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Articles 1 - 11 of 11
Full-Text Articles in Law
How The Justice System Fails Us After Police Shootings, Caren Morrison
How The Justice System Fails Us After Police Shootings, Caren Morrison
Caren Myers Morrison
No abstract provided.
Ruling Shows Europe Still Vexed Over Nsa Spying Leaving Us Companies In Legal Limbo, Caren Morrison
Ruling Shows Europe Still Vexed Over Nsa Spying Leaving Us Companies In Legal Limbo, Caren Morrison
Caren Myers Morrison
No abstract provided.
How China Plans To Blacklist Financially Unstable Citizens, Caren Morrison
How China Plans To Blacklist Financially Unstable Citizens, Caren Morrison
Caren Myers Morrison
No abstract provided.
China's Plan To Put Two-Faced Citizens On Credit Blacklist Isn't All That Foreign, Caren Morrison
China's Plan To Put Two-Faced Citizens On Credit Blacklist Isn't All That Foreign, Caren Morrison
Caren Myers Morrison
No abstract provided.
Jury 2.0, Caren Morrison
Jury 2.0, Caren Morrison
Caren Myers Morrison
When the Framers drafted the Sixth Amendment and provided that the accused in a criminal case would have the right to a speedy and public trial by an “impartial jury,” it is unlikely that they imagined the members of that impartial jury becoming Facebook friends during deliberations, or Googling the defendant’s name during trial. But in the past few years, such cases have increasingly been making headlines. The impact of the Internet on the functioning of the jury has generated a lot of press, but has not yet attracted scholarly attention. This article seeks to focus legal discourse on this …
Dr. Panopticon, Or How I Stopped Worrying And Learned To Love The Drone, Caren Morrison
Dr. Panopticon, Or How I Stopped Worrying And Learned To Love The Drone, Caren Morrison
Caren Myers Morrison
Of all the ways the government has to watch us, unmanned aerial vehicles, commonly known as drones, best capture the visceral fear of the all-seeing surveillance state. Because drones are becoming increasingly tiny, inexpensive, and powerful, they could enable a new species of universal surveillance, turning our cities into a modern version of Bentham’s panopticon. But this essay, written for the criminal justice symposium issue of the JCRED, is not about the alarming consequences of surveillance technology. Instead, it seeks to explore whether there is anything useful to be learned from the possibility of continuous mass surveillance. Not just useful …
We Don't Need More Laws Protecting Our Privacy From Drones?, Caren M. Morrison
We Don't Need More Laws Protecting Our Privacy From Drones?, Caren M. Morrison
Caren Myers Morrison
No abstract provided.
The First Amendment And The Rpas, Caren M. Morrison
The First Amendment And The Rpas, Caren M. Morrison
Caren Myers Morrison
No abstract provided.
Will We Pick Privacy Over Convenience When It Comes To Drones?, Caren Morrison
Will We Pick Privacy Over Convenience When It Comes To Drones?, Caren Morrison
Caren Myers Morrison
No abstract provided.
Will We Pick Privacy Over Drone-Drops From Amazon?, Caren Morrison
Will We Pick Privacy Over Drone-Drops From Amazon?, Caren Morrison
Caren Myers Morrison
No abstract provided.
Investigating Jurors On Social Media, Caren Myers Morrison
Investigating Jurors On Social Media, Caren Myers Morrison
Caren Myers Morrison
This essay proceeds in three parts. First, it examines the current state of jury investigations, and how they differ from those conducted in the past. Then, it describes the evolving legal and ethical positions that are combining to encourage such investigations. Finally, it offers a note of caution–condoning such investigations while keeping them hidden from jurors may be perceived as unfair and exploitative, risking a possible backlash from outraged jurors. Instead, I propose a modest measure to provide notice and explanation to jurors that their online information is likely to be searched, and why.