Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Civil Rights and Discrimination (24)
- Law and Society (13)
- Law and Gender (12)
- Law and Race (10)
- Legal Profession (10)
-
- Labor and Employment Law (9)
- Legal Education (8)
- Sexuality and the Law (7)
- Legal History (6)
- Health Law and Policy (5)
- Arts and Humanities (4)
- Education Law (4)
- Criminal Law (3)
- Disability Law (3)
- History (3)
- Law and Politics (3)
- Social and Behavioral Sciences (3)
- Civil Law (2)
- Disability Studies (2)
- History of Gender (2)
- Housing Law (2)
- Human Rights Law (2)
- Law and Psychology (2)
- Legislation (2)
- Litigation (2)
- Science and Technology Law (2)
- Women's History (2)
- Aesthetics (1)
- Applied Behavior Analysis (1)
- Institution
-
- Roger Williams University (9)
- Georgetown University Law Center (3)
- University of Georgia School of Law (3)
- Boston University School of Law (2)
- Loyola University Chicago, School of Law (2)
-
- Maurer School of Law: Indiana University (2)
- University of North Carolina School of Law (2)
- University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School (2)
- University of Pittsburgh School of Law (2)
- University of Tennessee College of Law (2)
- American University Washington College of Law (1)
- Case Western Reserve University School of Law (1)
- George Washington University Law School (1)
- New York Law School (1)
- Notre Dame Law School (1)
- Schulich School of Law, Dalhousie University (1)
- St. Mary's University (1)
- Texas A&M University School of Law (1)
- University of Florida Levin College of Law (1)
- University of Louisville (1)
- University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law (1)
- University of Nebraska - Lincoln (1)
- University of New Hampshire (1)
- Vanderbilt University Law School (1)
- Wayne State University (1)
- Publication
-
- Scholarly Works (5)
- Life of the Law School (1993- ) (4)
- Faculty Scholarship (3)
- School of Law Conferences, Lectures & Events (3)
- AI-DR Collection (2)
-
- All Faculty Scholarship (2)
- Articles (2)
- Articles by Maurer Faculty (2)
- Faculty Publications & Other Works (2)
- Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works (2)
- Articles & Chapters (1)
- Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals (1)
- Articles, Book Chapters, & Popular Press (1)
- Brandeis School of Law Faculty Scholarship (1)
- Faculty Articles (1)
- Faculty Publications (1)
- Faculty Works (1)
- GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works (1)
- Honors Theses (1)
- Journal Articles (1)
- Law Faculty Research Publications (1)
- Law Faculty Scholarship (1)
- Law Library Newsletters/Blog (1)
- RWU Law (1)
- U.S. Supreme Court Briefs (1)
- UF Law Faculty Publications (1)
- Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications (1)
Articles 31 - 44 of 44
Full-Text Articles in Law
A Homestead Act For The 21st Century, Mehrsa Baradaran
A Homestead Act For The 21st Century, Mehrsa Baradaran
Scholarly Works
The goal of the 21st century Homestead Act is to counteract the longstanding legacy of racially discriminatory housing policies by revitalizing distressed communities through public investment. The basic structure of the program is a wholesale transfer of land to residents who meet certain criteria. Accompanied by a holistic plan at the city level to revitalize the community through public investments in infrastructure and jobs, this proposal would benefit people who live in select small and medium-sized cities that are experiencing high vacancies.
A New #Metoo Result: Rejecting Notions Of Romantic Consent With Executives, Michael Z. Green
A New #Metoo Result: Rejecting Notions Of Romantic Consent With Executives, Michael Z. Green
Faculty Scholarship
With the growth of the #MeToo movement since October 2017, more than 200 prominent male executives have lost their jobs. Some pushback has occurred as many of these executives have asserted their behavior was not inappropriate because their acts were consensual. Essentially, this argument requires companies evaluating this behavior to find nothing wrong when executives use their vast power and influence to have romantic and sexual relationships with their subordinates who do not say “no.”
Those suggesting that the #MeToo movement has gone too far believe it will result in unintended consequences where totally benign and even positive engagement between …
Threats To Medicaid And Health Equity Intersections, Mary Crossley
Threats To Medicaid And Health Equity Intersections, Mary Crossley
Articles
2017 was a tumultuous year politically in the United States on many fronts, but perhaps none more so than health care. For enrollees in the Medicaid program, it was a “year of living precariously.” Long-promised Republican efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act also took aim at Medicaid, with proposals to fundamentally restructure the program and drastically cut its federal funding. These proposals provoked pushback from multiple fronts, including formal opposition from groups representing people with disabilities and people of color and individual protesters. Opposition by these groups should not have surprised the proponents of “reforming” Medicaid. Both people of …
The Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act's Evolving Genocide Exception, Vivian Grosswald Curran
The Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act's Evolving Genocide Exception, Vivian Grosswald Curran
Articles
The Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA) was passed by Congress as a comprehensive statute to cover all instances when foreign states are to be immune from suit in the courts of the United States, as well as when foreign state immunity is to be limited. Judicial interpretation of one of the FSIA’s exceptions to immunity has undergone significant evolution over the years with respect to foreign state property expropriations committed in violation of international law. U.S. courts initially construed this FSIA exception by denying immunity only if the defendant state had expropriated property of a citizen of a nation other …
Animus And Its Alternatives: Constitutional Principle And Judicial Prudence, Daniel O. Conkle
Animus And Its Alternatives: Constitutional Principle And Judicial Prudence, Daniel O. Conkle
Articles by Maurer Faculty
In a series of cases addressing sexual orientation and other issues, the Supreme Court has ruled that animus-based lawmaking is constitutionally impermissible. The Court treats animus as an independent and sufficient basis for invalidation. Moreover, it appears to regard animus as a doctrine of first resort, to be utilized even when an alternative constitutional rationale, such as declaring a challenged classification suspect or quasi-suspect, would readily justify the same result. Responding especially to Professor William D. Araiza’s elaboration and defense of the Court’s animus doctrine, I agree that this doctrine is sound, indeed compelling, as a matter of constitutional principle. …
Law And Norms In The Market Response To Discrimination In The Sharing Economy, Naomi Schoenbaum
Law And Norms In The Market Response To Discrimination In The Sharing Economy, Naomi Schoenbaum
GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works
Published by De Gruyter May 11, 2019, https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/lehr-2019-0001/html
Sharing-economy firms have opposed the application of antidiscrimination law to their transactions. At the same time, these firms have heralded their ability to achieve antidiscrimination aims without the force of law, and have adopted various measures to address discrimination. This Article documents and assesses these measures, focusing on the relationship between law and norms. Relying on the sharing economy as a case study, this Article shows how law can play a crucial role in spurring antidiscrimination efforts by firms that it does not regulate, but also how antidiscrimination law might nonetheless be …
Discrimination By Design?, Naomi Cahn, June Carbone, Nancy Levit
Discrimination By Design?, Naomi Cahn, June Carbone, Nancy Levit
Faculty Works
Platform world is speeding the redesign of employment. Bricks-and-mortar firms once hired through narrow portals and then invested in the workers they hired, providing job security and predictable career ladders. Platform world flings the doors wide open to income-generating efforts, providing new opportunities but also offering security and predictable advancement to almost no one.
Other legal scholars have mined these same data for gender disparities; they have found disparities in the platform economy arising from customer biases and individual preferences, and manifested in men’s and women’s different experiences in everything from pricing plumbing services to fraud prevention. Neutral-appearing algorithms may …
After Suffrage: The Unfinished Business Of Feminist Legal Advocacy, Serena Mayeri
After Suffrage: The Unfinished Business Of Feminist Legal Advocacy, Serena Mayeri
All Faculty Scholarship
This Essay considers post-suffrage women’s citizenship through the eyes of Pauli Murray, a key figure at the intersection of the twentieth-century movements for racial justice and feminism. Murray drew critical lessons from the woman suffrage movement and the Reconstruction-era disintegration of an abolitionist-feminist alliance to craft legal and constitutional strategies that continue to shape equality law and advocacy today. Murray placed African American women at the center of a vision of universal human rights that relied upon interracial and intergenerational alliances and anticipated what scholars later named intersectionality. As Murray foresaw, women of color formed a feminist vanguard in the …
What Genetic Testing Teaches About Long-Term Predictive Health Analytics Regulation, Sharona Hoffman
What Genetic Testing Teaches About Long-Term Predictive Health Analytics Regulation, Sharona Hoffman
Faculty Publications
The ever-growing phenomenon of predictive health analytics is generating significant excitement, hope for improved health outcomes, and potential for new revenues. Researchers are developing algorithms to predict suicide, heart disease, stroke, diabetes, cognitive decline, future opioid abuse, and other ailments. The researchers include not only medical experts, but also commercial enterprises such as Facebook and LexisNexis, who may profit from the work considerably. This Article focuses on long-term disease predictions (predictions regarding future illnesses), which have received surprisingly little attention in the legal and ethical literature. It compares the robust academic and policy debates and legal interventions that followed the …
The Hidden Fences Shaping Resegregation, Jeannine Bell
The Hidden Fences Shaping Resegregation, Jeannine Bell
Articles by Maurer Faculty
This Article offers a window into the experiences that inform the neighborhood choices of middle-class and upper-middle-class Blacks. As I suggest below, there are many hidden fences, walling off white neighborhoods and restricting Blacks’ housing choices in de facto ways. These hidden fences exist in the form of the many challenges Blacks face when moving to white neighborhoods. The obstacles to easy, contented lives range from police harassment to anti-integrationist violence that push Blacks into less affluent neighborhoods. Ultimately, this Article demonstrates how race can circumscribe housing choice and social mobility, even in the absence of legal barriers restricting where …
Pricing Algorithms & Collusion, Maurice Stucke
Gina, Big Data, And The Future Of Employee Privacy, Brad Areheart
Gina, Big Data, And The Future Of Employee Privacy, Brad Areheart
Scholarly Works
Threats to privacy abound in modern society, but individuals currently enjoy little meaningful legal protection for their privacy interests. We argue that the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA) offers a blueprint for preventing employers from breaching employee privacy. GINA has faced significant criticism since its enactment in 2008: commentators have dismissed the law as ill-conceived, unnecessary, and ineffective. While we concede that GINA may have failed to alleviate anxieties about medical genetic testing, we assert that it has unappreciated value as an employee-privacy statute. In the era of big data, protections for employee privacy are more pressing than protections against …
Race Ipsa Loquitur, Girardeau A. Spann
Race Ipsa Loquitur, Girardeau A. Spann
Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works
The goal of this Article is to make the existence of invidious racial discrimination in the United States so palpable that it can no longer be denied. Part I argues that racial inequality is so pervasive, unconscious, and structural that it has simply become an assumed fixture of United States and is rarely even noticed. Section I.A describes the history of racial subordination in the United States. Section I.B invokes the concept of disparate impact to illustrate the continuing manifestations of invidious discrimination in contemporary culture. Part II describes the manner in which the culture nevertheless chooses to deny the …
Combating Silence In The Profession, Veronica Root Martinez
Combating Silence In The Profession, Veronica Root Martinez
Journal Articles
Members of the legal profession have recently taken a public stance against a wave of oppressive policies and practices. From helping immigrants stranded in airports to protesting in the face of white nationalists, lawyers are advocating for equality within and throughout American society each and every day. Yet as these lawyers go out into the world on behalf of others, they do so while their very profession continues to struggle with its own discriminatory past. For decades, the legal profession purposefully excluded women, religious minorities, and people of color from its ranks, while instilling a select group of individuals with …