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Full-Text Articles in Law

Revamping Part 2: An Analysis Of Revisions To The Federal Substance Use Disorder Treatment Confidentiality Regulations, Michelle Rackish Jan 2023

Revamping Part 2: An Analysis Of Revisions To The Federal Substance Use Disorder Treatment Confidentiality Regulations, Michelle Rackish

Journal of Health Care Law and Policy

No abstract provided.


A Phoenix From The Ashes: Reproductive Justice In A World Without Roe, Kimberly Mutcherson Jan 2023

A Phoenix From The Ashes: Reproductive Justice In A World Without Roe, Kimberly Mutcherson

Journal of Health Care Law and Policy

No abstract provided.


Essay In Honor Of Dean David Logan, Sheldon Whitehouse Jan 2023

Essay In Honor Of Dean David Logan, Sheldon Whitehouse

Roger Williams University Law Review

No abstract provided.


In Re Mandy M., 239 A.3d 1152, 1155 (R.I. 2020), Jacklyn Henry Jan 2023

In Re Mandy M., 239 A.3d 1152, 1155 (R.I. 2020), Jacklyn Henry

Roger Williams University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Welcome To Web 3.0: A Reevaluation Of Music Licensing And Consumption To Level The Payment Imbalance For Songwriters, Chelsea Cohen Jan 2023

Welcome To Web 3.0: A Reevaluation Of Music Licensing And Consumption To Level The Payment Imbalance For Songwriters, Chelsea Cohen

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

For decades, songwriters have been short changed in their music royalties and copyright splits. This Note explores the historical inequity between songwriters and their counterparts—labels and recording artists—in royalty receipts, and potential methods by which this wrong may be righted in the next iteration of the internet, Web 3.0. Battles of the past can serve as a frame of reference in evaluating how songwriters will be compensated in Web 3.0. Tech companies cannot have a free pass to disregard licensing laws in the name of fast profits. This Note analyzes how music will be consumed and profited off of in …


Meals For All, Not Just The Cake Eaters: A Call For Universal School Lunch In Minnesota As A Step Towards Racial Equity, Anna Cousin Jan 2023

Meals For All, Not Just The Cake Eaters: A Call For Universal School Lunch In Minnesota As A Step Towards Racial Equity, Anna Cousin

Mitchell Hamline Law Journal of Public Policy and Practice

No abstract provided.


Expanding The Sixth Amendment’S Right To Counsel To Ensure Fairness For Noncitizen Defendants, Kathy Santamaria Mendez Jan 2023

Expanding The Sixth Amendment’S Right To Counsel To Ensure Fairness For Noncitizen Defendants, Kathy Santamaria Mendez

Mitchell Hamline Law Journal of Public Policy and Practice

No abstract provided.


Constitutionality Of Reparations For Native Americans: Confronting The Boarding Schools, Monica Shaffer Jan 2023

Constitutionality Of Reparations For Native Americans: Confronting The Boarding Schools, Monica Shaffer

Mitchell Hamline Law Review

No abstract provided.


Major Questions Impede Major Progress--Rebuking The Major Questions Doctrine & West Virginia V. Epa In Minnesota, Michael Warkel Jan 2023

Major Questions Impede Major Progress--Rebuking The Major Questions Doctrine & West Virginia V. Epa In Minnesota, Michael Warkel

Mitchell Hamline Law Review

No abstract provided.


Minerva I Am Not – The Materially Broader Claim Standard And Assignor Estoppel, David R. Soucy Esq. Jan 2023

Minerva I Am Not – The Materially Broader Claim Standard And Assignor Estoppel, David R. Soucy Esq.

UIC Review of Intellectual Property Law

No abstract provided.


The Rights Of Stateless Children Born From Cross-Border Reproductive Care, Carson Cook Jan 2023

The Rights Of Stateless Children Born From Cross-Border Reproductive Care, Carson Cook

Emory International Law Review

No abstract provided.


Bridge Or Barrier: The Intersection Of Wealth, Housing, And The Disparate Impact Standard Jan 2023

Bridge Or Barrier: The Intersection Of Wealth, Housing, And The Disparate Impact Standard

Florida A & M University Law Review

This note asserts that exclusionary zoning and housing based on income or economic standing can have a disparate impact on race. The disparate impact standard of the Fair Housing Act of 1968, 42, U.S.C.S § 3601 et seq., used in the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs v. Inclusive Communities, does not do enough to aid plaintiffs in bringing claims where there is a racial disparity in housing. Part One of this paper will discuss the Federal policies that historically contributed to the wealth gap that exists on the basis of race, the legacy of these policies, and how …


The Roots Of The Problem: How The Crown Act Could Remedy The Inadequacies Of Title Vii Hair Discrimination Protections In The Entertainment Industry Jan 2023

The Roots Of The Problem: How The Crown Act Could Remedy The Inadequacies Of Title Vii Hair Discrimination Protections In The Entertainment Industry

Florida A & M University Law Review

This article will examine the inadequacies of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (“Title VII”) as it relates to hair discrimination in the entertainment industry and how the “Create a Respectful and Open Workplace for Natural Hair” (“CROWN”) Act could help to alleviate those inadequacies. Title VII fails to acknowledge the connection between hair texture/ protective styles and race. The entertainment industry exploits the failures of Title VII when casting African American women for television and film roles. Industry executives have been known to ask actresses to mute or exaggerate their blackness through different requests for their …


School Curriculum: The Sigmatic Harm To Students And The Responsibility Of Congress To Act Again Jan 2023

School Curriculum: The Sigmatic Harm To Students And The Responsibility Of Congress To Act Again

Florida A & M University Law Review

When Brown was decided, the Supreme Court felt that it could not trust the States to encourage and facilitate equality on its own, which was proven true in the subsequent, decades-long resistance against integration following the Brown II mandate. Once again, the States cannot be trusted to move towards equality and away from backward community norms and bias without federal intervention. This is currently being exemplified by states like Florida—explicitly banning public schools from teaching Critical Race Theory. The Supreme Court does not seem willing to extend Brown any further, but the federal government may encourage and facilitate curriculum equality …


The American Dream Belongs To All Of Us: Latinos And Jamaican Americans Experience Cultural Genocide By American Assimilation Jan 2023

The American Dream Belongs To All Of Us: Latinos And Jamaican Americans Experience Cultural Genocide By American Assimilation

Florida A & M University Law Review

Racism in the United States has had a detrimental effect on the Latino and Jamaican experience in this country; affirmative action can be used to promote acculturation rather than assimilation. Part I of this article will explore the origins of the American Experiment as the creation of a country with freedom and democracy and how the benefit of those rights has never been given to racialized minorities without a struggle and fight. Part II explores Supreme Court cases that deal with discrimination issues in America and highlights how the solution to the forced assimilation of diverse cultures cannot be found …


Special Thank You! Jan 2023

Special Thank You!

Florida A & M University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Front Matter Jan 2023

Front Matter

Florida A & M University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Editorial Board And Statement Of Policy Jan 2023

Editorial Board And Statement Of Policy

Florida A & M University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Leadership, Faculty, Instructors, And Trustees Jan 2023

Leadership, Faculty, Instructors, And Trustees

Florida A & M University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Table Of Contents Jan 2023

Table Of Contents

Florida A & M University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Editors Note Jan 2023

Editors Note

Florida A & M University Law Review

No abstract provided.


What To The Marginalized Person Is The American Dream Jan 2023

What To The Marginalized Person Is The American Dream

Florida A & M University Law Review

I will organize this Note around three themes Douglass articulated in his speech. These themes, which remain timely and relevant over 170 years later, are (1) the importance of attending to those most impacted by injustices; (2) the responsibility of each of us to address the injustices we see in the world around us; and (3) the practice of remaining hopeful in the face of what, at times, may feel like daunting circumstances. I will structure this Note around these three themes as I consider what the American Dream means for marginalized persons. Throughout, I will weave in examples of …


The Anti-Woke And The Black American (Waking) Dream Jan 2023

The Anti-Woke And The Black American (Waking) Dream

Florida A & M University Law Review

This essay, though not a direct transcript, is based largely upon the keynote address given by the author on February 24, 2023, at the “The American Dream Belongs to All of Us” Symposium sponsored by the Florida A&M University (FAMU) Law Review and the FAMU Hispanic American Law Student Association (HALSA) at FAMU College of Law. The author joyfully acknowledges that her remarks are likely impermissible under the so-called Stop-W.O.K.E. Act that is currently being challenged in court by members of the FAMU College of Law community.


Critical Race Theory And Florida Schools: An Attempt To Suppress Racism Embedded Within American History Jan 2023

Critical Race Theory And Florida Schools: An Attempt To Suppress Racism Embedded Within American History

Florida A & M University Law Review

“Our Constitution is colorblind, and neither knows nor tolerates classes among its citizens.” Imagine that a public school student learns that the curriculum taught at their school about their culture and its history has just been banned. Further, they discover that the reasoning for the removal is the belief that the curriculum promotes reverse racism. Imagine this happening only to classes related to their culture and background, but similar courses teaching the history and experiences of other cultures remain untouched, unbanned, and unaddressed. History is the story of the past and tells us where we are, where we come from, …


Front Matter Jan 2023

Front Matter

SMU Science and Technology Law Review

No abstract provided.


Houston Security Camera Ordinance: Reasonable Safety Measure Or Orwellian Surveillance, Clint Nuckolls Jan 2023

Houston Security Camera Ordinance: Reasonable Safety Measure Or Orwellian Surveillance, Clint Nuckolls

SMU Science and Technology Law Review

A new ordinance went into effect in Houston, Texas in July 2022, which looks to leverage technology and require certain businesses to install surveillance cameras at their own cost and turn footage over to the police on demand without a warrant. The ordinance specifically requires bars, nightclubs, convenience stores, sexually oriented businesses, and game rooms to install surveillance cameras, with accompanying lighting at all places where customers are permitted, keep the cameras running at all times, even when the business is closed, and store the footage for at least thirty days, all at the expense of the business owners. The …


Employee Monitoring: As Technology Advances Yet The Electronic Communications Privacy Act Stays In The Past, Isabela Possino Jan 2023

Employee Monitoring: As Technology Advances Yet The Electronic Communications Privacy Act Stays In The Past, Isabela Possino

SMU Science and Technology Law Review

Since the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986 was enacted, the United States has endured an evolution of technology. While progressive at its inception, the ECPA has since been met with a tumultuous response from scholars, courts, and others trying to understand its purpose and application regarding privacy rights and the monitoring of communications. Specifically, since the COVID-19 pandemic, the ECPA has remained at the forefront of debate with respect to employee monitoring and surveillance practices. This article provides an overview of the ECPA and explains why today’s technological advancements have surpassed the protections afforded by the Act, leaving employees …


Convertible Equity In The Japanese Startup Ecosystem, A. Reid Monroe-Sheridan Jan 2023

Convertible Equity In The Japanese Startup Ecosystem, A. Reid Monroe-Sheridan

University of Pennsylvania Asian Law Review

No abstract provided.


Court Polarization: A Comparative Perspective, Iddo Porat Jan 2023

Court Polarization: A Comparative Perspective, Iddo Porat

UC Law SF International Law Review

Polarization is on the rise around the globe. Political views are driven to the poles, and moderate views are weakened. Many studies have been carried out on the increase in social and political polarization, but far fewer on the effects of polarization on constitutional and supreme courts, and none on a comparative or global scale. This Article attempts to fill this gap. It aims, for the first time, to describe and typologize the effects of political polarization on constitutional and supreme courts in different parts of the world.

The Article identifies three models of such effects: mirror polarization (the U.S.) …


Civil Litigation: Optimism And Expenditures: The Effect On Settlements, Ben Depoorter Jan 2023

Civil Litigation: Optimism And Expenditures: The Effect On Settlements, Ben Depoorter

The Judges' Book

No abstract provided.