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Articles 1 - 7 of 7
Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
Post Conviction Developments, Thomas M. Place
Post Conviction Developments, Thomas M. Place
Faculty Scholarly Works
No abstract provided.
Habitations Of Cruelty - Pitfalls Of Expanding Hate Crime Legislation To Include The Homeless, Scott A. Steiner
Habitations Of Cruelty - Pitfalls Of Expanding Hate Crime Legislation To Include The Homeless, Scott A. Steiner
Scott A Steiner
Hate crime law has developed and expanded substantially since its earliest form. A concerted effort is currently underway to expand existing hate crime legislation to include the homeless.
This paper provides a history of both state and federal hate crime legislation, examines precisely what a hate crime is (and how that definition differs from state to state), explores the growing problem of violence against the homeless, and analyzes recent developments in expanding state and local law to protect based on homelessness.
It offers both arguments in favor and arguments against the expansion of hate crime laws to include the homeless …
A Bibliographic Guide To The Criminal Law Literature Of The People’S Republic Of China: 1949-2000, Zhai Jianxiong
A Bibliographic Guide To The Criminal Law Literature Of The People’S Republic Of China: 1949-2000, Zhai Jianxiong
International Journal of Legal Information
Mr. Zhai presents a bibliographic guide listing the major sources of criminal law literature of the People’s Republic of China published during 1949-2000. The fifty year span is divided into three phases, each containing a selective bibliography on criminal law representative of academic scholarship of the corresponding period.
Speech: Latinas And Their Families In Detention: The Growing Intersection Of Immigration Law And Criminal Law, Sandra Guerra Thompson
Speech: Latinas And Their Families In Detention: The Growing Intersection Of Immigration Law And Criminal Law, Sandra Guerra Thompson
William & Mary Journal of Race, Gender, and Social Justice
In this article, Professor Sandra Guerra Thompson explores the growing enforcement of immigration law within the interior of the United States and the growing intersection of the criminal justice system and immigration law. Through the use of worksite enforcement sweeps and immigration screening by state and local law enforcement, growing numbers of undocumented persons are being taken into custody by federal immigration officials. She examines the plight of women and families held in detention centers under what are often deplorable conditions. Ironically, immigration detention centers offer fewer resources than those available in most state prisons. The immigration law judicial system …
The American Prosecutor - Power, Discretion, And Misconduct, Angela J. Davis
The American Prosecutor - Power, Discretion, And Misconduct, Angela J. Davis
Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals
No abstract provided.
The Right To Silence Helps The Innocent: A Response To Critics, Alex Stein
The Right To Silence Helps The Innocent: A Response To Critics, Alex Stein
Alex Stein
This contribution to the Cardozo Law Review symposium on the future of the Fifth Amendment responds to the numerous critics of Daniel J. Seidmann & Alex Stein, The Right to Silence Helps the Innocent: A Game-Theoretic Analysis of the Fifth Amendment Privilege, 114 HARV. L. REV. 430 (2000).
Under Seidmann and Stein’s theory, the right to silence protects innocents who find themselves unable to corroborate their self-exonerating accounts by verifiable evidence. Absent the right, guilty criminals would pool with innocents by making false self-exonerating statements. Factfinders would consequently discount the probative value of all uncorroborated exculpatory statements, at the expense …
The Harms And Wrongs Of Stealing: The Harm Principle And Dishonesty In Theft, Alex Steel
The Harms And Wrongs Of Stealing: The Harm Principle And Dishonesty In Theft, Alex Steel
Alex Steel
In ‘On the Nature and Rationale of Property Offences’ A P Simester and G R Sullivan argue that the Harm Principle can be used to justify property offences. This article provides a critique of that essay. It begins with an overview of the Harm Principle and some key criticisms of it. It then considers Simester and Sullivan’s argument that the conduct proscribed by property offences causes harm to the property regime generally. The article suggests that this is an overly broad notion of harm on which to base criminalisation, and one that fails to adequately identify which particular breaches of …