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Criminal Procedure

Series

2021

University of Nevada, Las Vegas -- William S. Boyd School of Law

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

Talking Back In Court, M. Eve Hanan Jan 2021

Talking Back In Court, M. Eve Hanan

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No abstract provided.


Incarcerated Activism During Covid-19, M. Eve Hanan Jan 2021

Incarcerated Activism During Covid-19, M. Eve Hanan

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Incarcerated people have a notoriously difficult time advocating for themselves. Like other authoritarian institutions, prisons severely curtail and often punish speech, organizing, and self-advocacy. Also, like other authoritarian institutions, prison administrators are inclined to suppress protest rather than respond to the grounds for protest. Yet, despite impediments to their participation, incarcerated people have organized during the pandemic, advocating for themselves through media channels, public forums, and the courts. Indeed, a dramatic increase in incarcerated activism correlates with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Just as the COVID-19 pandemic highlights injustice in other areas of criminal legal practices, it reveals both …


Distributed Federalism: The Transformation Of Younger, Anne R. Traum Jan 2021

Distributed Federalism: The Transformation Of Younger, Anne R. Traum

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For decades federal courts have remained mostly off limits to civil rights cases challenging the constitutionality of state criminal proceedings. Younger abstention, which requires federal courts to abstain from suits challenging the constitutionality of pending state prosecutions, has blocked plaintiffs from bringing meritorious civil rights cases and insulated local officials and federal courts from having to defend against or decide them. Younger’s reach is broad. It has forced political protestors (from the Vietnam era to Black Lives Matter) to challenge the constitutionality of their arrests and prosecutions within their state criminal proceedings. The doctrine also has made it difficult to …