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2020

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Justice As Message Symposium: What We See When We See Law … Through The Eyes Of Dame Laura Knight, Diane Marie Amann Dec 2020

Justice As Message Symposium: What We See When We See Law … Through The Eyes Of Dame Laura Knight, Diane Marie Amann

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The eye cannot help but be drawn to the cover of Justice as Message, the new analysis by Carsten Stahn of, to quote the subtitle, Expressivist Foundations of International Criminal Justice. On the high-gloss paper jacket we see a tableau of blacks and browns and olive drab, accented only by the purple of a lawyer’s robe and the teal of a dossier perched on the bar behind him. In front, we see that the bench is buried in paper – paper that turns to ashes as the back wall gives way to a vision of buildings in ruin …


Contemporary Homeschooling: Black Children’S Best Interests, Freedom From Religion, And Anti-Racism, Andrea L. Dennis, Cheryl Fields-Smith Dec 2020

Contemporary Homeschooling: Black Children’S Best Interests, Freedom From Religion, And Anti-Racism, Andrea L. Dennis, Cheryl Fields-Smith

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The coronavirus pandemic has increased interest in homeschooling, igniting discussion and debate surrounding the intersections of family and children’s rights, religious freedom, and education law. This essay raises awareness regarding the changing faces of homeschool families which challenge notions of equity and familial rights related to education and religion. We draw on the above representative quote from Anneliese to provide understanding of the benefits and meaning of homeschooling from an African American perspective.

Traditional homeschooling – in which parents assume full responsibility for their children’s education outside of public or private school settings – long has been viewed as a …


The Meaning Of "Medicare-For-All", Isaac ("Zack") D. Buck Dec 2020

The Meaning Of "Medicare-For-All", Isaac ("Zack") D. Buck

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Medicare-for-All proposals are heralded for the guarantee of additional coverage they provide, moving health insurance in the United States from nearly universal to completely universal. Indeed, if Medicare is known for something, it is the guarantee of access to health insurance it provides. Since its inception, the Medicare program has provided universal coverage to Americans aged 65 and older—a population that is both expensive to cover and often most in need of high-quality health care. But Medicare is more than that. While Medicare has become the program that guarantees coverage to an entire subset of American citizens, it has also …


Unravelling The Us Presidential Election, Lori A. Ringhand Nov 2020

Unravelling The Us Presidential Election, Lori A. Ringhand

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One of the most perplexing things about US elections is the extent to which we litigate what in much of the rest of the world are routine nuts and bolts questions about how elections work. I had first-hand experience with this during the 2000 presidential election when I was living in the UK. Why, I constantly was asked, is the US Supreme Court deciding your presidential election?

It’s a good question, and also a timely one given how the current presidential election is unfolding.


The Music Of Mass Incarceration, Andrea L. Dennis Nov 2020

The Music Of Mass Incarceration, Andrea L. Dennis

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Intellectual property law reaches every aspect of the world, society, and creativity. Sometimes, creative expression is at the very crux of societal conflict and change. Through its history, rap music has demonstrated passionate creative expression, exploding with emotion and truths. Now the most popular musical genre in America, rap has always shared—and consistently critiqued—disproportionate effects of the criminal legal system on Black communities. The world is increasingly hearing these tunes with special acuity and paying more attention to the lyrics. Virtually every music recording artist would consider the following numbers a major career achievement: 500 percent increase; 222 percent growth; …


Hands-Off Religion In The Early Months Of Covid-19, Samuel J. Levine Oct 2020

Hands-Off Religion In The Early Months Of Covid-19, Samuel J. Levine

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For decades, scholars have documented the United States Supreme Court’s “hands-off approach” to questions of religious practice and belief, pursuant to which the Court has repeatedly declared that judges are precluded from making decisions that require evaluating and determining the substance of religious doctrine. At the same time, many scholars have criticized this approach, for a variety of reasons. The early months of the COVID-19 outbreak brought these issues to the forefront, both directly, in disputes over limitations on religious gatherings due to the virus, and indirectly, as the Supreme Court decided important cases turning on religious doctrine. Taken together, …


The Nature Of Standing, Matthew I. Hall, Christian Turner Oct 2020

The Nature Of Standing, Matthew I. Hall, Christian Turner

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Standing to raise a claim before a judicial tribunal is notoriously contested. Federal courts during the last century developed an increasingly rule-like and rigid doctrine around the concept of private injury to govern access to the federal forum. Some states followed the federal lead. Others have created important exceptions, and even in federal courts, issues like organizational standing, legislative standing, and standing of qui tam relators have proved controversial. We describe a broader taxonomy of agenda control rules, of which standing rules are a special case, to understand why and how courts and other institutions govern their choices of what …


The Legal Landscape For Frontline Student Journalists, Jonathan Peters Oct 2020

The Legal Landscape For Frontline Student Journalists, Jonathan Peters

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They have exposed campus outbreaks and questioned reopening plans. They have documented social-distancing violations at fraternity and sorority houses. They have tracked and explained fast-breaking changes to instructional modes and commencement events. They have demanded transparency from school administrators. And through it all they have boldly told the story of the human experience.

Famously, at the University of North Carolina, the Daily Tar Heel published a biting editorial under the headline “UNC has a clusterfuck on its hands,” after virus clusters were identified in campus housing. And the day that Notre Dame announced it would move only temporarily …


Gut Renovations: Using Critical And Comparative Rhetoric To Remodel How The Law Addresses Privilege And Power, Lucille Jewel Oct 2020

Gut Renovations: Using Critical And Comparative Rhetoric To Remodel How The Law Addresses Privilege And Power, Lucille Jewel

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No abstract provided.


The Impact Of Autonomous Vehicles On Urban Land Use Patterns, Gregory M. Stein Sep 2020

The Impact Of Autonomous Vehicles On Urban Land Use Patterns, Gregory M. Stein

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Autonomous vehicles are coming. The only questions are how quickly they will arrive, how we will manage the years when they share the road with conventional vehicles, and how the legal system will address the issues they raise. This Article examines the impact the autonomous vehicle revolution will have on urban land use patterns.

Autonomous vehicles will transform the use of land and the law governing that valuable land. Automobiles will drop passengers off and then drive themselves to remote parking areas, reducing the need for downtown parking. These vehicles will create the need for substantial changes in roadway design. …


Tired Of Looking Gray And Boring Online? A Simple 3-Camera Tv Studio/Classroom For Lively Online Teaching, Glenn Harlan Reynolds Sep 2020

Tired Of Looking Gray And Boring Online? A Simple 3-Camera Tv Studio/Classroom For Lively Online Teaching, Glenn Harlan Reynolds

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Tired of the dreary webcam-look in my online classroom, I created a fairly simple and reasonably inexpensive three-camera studio using real video cameras for online teaching. This paper outlines how it was done, and provides suggestions for simpler, cheaper alternatives that are still far superior to traditional webcam approaches.


(In)Formal Marriage Equality, Michael J. Higdon Sep 2020

(In)Formal Marriage Equality, Michael J. Higdon

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In 2015, same-sex couples throughout the United States obtained formal marriage equality. But is the prospective ability to obtain marriage licenses sufficient to achieve Obergefell’s promise of equality? What about individuals whose same-sex relationship did not survive — either through death or dissolution — to see marriage equality become the law of the land? Or those who did ultimately wed but now have a marriage that appears to be artificially short when considering just how long the couple has actually been together in a marriage-like relationship? With marriage benefits conditioned not only on the fact of marriage but also the …


Inequality In The Sharing Economy, Gregory M. Stein Sep 2020

Inequality In The Sharing Economy, Gregory M. Stein

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The rise of the sharing economy benefits consumers and providers alike. Consumers can access a wider range of goods and services on an as-needed basis and no longer need to own a smaller number of costly assets that sit unused most of the time. Providers can engage in profitable short-term ventures, working on their own schedule and enjoying many new opportunities to supplement their income.

Sharing economy platforms often employ dynamic pricing, which means that the price of a good or service varies in real time as supply and demand change. Under dynamic pricing, the price of a good or …


A Reckoning Over Law Faculty Inequality, Melanie Wilson Sep 2020

A Reckoning Over Law Faculty Inequality, Melanie Wilson

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In this review, I examine Dr. Meera E. Deo’s book, Unequal Profession: Race and Gender in Legal Academia, published last year by Stanford University Press. In Unequal Profession, Deo, an expert on institutional diversity, presents findings from a first-of-its-kind empirical study, documenting many of the challenges women of color law faculty confront daily in legal academia. Deo uses memorable quotes and powerful stories from the study’s faculty participants to present her important work in 169 readable and revealing pages. Unequal Profession begins by outlining the barriers women of color face when entering law teaching and progresses through the life cycle …


The Pandemic Juror, Melanie Wilson Aug 2020

The Pandemic Juror, Melanie Wilson

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While the deadly and highly contagious COVID-19 virus rages across the country, courts are resuming criminal jury trials. In moving forward, judges reference case backlogs, speedy trial rights, and concern for the rights of the accused. Overlooked in this calculus is the importance of juror safety. The Sixth Amendment guarantees “the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury.” There is no justice without jurors.

Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, the justice system sometimes took advantage of juror vulnerability, treating jurors callously, if not rudely, during voir dire by asking them intensely personal questions. During the pandemic, …


Private Insurance Limits And Responses, Elizabeth Weeks Aug 2020

Private Insurance Limits And Responses, Elizabeth Weeks

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The COVID-19 pandemic exposed a number of existing flaws in the United States’ patchwork approach to paying for and providing access to medical care. Shelter-in-place orders, social distancing, and other public health strategies employed to address the pandemic spawned a global recession, causing rapid and high unemployment rates in many countries. The U.S. unemployment rate peaked in April 2020 at 14.7%, higher than in any previous period since World War II. The United States has long hewed an anachronistic policy of relying heavily on private employers to provide health insurance to a substantial portion of the population. Those who are …


The Gun Subsidy, Christian Turner, Justin Van Orsdol Aug 2020

The Gun Subsidy, Christian Turner, Justin Van Orsdol

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Despite thousands of gun deaths annually, the United States has failed to reach consensus on any means of addressing the public health crisis that is gun violence. The issue has become politically polarized, constitutionalized, and an object of pessimism and despair. We propose a regulatory system in which gun manufacturers would be strictly liable to a federal fund for deaths caused by their guns, paired with a subsidy that will serve to ensure the availability of guns sufficient to meet the rights the Supreme Court has found in the Second Amendment. While strict liability of this kind can indeed serve …


Organizational Justice And Antidiscrimination, Brad Areheart Jun 2020

Organizational Justice And Antidiscrimination, Brad Areheart

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Despite eighty years of governmental interventions, the legal system has proven ill-equipped to address workplace discrimination. Potential plaintiffs are reluctant to file discrimination claims for a host of social and economic reasons, and the relatively few who do file face steep structural barriers. This Article argues that the most promising way to curb workplace discrimination is not through amending statutes or trying to change the behavior of individual bad actors; instead, we must modify the workplace itself. Specifically, this Article argues that Organizational Justice — a theory empirically grounded in behavioral science — provides novel guidance for how to proactively …


Private Schools' Role And Rights In Setting Vaccination Policy: A Constitutional And Statutory Puzzle, Hillel Y. Levin May 2020

Private Schools' Role And Rights In Setting Vaccination Policy: A Constitutional And Statutory Puzzle, Hillel Y. Levin

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Measles and other vaccine-preventable childhood diseases are making a comeback, as a growing number of parents are electing not to vaccinate their children. May private schools refuse admission to these students? This deceptively simple question raises complex issues of First Amendment law and statutory interpretation, and it also has implications for other current hot-button issues in constitutional law, including whether private schools may discriminate against LGBTQ students. This Article is the first to address the issue of private schools’ rights to exclude unvaccinated children. It finds that the answer is “it depends.” It also offers a model law that states …


Commentary To Professor Baker's Presentation, Gary Pulsinelli Apr 2020

Commentary To Professor Baker's Presentation, Gary Pulsinelli

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No abstract provided.


Commentary To Dean Fershee, Judy Cornett Apr 2020

Commentary To Dean Fershee, Judy Cornett

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No abstract provided.


Commentary To Professor Murray's Presentation, Eric Franklin Amarante Apr 2020

Commentary To Professor Murray's Presentation, Eric Franklin Amarante

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No abstract provided.


Criminalizing Immigrant Entrepreneurs (And Their Lawyers), Eric Franklin Amarante Apr 2020

Criminalizing Immigrant Entrepreneurs (And Their Lawyers), Eric Franklin Amarante

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To escape the harsh conditions of work in agriculture or food processing plants, many undocumented immigrants turn to entrepreneurship for safer working conditions and better economic prospects. Transactional lawyers often help these entrepreneurs form limited liability companies or worker cooperatives. Unfortunately, this simple act might expose these lawyers to criminal liability. The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 (IRCA) prohibits anyone from encouraging an undocumented person to reside in the United States. This prohibition has been construed to include everything from employing undocumented housekeepers to procuring falsified documents for citizenship applications, and some courts have even suggested that the …


Externalities Are Not Illusory, Gregory M. Stein Apr 2020

Externalities Are Not Illusory, Gregory M. Stein

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No abstract provided.


What Is A Merger Anyway?, Thomas E. Plank Apr 2020

What Is A Merger Anyway?, Thomas E. Plank

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No abstract provided.


Self-Dealing Rules In The Law Of Private Express Trusts: A Suggestion For Implementation Of Professor Edward's Suggestion, Amy Morris Hess Apr 2020

Self-Dealing Rules In The Law Of Private Express Trusts: A Suggestion For Implementation Of Professor Edward's Suggestion, Amy Morris Hess

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No abstract provided.


What Is A Merger Anyway?, Don Leatherman, Joan Macleod Heminway, Thomas E. Plank Apr 2020

What Is A Merger Anyway?, Don Leatherman, Joan Macleod Heminway, Thomas E. Plank

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Three law professors from different practice and academic backgrounds meet at the water cooler in the faculty wing of a law school in or about 2010. They get engaged in a conversation about mergers and acquisitions that covers much ground--from what a merger actually is (from the perspective of their distinctive areas of legal experience and expertise--business associations, federal income tax, and property law) to factors each believe to be important in choosing a transactional structure for a business combination. This edited panel discussion from the 2019 Business Law Prof Blog symposium, held at The University of Tennessee College of …


Commentary To Professor Moll's Presentation, George Kuney Apr 2020

Commentary To Professor Moll's Presentation, George Kuney

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No abstract provided.


The Negotiation Class, Elizabeth Chamblee Burch Apr 2020

The Negotiation Class, Elizabeth Chamblee Burch

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Professor Burch interviews Professors McGovern and Rubenstein about their law review article, The Negotiation Class: A Cooperative Approach to Class Actions Involving Large Stakeholders (99 Tex. L. Rev. 73 (2020)).


The Effective Competition Standard: A New Standard For Antitrust, Maurice Stucke Mar 2020

The Effective Competition Standard: A New Standard For Antitrust, Maurice Stucke

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No abstract provided.