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Equal Protection

2014

Selected Works

Civil Rights and Discrimination

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Law

Solving Batson, Tania Tetlow Mar 2014

Solving Batson, Tania Tetlow

Tania Tetlow

The Supreme Court faced an important ideological choice when it banned the racial use of peremptory challenges in Batson v. Kentucky. It could either ground the rule in equality rights designed to protect potential jurors from stereotyping, or it could base the rule on the defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to an “impartial jury” drawn from a fair cross-section of the community. By choosing Equal Protection analysis, the Court turned away from the defendant and the fair functioning of the criminal justice system and instead focused on protecting potential jurors. The Court thus built fatal error into the Batson rule, a …


The State As Witness: Windsor, Shelby County, And Judicial Distrust Of The Legislative Record, Bertrall L. Ross Dec 2013

The State As Witness: Windsor, Shelby County, And Judicial Distrust Of The Legislative Record, Bertrall L. Ross

Bertrall L Ross

More than ever, the constitutionality of laws turns on judicial review of an underlying factual record, assembled by lawmakers. Some scholars have suggested that by requiring extensive records, the Supreme Court is treating lawmakers like administrative agencies. The assumption underlying this metaphor is that if the state puts forth enough evidence in the record to support the law, its action will survive constitutional scrutiny. What scholars have overlooked, however, is that the Court is increasingly questioning the credibility of the record itself. Even in cases where

the state produces adequate evidence to support its action, the Court sometimes invalidates the …