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Duke Law

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2022

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Articles 1 - 30 of 77

Full-Text Articles in Law

A Way Forward After Dobbs: Human Rights Advocacy And Self-Managed Abortion In The United States, Kelly Keglovits Dec 2022

A Way Forward After Dobbs: Human Rights Advocacy And Self-Managed Abortion In The United States, Kelly Keglovits

Duke Journal of Constitutional Law & Public Policy Sidebar

Even in the era before Dobbs, wherein the Supreme Court repeatedly classified abortion as a "fundamental right," the ability to have an abortion was inaccessible in many parts of the United States. The irony that a "fundamental right" was so difficult to exercise results from how Constitutional rights are understood, which left many open-ended avenues for states to bring restrictions. International Human Rights law, however, offers a more optimistic and accountable approach to steps forward in increasing abortion access—illustrating a need to bring a human rights-based approach home. Dobbs has eviscerated any concept of federal protections for abortion, severely worsening …


Ai And The Regulatory Paradigm Shift At The Fda, Catherine M. Sharkey, Kevin M. K. Fodouop Dec 2022

Ai And The Regulatory Paradigm Shift At The Fda, Catherine M. Sharkey, Kevin M. K. Fodouop

Duke Law Journal Online

No abstract provided.


Toward Recognizing An International Human Right To Claim Innocence, Brandon Garrett, Laurence R. Helfer, Jayne C. Huckerby, Mark Godsey, Luca Lupària Dec 2022

Toward Recognizing An International Human Right To Claim Innocence, Brandon Garrett, Laurence R. Helfer, Jayne C. Huckerby, Mark Godsey, Luca Lupària

Judicature International

No abstract provided.


The Fracas At The Fdic, Todd Phillips Nov 2022

The Fracas At The Fdic, Todd Phillips

Duke Law Journal Online

In December 2021, the Democratic members of the Board of Directors of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) attempted to use their majority to issue a request for information but were blocked by the Republican Chair. Although the Democrats outnumbered the Chair three-to-one, the agency's General Counsel declared the move invalid, and the request went unpublished. After weeks of hostility, the Chair resigned, effectively conceding her inability to lead the agency. Although governance at the FDIC is now settled, concern over the Democratic directors' actions and the Chair's resignation have reverberated beyond that singular agency. Republicans are concerned that the …


Jury Nullification In Abortion Prosecutions: An Equilibrium Theory, Peter N. Salib, Guha Krishnamurthi Oct 2022

Jury Nullification In Abortion Prosecutions: An Equilibrium Theory, Peter N. Salib, Guha Krishnamurthi

Duke Law Journal Online

The Supreme Court has overturned Roe v. Wade. Doing so, it has rescinded recognition of a fundamental constitutional right for the first time in nearly a century. Even before Roe's demise, multiple states enacted laws to criminalize abortion once the abortion right was gone. More states will surely follow soon. Calls to action have gone out to those who can protect women's rights: the President, Congress, left­leaning state governments, and more. We add another call - to jurors.

Jurors - and sometimes judges - have the power to refuse to convict factually guilty defendants in criminal prosecutions when they believe …


Antitrust As An Instrument Of Democracy, Daniel A. Crane Oct 2022

Antitrust As An Instrument Of Democracy, Daniel A. Crane

Duke Law Journal Online

No abstract provided.


Cryptocurrency, Legibility, And Taxation, Amanda Parsons Oct 2022

Cryptocurrency, Legibility, And Taxation, Amanda Parsons

Duke Law Journal Online

In Jarrett v. United States, a taxpayer in Tennessee is arguing that staking cryptocurrency did not result in him earning “income” under federal income tax law. This case illustrates the fundamental challenge that cryptocurrency and blockchain technology present for tax law. Wealth creation in the crypto space is not readily legible to the state. This absence of legibility threatens tax law’s reliance on placing economic activities into categories to determine how they should be taxed. Furthermore, this case highlights the harms Congress and Treasury are risking by not taking action on cryptocurrency taxation. The uncertainty and lack of guidance …


Artificial Justice: The Quandary Of Ai In The Courtroom, Paul W. Grimm, Maura R. Grossman, Sabine Gless, Mireille Hildebrandt Sep 2022

Artificial Justice: The Quandary Of Ai In The Courtroom, Paul W. Grimm, Maura R. Grossman, Sabine Gless, Mireille Hildebrandt

Judicature International

No abstract provided.


Hon. Joel Toomey, Gerald B. Tjoflat Jul 2022

Hon. Joel Toomey, Gerald B. Tjoflat

Special Collections

A discussion with Judge Tjoflat regarding supervising the operation of the Southern District of Florida and districts generally; and building the current courthouse.


Rev. Canon Beth Tjoflat, Gerald B. Tjoflat Jul 2022

Rev. Canon Beth Tjoflat, Gerald B. Tjoflat

Special Collections

A discussion with Judge Tjoflat regarding his involvement with the Episcopal Church, especially in the Diocese of Florida


Dean Michael P. Scharf, Gerald B. Tjoflat Jul 2022

Dean Michael P. Scharf, Gerald B. Tjoflat

Special Collections

A discussion with Judge Tjoflat regarding his relationships with older judges, other prominent influencers, and his time as chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit


Designing Constitutions For A Lasting Democracy, Donald L. Horowitz, Elisabeth Perham Jul 2022

Designing Constitutions For A Lasting Democracy, Donald L. Horowitz, Elisabeth Perham

Judicature International

No abstract provided.


A Global Comparison Of Judicial Discipline Mechanisms, Zhuozhen Duan Jul 2022

A Global Comparison Of Judicial Discipline Mechanisms, Zhuozhen Duan

Judicature International

No abstract provided.


We Can't Talk About Race Unless We Also Talk About Art, Lavinia Liang Jun 2022

We Can't Talk About Race Unless We Also Talk About Art, Lavinia Liang

Duke Law Journal Online

No abstract provided.


Catchall Policing And The Fourth Amendment, Nirej Sekhon Jun 2022

Catchall Policing And The Fourth Amendment, Nirej Sekhon

Duke Law Journal Online

American police do a bit of everything. They direct traffic, resolve private disputes, help the sick and injured, and do animal control. Far less frequently than one might think, they make arrests. Americans reflexively call the police for troubles, big and small. The “catchall tradition” is shorthand for this melding of non-adversarial, public assistance with adversarial, crime-control functions. The catchall tradition means that civilians are exposed to the police’s coercive power as a condition of receiving police help. This Article contends that the catchall tradition is antithetical to constitutional police regulation. The Supreme Court has distinguished adversarial from non-adversarial state …


Dueling Dictionaries And Clashing Corpora, Kevin Tobia Jun 2022

Dueling Dictionaries And Clashing Corpora, Kevin Tobia

Duke Law Journal Online

No abstract provided.


Rattlesnakes, Debt, And Arpa § 1005: The Existential Crisis Of American Black Farmers, Maia Foster, P. J. Austin Jun 2022

Rattlesnakes, Debt, And Arpa § 1005: The Existential Crisis Of American Black Farmers, Maia Foster, P. J. Austin

Duke Law Journal Online

No abstract provided.


How Technology Is Changing Justice In China, Shitong Qiao, Zhiyu Li, Benjamin Chen Jun 2022

How Technology Is Changing Justice In China, Shitong Qiao, Zhiyu Li, Benjamin Chen

Judicature International

No abstract provided.


Done The Time, Still Being Punished For The Crime: The Irrationality Of Collateral Consequences In Occupational Licensing And Fourteenth Amendment Challenges, Mccarley Maddock May 2022

Done The Time, Still Being Punished For The Crime: The Irrationality Of Collateral Consequences In Occupational Licensing And Fourteenth Amendment Challenges, Mccarley Maddock

Duke Journal of Constitutional Law & Public Policy Sidebar

Traditionally, retributive models of criminal justice rely on incarceration as punishment for a crime. Under this theory, punishment should end when the offender is released from prison. Yet, a decentralized web of statutes across the United States undermines this commonsense notion and continues to punish formerly incarcerated persons by denying them access to basic services for re-entry into society such as housing, government benefits, and employment. Specifically, thousands of the formerly incarcerated individuals are barred from working in or pursuing a career of their choice based on state statutes that prohibit entry into a given profession based on criminal history. …


Universalizing Fraud, Parmida Enkeshafi May 2022

Universalizing Fraud, Parmida Enkeshafi

Duke Journal of Constitutional Law & Public Policy Sidebar

The criminal trial of Elizabeth Holmes has reanimated public interest in fraud. Holmes, once a Silicon Valley prodigy, was charged with two counts of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and eleven counts of wire fraud. A jury found Holmes guilty on four counts, potentially subjecting her to 80 years in prison. This Note uses the example of Elizabeth Holmes's case to examine more broadly the role of morality in fraud and argues for a new framework by which to articulate and prosecute fraud.

Criminal jurisprudence has struggled to construct a satisfactory definition of "white-collar crime" since sociologist Edwin H. Sutherland …


The Shurtleff Conundrum: Resolving The Conflict In Government-Speech And Public Forum Analysis, James Walraven Apr 2022

The Shurtleff Conundrum: Resolving The Conflict In Government-Speech And Public Forum Analysis, James Walraven

Duke Journal of Constitutional Law & Public Policy Sidebar

Shurtleff v. Boston is the Supreme Court's latest opportunity to clarify the murky line between the "government-speech" and "public forum" doctrines. The Court will decide whether the City of Boston violated the Free Speech Clause by refusing to fly a flag with Christian imagery in front of City Hall. The City had previously allowed the flying of numerous national and cultural flags by various organizations, but refused to fly a conservative social organization's "Christian flag" because of the City's fear of appearing to endorse a particular religion.

Under the public forum doctrine, private citizens' free speech is protected to varying …


Xiaomi Corporation V. U.S. Department Of Defense: Defending The International Emergency Economic Powers Act, Bailey Williams Apr 2022

Xiaomi Corporation V. U.S. Department Of Defense: Defending The International Emergency Economic Powers Act, Bailey Williams

Duke Journal of Constitutional Law & Public Policy Sidebar

The International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) provides the Executive with emergency authority to act in the realm of foreign affairs and national security. As global power struggles increasingly play out in financial markets as opposed to battle fields, the United States is leveraging global capital markets, banking, and financial systems to effectuate national security goals – and is relying on IEEPA to do so. However, critics argue IEEPA lacks appropriate procedural safeguards given the courts' general deference to the Executive acting pursuant to national security and the corresponding lack of Congressional oversight.

After assessing various criticisms of IEEPA, this …


Noncitizens' Rights In The Face Of Prolonged Detention: Johnson V. Arteaga-Martinez, Samantha L. Fawcett Apr 2022

Noncitizens' Rights In The Face Of Prolonged Detention: Johnson V. Arteaga-Martinez, Samantha L. Fawcett

Duke Journal of Constitutional Law & Public Policy Sidebar

Under the Immigration and Nationality Act (the "INA"), codified in part at 8 U.S.C. § 1231, the federal government generally has ninety days to successfully deport a detained noncitizen who has reentered illegally after being removed once before. While exceptions to this time limit exist, the United States Supreme Court determined in 2001 that detention under Section 1231 cannot be indefinite.[1]

Now, more than two decades later, the Court must elaborate further. In Johnson v. Arteaga-Martinez, the Court must decide how long a detainment can last beyond the ninety-day statutory limit while a detainee seeks relief from deportation through …


Name And Shame: How International Pressure Allows Civil Rights Activists To Incorporate Human Rights Norms Into American Jurisprudence, Lily Talerman Apr 2022

Name And Shame: How International Pressure Allows Civil Rights Activists To Incorporate Human Rights Norms Into American Jurisprudence, Lily Talerman

Duke Journal of Constitutional Law & Public Policy Sidebar

The United States has ratified international human rights treaties sparingly. Where it has ratified, it has provided such a large number of reservations that the treaties’ domestic effects are effectively nullified. Even though international human rights law has not been directly incorporated into American jurisprudence, however, international human rights norms have greatly affected civil rights provisions in the United States by naming and shaming American civil rights abuses. Recognizing the relatively low success rate of tackling systemic racism in the United States through treaty implementation, this Note instead argues that naming and shaming American civil and human rights abuses more …


David F. Levi, Gerald B. Tjoflat Apr 2022

David F. Levi, Gerald B. Tjoflat

Special Collections

Dean David F. Levi interviews Judge Gerald B. Tjoflat about his experiences on the bench, at Duke Law School. and his legal career.


Dobbs V. Jackson Women's Health Organization And The Likely End Of The Roe V. Wade Era, Jeffrey Hannan Apr 2022

Dobbs V. Jackson Women's Health Organization And The Likely End Of The Roe V. Wade Era, Jeffrey Hannan

Duke Journal of Constitutional Law & Public Policy Sidebar

No abstract provided.


Gary Myers, Gerald B. Tjoflat Mar 2022

Gary Myers, Gerald B. Tjoflat

Special Collections

A discussion with Judge Tjoflat regarding jurisprudence, overall judicial philosophy, and approach to being a judge.


F.B.I. V. Fazaga: The Secret Of The State-Secrets Privilege, Rebecca Reeves Mar 2022

F.B.I. V. Fazaga: The Secret Of The State-Secrets Privilege, Rebecca Reeves

Duke Journal of Constitutional Law & Public Policy Sidebar

When the government successfully invokes the state-secrets privilege, it allows for evidence to be excluded from trial if making that evidence public would threaten national security. It is unclear, however, under what circumstances this privilege can be invoked, what happens when it is successfully invoked, and what occurs after the evidence is excluded. In Federal Bureau of Investigation v. Fazaga, the Supreme Court will have the opportunity to clarify the state-secrets privilege. Additionally, the Court will be asked to determine whether the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 (FISA) displaces this privilege when the government invokes it regarding evidence …


Proper Cause For Concern: New York State Rifle & Pistol Association V. Bruen, Ali Rosenblatt Feb 2022

Proper Cause For Concern: New York State Rifle & Pistol Association V. Bruen, Ali Rosenblatt

Duke Journal of Constitutional Law & Public Policy Sidebar

Gun rights and gun control advocates alike are watching the Supreme Court, to see what happens in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, Inc. v. Bruen. In this pivotal Second Amendment case, the Court finds its first opportunity to substantially extend its 2008 decision in District of Columbia v. Heller, and to define the scope of the Second Amendment right to bear arms outside the home. The Court can decide this case narrowly by limiting its decision to the statutes at issue, New York’s “proper cause” regime (the “New York law”). Alternatively, the Court can rule broadly and use …


Prof. Michael T. Morley, Gerald B. Tjoflat Feb 2022

Prof. Michael T. Morley, Gerald B. Tjoflat

Special Collections

A discussion with Judge Tjoflat regarding the Split of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.