateness of those statutes against the successful and unsuccessful European models.
Restorative Justice In The Gilded Age: Shared Principles Underlying Two Movements In Criminal Justice, Ali M. Abid
Restorative Justice In The Gilded Age: Shared Principles Underlying Two Movements In Criminal Justice, Ali M. Abid
Ali M Abid
Two very different approaches to Criminal Justice have developed in recent years suggesting systemic reforms that would reduce rates of crime and incarceration and lessen the disproportionate effect on minority groups and other suspect classes. The first of these is the Restorative Justice movement, which has programs operating in most US states and many countries around the world. The Restorative Justice movement focuses on reintegrating offenders with the community and having them repair the damage directly to their victims. The movement describes itself as based on the systems of indigenous and pre-modern societies and as wholly distinct from the conventional …
“An Existential Moment Of Moral Perception”: Declarations Of Life And The Capital Jury Re-Imagined, Rebecca T. Engel
“An Existential Moment Of Moral Perception”: Declarations Of Life And The Capital Jury Re-Imagined, Rebecca T. Engel
Rebecca T Engel
In many ways, death penalty jurisprudence, as well as its social status, have evolved at a rapid rate recently in the United States. This has occurred as the Supreme Court has twice declared capital punishment to be specifically unconstitutional in the last decade, in Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S. 304 (2002) and Roper v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551 (2005), and as five states within four years have repealed it from within their criminal justice systems. (New York, New Jersey, Illinois, New Mexico, and Connecticut.) However, in other ways, the system has continued to lag, hardly moving from its difficult reinstatement …
Kids, Counsel And Costs: An Empirical Study Of Indigent Defense Services In The Los Angeles Juvenile Delinquency Courts, Cyn Yamashiro
Kids, Counsel And Costs: An Empirical Study Of Indigent Defense Services In The Los Angeles Juvenile Delinquency Courts, Cyn Yamashiro
cyn yamashiro
In the landmark case In re Gault, the Supreme Court guaranteed juveniles virtually all of the criminal due process rights previously granted to adults. Arguably the most vital of those rights is the right to competent counsel. Scholars have studied how systems provide legal counsel and have questioned the use of certain models to provide defense services. Los Angeles County utilizes two distinct models for the provision of defense services: a contract-panel attorney model and a public defender office. This study looks at data from over 2,800 juvenile court case files from the Los Angeles juvenile courts and asks the …
The Mandatory Meaning Of Miller, William W. Berry Iii
The Mandatory Meaning Of Miller, William W. Berry Iii
William W Berry III
In June 2012, the United States Supreme Court held in Miller v. Alabama that the imposition of mandatory life-without-parole sentences on juveniles violated the Eighth Amendment’s ban on “cruel and unusual” punishment. This case continued the Supreme Court’s slow but steady expansion of the scope of the Eighth Amendment over the past decade. In light of the Court’s decision in Miller to preclude mandatory sentences of life without parole for juveniles, this article explores the possibility of further expansion of the Eighth Amendment to proscribe other kinds of mandatory sentences. Applying the approach of the Court in Miller to other …
Time For A Tune-Up: Retooling The 2012 Tip Report In Order To Better Meet International Legal Research Standards, Ashley Feasley
Time For A Tune-Up: Retooling The 2012 Tip Report In Order To Better Meet International Legal Research Standards, Ashley Feasley
Ashley Feasley
The US Trafficking in Persons (TIP) Report is a valuable international report and diplomatic tool. However, the TIP Report needs to be overhauled to include documentation of sources and citations, as well as reflect relevant international legal standards. This paper points out some high-level improvements that could be made to the TIP Report to make it a better international research tool.
Notification And Risk Management For Victims Of Domestic Violence, Jaime K. Dahlstedt
Notification And Risk Management For Victims Of Domestic Violence, Jaime K. Dahlstedt
Jaime K. Dahlstedt
Technological advances have made possible the real-time enforcement of temporary and contested protection orders issued on behalf of victims of domestic abuse, particularly through global positioning satellite (GPS) monitoring of individuals who have been found to have committed domestic violence offenses and against whom stay away orders have been entered. Notwithstanding this capability, however, courts rarely impose GPS monitoring requirements alongside the safety provisions routinely imposed in domestic abuse cases.
This Article examines and critiques this prevailing practice. This Article argues that the procedural, substantive and logistical objections to GPS monitoring do not sufficiently justify the systemic failure to impose …
Disparate Protections For American Human Trafficking Victims, Amanda J. Peters
Disparate Protections For American Human Trafficking Victims, Amanda J. Peters
Amanda J Peters
The United States enacted the Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA) in 2000. It was the first piece of legislation to address human trafficking. Since that time, the United States has monitored anti-trafficking efforts worldwide. Nations that fail to meet minimum standards set by the United States risk losing non-humanitarian financial aid from the federal government, the International Monetary Fund, and global banks. Yet, these minimum standards are not met by the United States when it comes to protecting American trafficking victims.
According to the TVPA, governments shall attempt to prevent human trafficking, punish traffickers, and protect people who have been …
Medical Marijuana Lawyers: Outlaws Or Crusaders?, Sam Kamin, Eli Wald
Medical Marijuana Lawyers: Outlaws Or Crusaders?, Sam Kamin, Eli Wald
Sam Kamin
While marijuana remains a prohibited substance under federal law – one whose manufacture, possession, or distribution is a serious felony – 17 states plus the District of Columbia have legalized the drug for certain medical uses. This tension between state and federal law creates confusion for all of those who work in the emerging medical marijuana (“MMJ”) industry. As marijuana moves from the shadows to the storefronts, it becomes a business. Businesses have employees, shareholders and leases; they must comply with state and local zoning ordinances and pay their taxes. In most businesses, proprietors turn to lawyers for help with …
The Contradictory Stance On Jury Nullification, Kenneth J. Duvall
The Contradictory Stance On Jury Nullification, Kenneth J. Duvall
Kenneth J Duvall
Arguments about jury nullification in both courts and academia proceed under the assumption that either proponents and opponents of nullification could decisively carry the day. But as current Supreme Court law stands, nullification is at once prohibited and protected. This Article shines a light on the uneasy, confusing compromise in the doctrine, and finds that the two ways out of the dilemma—fully embracing nullification, or rejecting it—are equally taboo to the American legal mind. In Part I, this Article briefly explains the contested history of nullification. In Part II, it examines modern courts’ intermittent recognition of nullification. Part III then …
Of “Just Systems” And Lotteries: Thoughts And Reflections On Maples V. Thomas, Ryan K. Melcher
Of “Just Systems” And Lotteries: Thoughts And Reflections On Maples V. Thomas, Ryan K. Melcher
Ryan K Melcher
In 2012, the Supreme Court handed down its seven-to-two ruling in the case of Maples v. Thomas, a sad tale of attorney-ethics disasters and a seemingly broken (assuming it ever worked) Alabama criminal-justice system. Although the Court held that the “extraordinary” facts of the case warranted excusing Maples’s procedural default in his federal habeas corpus petition (namely, his failure to file a petition in time), it did not make entirely clear whether this was a one-time-only deal or a “template” (as dissenting Justice Scalia asserted) for future petitioners seeking relief based on similar falters of their post-conviction-level attorneys. This Article …
Juvenile Crime Regulation And The Moral Panic Problem, Elizabeth S. Scott
Juvenile Crime Regulation And The Moral Panic Problem, Elizabeth S. Scott
Elizabeth S Scott
JUVENILE CRIME REGULATION AND THE MORAL PANIC PROBLEM Elizabeth S. Scott American lawmakers hold complex and somewhat inconsistent attitudes about the appropriate response to juvenile crime. The dominant contemporary view is exemplified by recent Supreme Court opinions rejecting harsh sentences for juveniles as unconstitutional; on this view, young offenders are fundamentally different from adults and their crimes are seen as the product of immaturity. But sometimes a very different view prevails-as it did in the 1990s—of juvenile offenders as dangerous criminals whose age and immaturity are irrelevant to criminal punishment. This Essay argues that the tough sentences and punitive law …
Prime Time For Japan To Take Another Step Forward In Lay Participation: Exploring Expansion To Civil Trials, Matthew J. Wilson
Prime Time For Japan To Take Another Step Forward In Lay Participation: Exploring Expansion To Civil Trials, Matthew J. Wilson
Matthew J. Wilson
As juries in the U.S. and other parts of the world have increasingly come under attack, many countries in Asia have recently turned to juries or quasi-juries in an effort to enhance judicial credibility, ensure justice, facilitate civic engagement, and even stimulate economic reform and recovery. In fact, Japan has led the recent movement of citizen participation in criminal judicial proceedings, and other Asian powers including South Korea, Taiwan, and China have followed its lead to varying degrees. Eyes around the world are focusing on Japan to see how its new jury system (more commonly known as its “lay judge …
The Impact Of Economic Integration N Drug Trafficking Between Turkey And Iran, Ekici Behsat, Unlu Ali
The Impact Of Economic Integration N Drug Trafficking Between Turkey And Iran, Ekici Behsat, Unlu Ali
Ekici Behsat
Turkish foreign trade and security policy has been undergoing profound transformations over the past decade. One of the major changes has been observed in Turkey`s bilateral relations with Iran. Ankara and Tehran sought political entente and economic integration through various energy and trade agreements. In 2007, the governments of Turkey and Iran signed a Memorandum of Understanding on energy and trade. At the subsequent press speeches the state leaders promised to boost bilateral trade, eliminate barriers and encourage free movement of people. The agreement indicated that Ankara and Tehran began to experience a new era of entente after decades of …
Governors! Seize The Law: A Call To Expand The Use Of Pardons To Provide Relief From Deportation, Stacy Caplow
Governors! Seize The Law: A Call To Expand The Use Of Pardons To Provide Relief From Deportation, Stacy Caplow
Stacy Caplow
An obscure provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act allows an immigrant convicted of a wide range of crimes that are grounds for deportation to avoid this fate if pardoned by a chief executive. In the current era of expansion of the categories of crimes that constitute grounds for deportation and the shrinkage of equitable forms of relief, a pardon presents a vehicle for ameliorating these harsh effects. But few presidents or governors take advantage of this opportunity, even when the individual facing deportation is a long-term lawful resident whose transgression occurred long ago. During a few months in 2010, …