Saving The Space: How Free Speech Zones On College Campuses Advance Free Speech Values, 2020 J.D. Candidate, 2020, Roger Williams University School of Law
Saving The Space: How Free Speech Zones On College Campuses Advance Free Speech Values, Troy Lange
Roger Williams University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Title Ix & The Civil Rights Approach To Sexual Harassment In Education, 2020 Associate Professor, Barry University School of Law
Title Ix & The Civil Rights Approach To Sexual Harassment In Education, Nancy Chi Cantalupo
Roger Williams University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Title Ix Beyond School Lines: The Proposed Regulations That Will Limit Colleges And Universities’ Jurisdictional Scope Of Responsibility, 2020 Candidate for Juris Doctor, Roger Williams University School of Law 2021.
Title Ix Beyond School Lines: The Proposed Regulations That Will Limit Colleges And Universities’ Jurisdictional Scope Of Responsibility, Rachel Dunham
Roger Williams University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Maintaining The Delicate Balance Between Due Process And Protecting Reporting Students From Re-Traumatization During Cross-Examination: Title Ix Investigations In The Wake Of The Trump Administration's Proposed Regulations, 2020 Candidate for Juris Doctor, Roger Williams University School of Law,2021.
Maintaining The Delicate Balance Between Due Process And Protecting Reporting Students From Re-Traumatization During Cross-Examination: Title Ix Investigations In The Wake Of The Trump Administration's Proposed Regulations, Lauren Bizier
Roger Williams University Law Review
No abstract provided.
School Safety In Rural Settings, 2020 University of Central Florida
School Safety In Rural Settings, Daniel W. Eadens, Larry Walker, Vasily Yurin
Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works
Extreme violence is in our communities and sometimes flows into our schools. Read no further than the local newspapers if you want to see the impact on campus: physical violence, serious injury, suicide, mental crises, and threats with deadly weapon. In fact, the first documented school shooting in this country occurred in the year 1764 in rural Pennsylvania (Keenan & Rush, 2016). Unfortunately, shootings continue to plague our society and occur on rural school campuses today. Are rural schools safe? Is there a way to better predict school violence so it can be prevented? What kind of rural schools are …
The 'Other' Market, 2020 Boston University School of Law
The 'Other' Market, Cody Jacobs
Faculty Scholarship
The hiring market for tenure-track non–legal writing positions is a world unto itself with its own lingo (i.e., “meat market” and “FAR form”), its own unwritten rules (i.e., “Do not have two first-year courses in your preferred teaching package.”), and carefully calibrated expectations for candidates and schools with respect to the process and timing of hiring. These norms and expectations are disseminated to the participants in this market through a relatively well-established set of feeder fellowships, visiting assistant professor programs, elite law schools, blogs, and academic literature on the subject.
But there is another market that goes on every year …
A Class Action Lawsuit For The Right To A Minimum Education In Detroit, 2020 Northwestern Pritzker School of Law
A Class Action Lawsuit For The Right To A Minimum Education In Detroit, Carter G. Phillips
Northwestern Journal of Law & Social Policy
No abstract provided.
Table Of Contents, 2020 Seattle University School of Law
Table Of Contents, Seattle University Law Review
Seattle University Law Review
Table of Contents
The Future Of Law Schools: Covid-19, Technology, And Social Justice, 2020 University of Pittsburgh School of Law
The Future Of Law Schools: Covid-19, Technology, And Social Justice, Christian Sundquist
Articles
The COVID-19 pandemic has laid bare not only the social and racial inequities in society, but also the pedagogical and access to justice inequities embedded in the traditional legal curriculum. The need to re-envision the future of legal education existed well before the current pandemic, spurred by the shifting nature of legal practice as well as demographic and technological change. This article examines the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on legal education, and posits that the combined forces of the pandemic, social justice awareness and technological disruption will forever transform the future of both legal education and practice.
Lessons For Advocacy From The Life And Legacy Of The Reverened Doctor Pauli Murray, 2020 University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law
Lessons For Advocacy From The Life And Legacy Of The Reverened Doctor Pauli Murray, Florence Wagman Roisman
University of Maryland Law Journal of Race, Religion, Gender and Class
No abstract provided.
Covid-19'S Impact On Students With Disabilities In Under-Resourced School Districts, 2020 Duke Law School
Covid-19'S Impact On Students With Disabilities In Under-Resourced School Districts, Crystal Grant
Faculty Scholarship
This Essay explores the plight of students with disabilities during the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly those enrolled in under-resourced school districts. To address these ongoing disparities, remediate student regression, and prevent further educational loss, we must act quickly to get resources to the students who need it most and to guide districts towards using these resources effectively. This Essay questions whether federal and state governments are truly committed to creatively examining the current special education framework and adopting solutions that will prioritize expanding access to resources for students with disabilities. These solutions include an immediate advancement of funds to aid states …
Distance Legal Education: Lessons From The *Virtual* Classroom, 2020 University of PIttsburgh School of Law
Distance Legal Education: Lessons From The *Virtual* Classroom, Jacqueline D. Lipton
Articles
Abstract
In the 2018-2019 revision of the American Bar Association (ABA) Standards and Rules of Procedure for Approval of Law Schools, the ABA further relaxed the requirements relating to distance education in J.D. programs. However, outside of a handful of schools that have received permission to teach J.D. courses almost entirely online, most experiments in distance legal education have occurred in post-graduate (i.e. post-J.D.) programs: LL.M. degrees, and various graduate certificates and Master’s degrees in law-related subjects. These programs can be taught completely online without requiring special ABA permission.
This essay reflects on the author’s experiences over a number of …
The Comparative Legal Landscape Of Educational Pluralism, 2020 Notre Dame Law School
The Comparative Legal Landscape Of Educational Pluralism, Nicole Stelle Garnett
Journal Articles
In the United States, debates about private and faith-based education tend to focus on questions about government funding: which kinds of schools should the government fund (and at what levels)? Should, for example, students be able to use public funds to attend privately operated schools? Faith-based schools? If so, what policy mechanisms should be used to fund private schools—vouchers, tax credits, direct transfer payments? How much funding should these schools receive? The same amount as public schools or less? As a historical matter, the focus on funding in the United States makes sense because only public (that is, government-operated) elementary …
Standing In Between Sexual Violence Victims And Access To Justice: The Limits Of Title Ix, 2020 California Western School of Law
Standing In Between Sexual Violence Victims And Access To Justice: The Limits Of Title Ix, Hannah Brenner Johnson
Faculty Scholarship
Sexual violence proliferates across communities, generally, and is especially prevalent in places like colleges and universities. As quasi-closed systems, colleges and universities are governed by their own internal norms, policies, and federal laws, like Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, which address how sex discrimination must be handled in institutions of higher education that are in receipt of federal funds. Title IX focuses on all facets of sex discrimination including reporting, investigation, adjudication, and prevention. When schools are accused of failing to adequately respond to reports of sexual misconduct on their campuses, Title IX has been interpreted by …
Lawyer Regulation Stakeholder Networks And The Global Diffusion Of Ideas, 2020 Penn State Dickinson Law
Lawyer Regulation Stakeholder Networks And The Global Diffusion Of Ideas, Laurel S. Terry
Faculty Scholarly Works
This Article is a companion article to Laurel S. Terry, Global Networks and the Legal Profession, 53 Akron L. Rev. 137 (2019), https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3620399. That article explained why global networks are useful for lawyers and the clients they represent, introduced some of the scientific literature about networks, cited prior literature about (mostly domestic) legal profession networks, and then identified ways in which lawyers and their employers, including law firms, participate in global legal profession networks, as well as domestic networks.
This Article focuses on a subset of global legal profession networks, which are the global networks of lawyer regulation stakeholders. Section …
Building A Law-And-Political-Economy Framework: Beyond The Twentieth-Century Synthesis, 2020 Columbia Law School
Building A Law-And-Political-Economy Framework: Beyond The Twentieth-Century Synthesis, Jedediah S. Purdy, David Singh Grewal, Amy Kapczynski, K. Sabeel Rahman
Faculty Scholarship
We live in a time of interrelated crises. Economic inequality and precarity, and crises of democracy, climate change, and more raise significant challenges for legal scholarship and thought. “Neoliberal” premises undergird many fields of law and have helped authorize policies and practices that reaffirm the inequities of the current era. In particular, market efficiency, neutrality, and formal equality have rendered key kinds of power invisible, and generated a skepticism of democratic politics. The result of these presumptions is what we call the “Twentieth-Century Synthesis”: a pervasive view of law that encases “the market” from claims of justice and conceals it …
The New "Essential": Rethinking Social Goods In The Age Of Covid-19, 2020 Columbia Law School
The New "Essential": Rethinking Social Goods In The Age Of Covid-19, Olatunde C.A. Johnson
Faculty Scholarship
The Covid-19 crisis has laid bare the fragility of social insurance systems in the United States and the lack of income security and basic benefits for many workers and residents. The United States has long had weaker protections for workers compared to other liberal democracies racial and economic disparities among those most affected by these dislocations (analyses are hampered by a paucity of demographic data). Those who were socially and economically vulnerable before the pandemic (for example due to homelessness, immigration status, or incarceration) are likely to suffer the most harm. Changes in workplace conditions as a result of the …
Should I Stay Or Should I Go: Student Housing, Remote Instruction, Campus Policies And Covid-19, 2020 Touro Law Center
Should I Stay Or Should I Go: Student Housing, Remote Instruction, Campus Policies And Covid-19, Patricia E. Salkin, Pamela Ko
Scholarly Works
In March 2020, as the world scrambled to understand and address myriad public health and economic challenges unfolding from the novel coronavirus labeled COVID-19, higher education was forced into a tailspin. This article examines the legal and policy challenges that result from, among other issues, the congregate housing situations existing for on- and off-campus housing at colleges and universities. The legal issues demonstrate federalism at work and include; at the federal level, regulations and guidance from the White House, the Center for Disease Control (CDC) and the U.S. Department of Education; at the State level from gubernatorial executive orders, state …
Revisiting Rose And Its Effects: A Thirty-Year Retrospective, 2020 University of Kentucky
Revisiting Rose And Its Effects: A Thirty-Year Retrospective, S. Patrick Riley
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Protecting The Millennial Generation: Beyond The Scope Of The Internet, 2019 Barry University - Dwayne O. Andreas School of Law
Protecting The Millennial Generation: Beyond The Scope Of The Internet, Alexandria Vasquez Esq.
Child and Family Law Journal
No abstract provided.