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Full-Text Articles in Law

Prosecutorial Accountability: The Epidemic Of Prosecutorial Misconduct In America, Brei'a Womack Jan 2019

Prosecutorial Accountability: The Epidemic Of Prosecutorial Misconduct In America, Brei'a Womack

Public Interest Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Table Of Contents, Public Interest Law Reporter Jan 2019

Table Of Contents, Public Interest Law Reporter

Public Interest Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Death With Dignity: A Right To Death?, Emily Knox Jan 2019

Death With Dignity: A Right To Death?, Emily Knox

Public Interest Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


The Best We Can Be: How Toxic Masculinity Creates A Second Inescapable Situation For Inmates, Mariah Woodson Jan 2019

The Best We Can Be: How Toxic Masculinity Creates A Second Inescapable Situation For Inmates, Mariah Woodson

Public Interest Law Reporter

Toxic masculinity is a concept that has been in modern society for some time now. However, the recent release of the controversial Gillette razor commercial has sparked an uptick in discussions, from those who lauded the company for addressing the negative traits often associated with traditional masculinity to those who felt as though the company was unfairly targeting masculinity altogether. Regardless of where one falls on the debate, there is no denying the need for conversation. One point of discussion is what areas of our society embody these traits the most? An area that may be less intuitive are prisons …


The School To Prison Pipeline: Widespread Disparities In School Discipline Based On Race, Tara Carone Jan 2019

The School To Prison Pipeline: Widespread Disparities In School Discipline Based On Race, Tara Carone

Public Interest Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Students For Fair Admissions V. Harvard: Admissions Administrators Threaten The Future Of Affirmative Action In The United States, Seth Johnson Jan 2019

Students For Fair Admissions V. Harvard: Admissions Administrators Threaten The Future Of Affirmative Action In The United States, Seth Johnson

Public Interest Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Battle Of The Branches, Melissa Dupor Jan 2019

Battle Of The Branches, Melissa Dupor

Public Interest Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


A Hidden Crisis: Housing Insecurity On College Campuses, Christina Mendoza Jan 2019

A Hidden Crisis: Housing Insecurity On College Campuses, Christina Mendoza

Public Interest Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Juveniles, Mass Incarceration, And Why "Raising The Age" Is Not Enough, Kenya Barbara Jan 2019

Juveniles, Mass Incarceration, And Why "Raising The Age" Is Not Enough, Kenya Barbara

Public Interest Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Flawed Forensics: Cautionary Tales From Our Criminal Justice Past, Marisa Tisbo Jan 2019

Flawed Forensics: Cautionary Tales From Our Criminal Justice Past, Marisa Tisbo

Public Interest Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


How Will The Legalization Of Marijuana Affect The Incarcerated In Illinois?, Kevin Anderson Jan 2019

How Will The Legalization Of Marijuana Affect The Incarcerated In Illinois?, Kevin Anderson

Public Interest Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Table Of Contents, Public Interest Law Reporter Jan 2019

Table Of Contents, Public Interest Law Reporter

Public Interest Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Legalization Of Marijuana In Illinois: The Broader Implications On Social Justice, Colleen Ahern Jan 2019

Legalization Of Marijuana In Illinois: The Broader Implications On Social Justice, Colleen Ahern

Public Interest Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Housing Preservation Under Vawa: The Case For Treating Housing As An Immediate Safety Need, Olivia Alden Jan 2019

Housing Preservation Under Vawa: The Case For Treating Housing As An Immediate Safety Need, Olivia Alden

Public Interest Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Healthcare In America: Assessing The Aca And Medicare-For-All, Thomas Bishop Jan 2019

Healthcare In America: Assessing The Aca And Medicare-For-All, Thomas Bishop

Public Interest Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Uncared For In State Care, Ashli Giles-Perkins Jan 2019

Uncared For In State Care, Ashli Giles-Perkins

Public Interest Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Sex Stereotyping: Whether Title Vii Prohibits Discrimination Against Transgender People, Connor Q. Hollander Jan 2019

Sex Stereotyping: Whether Title Vii Prohibits Discrimination Against Transgender People, Connor Q. Hollander

Public Interest Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


International Lessons In The Systematic Adoption Of Felony Restorative Justice In Chicago, Sean Hux Jan 2019

International Lessons In The Systematic Adoption Of Felony Restorative Justice In Chicago, Sean Hux

Public Interest Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Wrongfully Convicted Does Not Need To Mean Wrongfully Compensated: Using State Legislation To Assure Accurate Compensation, Lilia Valdez Jan 2019

Wrongfully Convicted Does Not Need To Mean Wrongfully Compensated: Using State Legislation To Assure Accurate Compensation, Lilia Valdez

Public Interest Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Increased Administrative Roadblocks In Naturalization And Immigration Under President Trump, Kyle Johnson Jan 2019

Increased Administrative Roadblocks In Naturalization And Immigration Under President Trump, Kyle Johnson

Public Interest Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Access To Justice: The Law And Political Economy Of The Legal Services Corporation, Bobby Vanecko Jan 2019

Access To Justice: The Law And Political Economy Of The Legal Services Corporation, Bobby Vanecko

Public Interest Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


The Effects Of Voluntary And Presumptive Sentencing Guidelines, Stephen Rushin, Josph Colquitt, Griffin Sims Edwards Jan 2019

The Effects Of Voluntary And Presumptive Sentencing Guidelines, Stephen Rushin, Josph Colquitt, Griffin Sims Edwards

Faculty Publications & Other Works

This Article empirically illustrates that the introduction of voluntary and presumptive sentencing guidelines at the state-level can contribute to statistically significant reductions in sentence length, inter-judge disparities, and racial disparities.

For much of American history, judges had largely unguided discretion to select criminal sentences within statutorily authorized ranges. But in the mid-to-late twentieth century, states and the federal government began experimenting with sentencing guidelines designed to reign in judicial discretion to ensure that similarly situated offenders received comparable sentences. Some states have made their guidelines voluntary, while others have made their guidelines presumptive or mandatory, meaning that judges must generally …


Interrogating Police Officers, Stephen Rushin, Atticus Deprospo Jan 2019

Interrogating Police Officers, Stephen Rushin, Atticus Deprospo

Faculty Publications & Other Works

This Article empirically evaluates the procedural protections given to police officers facing disciplinary interrogations about alleged misconduct. It demonstrates that state laws and collective bargaining agreements have insulated many police officers from the most successful interrogation techniques.
The first part of this Article builds on previous studies by analyzing a dataset of police union contracts and state laws that govern the working conditions in a substantial cross section of large and midsized American police departments. Many of these police departments provide officers with hours or even days of advanced notice before a disciplinary interrogation. An even larger percentage of these …


Police Disciplinary Appeals, Stephen Rushin Jan 2019

Police Disciplinary Appeals, Stephen Rushin

Faculty Publications & Other Works

This Article empirically evaluates the procedural protections given to police officers facing disciplinary interrogations about alleged misconduct. It demonstrates that state laws and collective bargaining agreements have insulated many police officers from the most successful interrogation techniques.
The first part of this Article builds on previous studies by analyzing a dataset of police union contracts and state laws that govern the working conditions in a substantial cross section of large and midsized American police departments. Many of these police departments provide officers with hours or even days of advanced notice before a disciplinary interrogation. An even larger percentage of these …


The Effects Of Voluntary And Presumptive Sentencing Guidelines, Stephen Rushin, Griffin Sims Edwards, Josph Colquitt Jan 2019

The Effects Of Voluntary And Presumptive Sentencing Guidelines, Stephen Rushin, Griffin Sims Edwards, Josph Colquitt

Faculty Publications & Other Works

This Article empirically illustrates that the introduction of voluntary and presumptive sentencing guidelines at the state-level can contribute to statistically significant reductions in sentence length, inter-judge disparities, and racial disparities.

For much of American history, judges had largely unguided discretion to select criminal sentences within statutorily authorized ranges. But in the mid-to-late twentieth century, states and the federal government began experimenting with sentencing guidelines designed to reign in judicial discretion to ensure that similarly situated offenders received comparable sentences. Some states have made their guidelines voluntary, while others have made their guidelines presumptive or mandatory, meaning that judges must generally …