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Articles 31 - 60 of 577
Full-Text Articles in Law
Reimagining Public Safety, Brandon Hasbrouck
Reimagining Public Safety, Brandon Hasbrouck
Northwestern University Law Review
In the aftermath of George Floyd’s murder, abolitionists were repeatedly asked to explain what they meant by “abolish the police”—the idea so seemingly foreign that its literal meaning evaded interviewers. The narrative rapidly turned to the abolitionists’ secondary proposals, as interviewers quickly jettisoned the idea of literally abolishing the police. What the incredulous journalists failed to see was that abolishing police and prisons is not aimed merely at eliminating the collateral consequences of other social ills. Abolitionists seek to build a society in which policing and incarceration are unnecessary. Rather than a society without a means of protecting public safety, …
Beyond The Law: A Four-Step Explanation Of Why Affirmativeaction Is Here To Stay, Jesse Merriam
Beyond The Law: A Four-Step Explanation Of Why Affirmativeaction Is Here To Stay, Jesse Merriam
Ohio Northern University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Conflicting Interests In Name And Pronoun Policies In K-12 School, Manni Jandernoa
Conflicting Interests In Name And Pronoun Policies In K-12 School, Manni Jandernoa
SLU Law Journal Online
The year 2022 has brought a record number of proposed antitransgender legislation throughout the country. With an expanding amount of youths identifying as transgender and/or nonbinary, schools are continuing to grapple how to support these students while complying with the law. In this article, Manni Jandernoa discusses individual conflicting interests involved with respect to the application or lack of school name and pronoun policies.
Big Data Affirmative Action, Peter N. Salib
Big Data Affirmative Action, Peter N. Salib
Northwestern University Law Review
As a vast and ever-growing body of social-scientific research shows, discrimination remains pervasive in the United States. In education, work, consumer markets, healthcare, criminal justice, and more, Black people fare worse than whites, women worse than men, and so on. Moreover, the evidence now convincingly demonstrates that this inequality is driven by discrimination. Yet solutions are scarce. The best empirical studies find that popular interventions—like diversity seminars and antibias trainings—have little or no effect. And more muscular solutions—like hiring quotas or school busing—are now regularly struck down as illegal. Indeed, in the last thirty years, the Supreme Court has invalidated …
The Impacts Of Compulsory Prison Labor Ballot Initiatives On Pregnant & Postpartum Incarcerated Women Of Color, Candace Bond-Theriault
The Impacts Of Compulsory Prison Labor Ballot Initiatives On Pregnant & Postpartum Incarcerated Women Of Color, Candace Bond-Theriault
Center for Gender & Sexuality Law
The 13th Amendment to the United States Constitution purported to abolish the institution of slavery, but it created an exception for compulsory labor performed by people convicted of crimes. In November 2022, voters in Alabama, Vermont, Louisiana, Tennessee, and Oregon will be asked to vote on ballot initiatives that would strike language from their state constitutions that currently allows states to force incarcerated people to perform labor with minimal or no pay.1 This policy brief examines the legal language of these ballot initiatives and evaluates whether each measure, if approved by voters, will actually close the compulsory labor loophole. In …
Cardozo Launches The Perlmutter Center For Legal Justice, Benjamin N. Cardozo School Of Law
Cardozo Launches The Perlmutter Center For Legal Justice, Benjamin N. Cardozo School Of Law
Event Invitations 2022
The Perlmutter Center for Legal Justice at Cardozo Law will be comprised of two components:
The Perlmutter Forensic Science Educational Program, an ambitious legal education program in scientific evidence for practicing attorneys.
The Perlmutter Freedom Clinic, seeking justice for the unjustly incarcerated, will fight wrongful convictions based on the misuse of scientific evidence and work to obtain clemency for individuals that have been unjustly incarcerated.
The Center will be led by prominent civil rights attorney and criminal justice reform advocate Josh Dubin, who will serve as Executive Director. The Deputy Director will be Derrick Hamilton, a formerly incarcerated individual who …
Weekly Pop-Up Class: Understanding The Lgbtq+ Civil Rights Movement And Why It Matters, Ferkauf Professors Kailey Roberts And Jennifer Cooper, Benjamin N. Cardozo School Of Law
Weekly Pop-Up Class: Understanding The Lgbtq+ Civil Rights Movement And Why It Matters, Ferkauf Professors Kailey Roberts And Jennifer Cooper, Benjamin N. Cardozo School Of Law
Event Invitations 2022
Kailey Roberts is an Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychology at Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology specializing in bereavement and existential psychotherapy. Roberts' research and teaching focuses on understanding existential distress and supporting individuals facing adversity through connection to their unique sense of meaning, identity and purpose. Jennifer Cooper, is an Assistant Professor at Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology. Cooper’s research agenda is focused on preventing and treating youth mental, emotional and behavioral issues through improving the use of multi-tier frameworks and culturally responsive evidence-based practices in schools. They will discuss "Cultivating Psychosocial Wellbeing in LGBTQIA+ Individuals and Communities."
Weekly Pop-Up Class: Lgbtq Rights And The Crisis Of Democracy, Deborah Pearlstein, Benjamin N. Cardozo School Of Law
Weekly Pop-Up Class: Lgbtq Rights And The Crisis Of Democracy, Deborah Pearlstein, Benjamin N. Cardozo School Of Law
Event Invitations 2022
Deborah Pearlstein is Professor of Law and Co-Director of the Floersheimer Center for Constitutional Democracy. Pearlstein has repeatedly testified before Congress on topics from war powers to executive branch oversight. Her work on the U.S. Constitution, international law, and national security has appeared widely in law journals and the popular press.
Discrimination Because Of Sex[Ual Orientation And Gender Identity]: The Necessity Of The Equality Act In The Wake Of Bostock V. Clayton County, Rachel Eric Johnson
Discrimination Because Of Sex[Ual Orientation And Gender Identity]: The Necessity Of The Equality Act In The Wake Of Bostock V. Clayton County, Rachel Eric Johnson
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Racecraft And Identity In The Emergence Of Islam As A Race, Cyra Akila Choudhury
Racecraft And Identity In The Emergence Of Islam As A Race, Cyra Akila Choudhury
University of Cincinnati Law Review
Can a religion, over time and through its social and legal resignification, come to be a race? Drawing on Critical Race Theory (“CRT”), Critical Discourse Theory, the work of Karen E. and Barbara J. Fields and Cedric Robinson, this article argues that Islam has emerged as a race and Muslims as a racial group. To support the claim, Part I examines the theoretical basis for the argument. Applying the concept of “racecraft,” the article theorizes that racism produces both the racial group and race. As many have already argued, race is not based in biology; it is not a fact …
Weekly Pop-Up Class: Understanding The Lgbtq+ Civil Rights Movement And Why It Matters, Kate Shaw, Benjamin N. Cardozo School Of Law
Weekly Pop-Up Class: Understanding The Lgbtq+ Civil Rights Movement And Why It Matters, Kate Shaw, Benjamin N. Cardozo School Of Law
Event Invitations 2022
Cardozo Professor Kate Shaw is the Co-Director of the Floersheimer Center for Constitutional Democracy. Before joining Cardozo, she worked in the White House Counsel’s Office as a Special Assistant to the President and Associate Counsel to the President. She clerked for Justice John Paul Stevens of the U.S. Supreme Court and Judge Richard A. Posner of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit.
Ma'ii And Nanaboozhoo Fistfight In Heaven, Tamera Begay, Matthew Fletcher
Ma'ii And Nanaboozhoo Fistfight In Heaven, Tamera Begay, Matthew Fletcher
Articles
In the form of a cute, cuddly, and innocent waabooz, Nanaboozhoo munched on the chewy, bitter Tłohdá’ákáłiitsoh he found everywhere in this land, far from his own. Although, it was a bit dry. In this land, Dinétah, Nanaboozhoo thought he could see forever. There were few trees. The sky was bright blue and limitless. The air smelled like a kind of dirt he had never experienced. And, boy howdy, was it dry. He couldn’t smell water for the life of him. But there was water, to be sure, or else there wouldn’t be this bush.
Race And Washington's Criminal Justice System: 2022 Recommendations To Criminal Justice Stakeholders In Washington, Task Force 2.0: Race And The Criminal Justice System
Race And Washington's Criminal Justice System: 2022 Recommendations To Criminal Justice Stakeholders In Washington, Task Force 2.0: Race And The Criminal Justice System
Fred T. Korematsu Center for Law and Equality
Race and Washington's Criminal Justice System: 2022 Recommendations to Criminal Justice Stakeholders in Washington
The Supreme Court Gets The Ball Rolling: Ncaa V. Alston And Title Ix, Arianna Banks
The Supreme Court Gets The Ball Rolling: Ncaa V. Alston And Title Ix, Arianna Banks
Northwestern University Law Review
Student-athlete compensation has been a consistent topic of controversy over the past few years, as critics question the legitimacy of the NCAA’s notion of amateurism and proponents favor the status quo. The Supreme Court decision in NCAA v. Alston has only served to intensify the debate, opening the door to alternative compensation structures. Despite a unanimous ruling in favor of the athletes, the limited holding of the case has only produced further questions. In his scathing concurrence, Justice Kavanaugh raises one such question: how does a student-athlete compensation structure comply with Title IX? This Comment seeks to address that question …
Endmatter, Cwru School Of Law
Endmatter, Cwru School Of Law
The Reporter: Social Justice Law Center Magazine
No abstract provided.
A Declaration Of Dependence For Iowa Civil Rights Committees, Michael Mahoney
A Declaration Of Dependence For Iowa Civil Rights Committees, Michael Mahoney
The Reporter: Social Justice Law Center Magazine
No abstract provided.
Commentary: Beyond Debate Means Beyond Protection, Lucas Allison
Commentary: Beyond Debate Means Beyond Protection, Lucas Allison
The Reporter: Social Justice Law Center Magazine
No abstract provided.
State Of Ohio V. Wrongful Convictions, Alireza Nourani-Dargiri
State Of Ohio V. Wrongful Convictions, Alireza Nourani-Dargiri
The Reporter: Social Justice Law Center Magazine
No abstract provided.
Commentary: State Of Tennessee V. Gilbert, Thad Cwiklinski
Commentary: State Of Tennessee V. Gilbert, Thad Cwiklinski
The Reporter: Social Justice Law Center Magazine
No abstract provided.
Lessons From Brookline: Lawsuits Won’T Save Us From Racist Workplace Practices, Makela Hayford
Lessons From Brookline: Lawsuits Won’T Save Us From Racist Workplace Practices, Makela Hayford
The Reporter: Social Justice Law Center Magazine
No abstract provided.
Violence Against Women Act And Marsy’S Law, Elena Gutbrod, Hannah Yeack
Violence Against Women Act And Marsy’S Law, Elena Gutbrod, Hannah Yeack
The Reporter: Social Justice Law Center Magazine
No abstract provided.
A Summary About The Positive Effect Of The Law Prohibiting The Source Of Income (Soi) Discrimination, Zhiwei Hua
A Summary About The Positive Effect Of The Law Prohibiting The Source Of Income (Soi) Discrimination, Zhiwei Hua
The Reporter: Social Justice Law Center Magazine
No abstract provided.
Eviction Sealing, Danielle Dalporto, Makela Hayford
Eviction Sealing, Danielle Dalporto, Makela Hayford
The Reporter: Social Justice Law Center Magazine
No abstract provided.
How The Fair Housing Act Fails Individual Victims With Criminal Convictions, Jane Norris, Zhiwei Hua
How The Fair Housing Act Fails Individual Victims With Criminal Convictions, Jane Norris, Zhiwei Hua
The Reporter: Social Justice Law Center Magazine
No abstract provided.
Death By A Single Sentence, Danielle Dalporto
Death By A Single Sentence, Danielle Dalporto
The Reporter: Social Justice Law Center Magazine
No abstract provided.
State V. Andujar: Why Meaningful Reform Is Needed, Natalie Aguilar
State V. Andujar: Why Meaningful Reform Is Needed, Natalie Aguilar
The Reporter: Social Justice Law Center Magazine
No abstract provided.
Comment On State V. Porter, Jane Norris
Comment On State V. Porter, Jane Norris
The Reporter: Social Justice Law Center Magazine
No abstract provided.
Review: Domestic Terrorism In The United States, Hannah Yeack
Review: Domestic Terrorism In The United States, Hannah Yeack
The Reporter: Social Justice Law Center Magazine
No abstract provided.
Frontmatter And Director's Letter, Ayehsa Hardaway
Frontmatter And Director's Letter, Ayehsa Hardaway
The Reporter: Social Justice Law Center Magazine
No abstract provided.
Law School News: Should Prison Be Abolished? 10-6-2022, Michael M. Bowden
Law School News: Should Prison Be Abolished? 10-6-2022, Michael M. Bowden
Life of the Law School (1993- )
No abstract provided.