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- Keyword
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- Puerto Rico; US Territory; commonwealth; colonization; voting rights; suffrage; naturalization; citizenship; Foraker Act; Jones Act; Insular Cases; incorporated territory; unincorporated territory; statehood; taxation without representation; First Amendment; Free Speech; Association; Strict Scrutiny; Government Interests; Compelling Interest; Narrow Tailoring; Proportionality; (1)
- Transitional Justice; Truth and Reconciliation; TRC; International Law; Restorative Justice; Epistemic Injustice; Truth Commission; Transformative Justice; Movement Lawyering; Trauma-Centered Advocacy (1)
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Social Welfare Law
Puerto Rican Presidential Voting Rights: Why Precedent Should Be Overturned, And Other Options For Suffrage, Sigrid Vendrell-Polanco
Puerto Rican Presidential Voting Rights: Why Precedent Should Be Overturned, And Other Options For Suffrage, Sigrid Vendrell-Polanco
Brooklyn Law Review
The United States has continued to hold Puerto Rico as a colony, much like the British empire did the US colonies, and has given it no clear path to incorporation, statehood, or independent sovereignty. It has also denied its citizens the right to vote for their president and have voting representation in Congress. Current case law regarding Puerto Rican presidential voting rights and voting representation in Congress rests on precedent that dates almost as far back as its acquisition—the infamous Insular Cases. This case law is inconsistent with prior precedent, constitutional principles, and does not account for Puerto Rico’s contributions …
Addressing The Toll Of Truth Telling, Inga N. Laurent
Addressing The Toll Of Truth Telling, Inga N. Laurent
Brooklyn Law Review
Across the United States, there are mounting and renewed calls for applying restorative justice principles to deeply entrenched societal ills based on reconciliation, namely in the form of truth and reconciliation commissions (TRCs). Amid our great mobilization, we would be wise to pause, contemplating lessons from lived experiences. Since the 1970s, approximately thirty-five national truth commissions have taken place. In South Africa, Canada, Sierra Leone, and many processes, TRCs have proven adept at cataloguing approved instances of victim and survivors’ (VS) stories and elaborately contextualizing conflict through a new historical lens. Despite the transformative potential of TRCs, they are still …