| Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year | Key Terms |
| Taylor J. House |
IS THE UNITED STATES JUDICIAL SYSTEM FAILING TRANSGENDER WOMEN? A CRITICAL OVERVIEW |
12 Florida A & M University Law Review 333 (Spring, 2017) |
Introduction. 333 I. The Start of the LGBTQA Civil Rights Movement led by Transgender Women. 335 II. The Prison System and Transphobia. 338 III. Say Her Name: The Erasure of Black Trans-Women from the Black Lives Matter Movement. 343 IV. Should This be a Right?. 345 A. Transgender Acceptance Using Cis-Gender Bathrooms. 346 V. Adequate Health Care... |
2017 |
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| Thomas B. Harvey |
JAILING THE POOR |
42 Human Rights 16 (2017) |
Across the United States, police and courts have combined forces to create, enforce, and legitimize practices that have created a class of people who have been jailed because of their poverty. The process starts innocently enough. In cases where jail time either falls outside the range of punishment or would be an absurd punishment for a low-level... |
2017 |
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| R. Mark Frey |
JOHN LENNON vs. THE USA: THE INSIDE STORY OF THE MOST BITTERLY CONTESTED AND INFLUENTIAL DEPORTATION CASE IN UNITED STATES HISTORY BY LEON WILDES AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION, CHICAGO, IL, 2016. 384 PAGES, $35 |
64-FEB Federal Lawyer 92 (January/February, 2017) |
The recent publication of noted immigration attorney Leon Wildes' John Lennon vs. The USA brings back vivid memories of an era marked by conflict in matters involving war and national security, civil rights, law and order, and the Silent Majority. In some ways, these matters are eerily similar to today's concerns with ISIS/ISIL, Black Lives Matter,... |
2017 |
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| Major Michael E. Gilbertson |
JUST MERCY: A STORY OF JUSTICE AND REDEMPTION |
2017-JAN Army Lawyer 30 (January, 2017) |
The real question of capital punishment in this country is, Do we deserve to kill? For the past four years, violent and nonviolent protests have filled the streets of America and energized conversations at the dinner table, on the sports field, and in news studios across the country, demanding a fundamental change in how the police treat our... |
2017 |
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| Lisa A. Kloppenberg , Wesley H. Dodd |
JUSTICE FOR ALL: A ROLE FOR ADR EDUCATORS |
32 Ohio State Journal on Dispute Resolution 665 (2017) |
I. Public Trust in the Justice System is Declining A. Public Trust in the Justice System is at an All-time Low B. The Black Lives Matter Movement is a Manifestation of the lack of Trust in the Justice System C. The Public Perceives Police Officers as One Part of an Intertwined Justice System D. The Judiciary is Perceived as Politicized II. The... |
2017 |
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| Benjamin J. Keele , Nick Sexton |
KEEPING UP WITH NEW LEGAL TITLES |
109 Law Library Journal 683 (Fall, 2017) |
¶1 The idea behind The Craft of Librarian Instruction: Using Acting Techniques to Create Your Teaching Presence certainly caught my attention. I worried, though, that the comparison of acting to teaching would be a gimmick. It was not. The authors' deep research and appreciation for acting truly shows. The book is well researched and includes ample... |
2017 |
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| Gloria Steinem |
KEYNOTE CONVERSATION: GLORIA STEINEM AND CHANCELLOR NANCY CANTOR, RUTGERS-NEWARK |
38 Women's Rights Law Reporter 247 (Spring/Summer, 2017) |
Good afternoon everyone. As I said this morning, I'm Professor Professor Suzanne Kim. I'm on the faculty here at Rutgers Law School, resident here on the Newark Campus. I want to welcome you again today to this exciting event celebrating the 20th Anniversary of the UN Fourth World Conference on Women. We've had an exciting day so far, the panelists... |
2017 |
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| Gerald Korngold |
LAND USE REGULATION AS A FRAMEWORK TO CREATE PUBLIC SPACE FOR SPEECH AND EXPRESSION IN THE EVOLVING AND RECONCEPTUALIZED SHOPPING MALL OF THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY |
68 Case Western Reserve Law Review 429 (Winter 2017) |
Much has been written lately about the death of malls and large-scale shopping centers. The data show, however, that the great numbers of these malls and centers are not going extinct, but rather are undergoing an evolution from the fortress-type, retail-focused mall of the 1970s to a twenty-first century model better attuned to current tastes of... |
2017 |
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| Steven T. Taylor |
LAS VEGAS LAW FIRM SHAKES IT UP WITH NEW POLICY ANALYST HIRE |
36 Of Counsel 24 (April, 2017) |
After serving two sessions in the Nevada state legislature as the legislative assistant for Senator Aaron Ford, a Democrat who became the Senate minority leader last session and serves as majority leader this year, Lauren Brooks learned a lot about the workings of state government. She also cultivated many important relationships on both sides of... |
2017 |
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| Julie E. Cohen |
LAW FOR THE PLATFORM ECONOMY |
51 U.C. Davis Law Review 133 (November, 2017) |
This Article explores patterns of legal-institutional change in the emerging, platform-driven economy. Its starting premise is that the platform is not simply a new business model, a new social technology, or a new infrastructural formation (although it is also all of those things). Rather, it is the core organizational form of the emerging... |
2017 |
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| Matthew Hector |
LAWSUIT CHALLENGES WARRANTLESS CELLPHONE TRACKING |
105 Illinois Bar Journal 25 (March, 2017) |
A Chicago lawyer is suing the city and other defendants for gathering cellphone information in a way that violates individual privacy and should require a warrant. STINGRAYS AREN'T FOUND SOLELY AT sea. Stingray is also the nickname for cell site simulators. These devices mimic cell towers, collecting data from phones. Collected data can include... |
2017 |
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| Sidney D. Watson |
LESSONS FROM FERGUSON AND BEYOND: BIAS, HEALTH, AND JUSTICE |
18 Minnesota Journal of Law, Science & Technology 111 (Winter, 2017) |
Introduction. 111 I. Racial Bias, Health, and Health Care. 115 II. Affordable Care Act: A Health Equity Agenda. 126 III. Section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act. 131 Conclusion. 141 |
2017 |
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| Katherine J. Bies |
LET THE SUNSHINE IN: ILLUMINATING THE POWERFUL ROLE POLICE UNIONS PLAY IN SHIELDING OFFICER MISCONDUCT |
28 Stanford Law and Policy Review 109 (2017) |
Introduction. 110 I. Arguments for and Against Police Officer Misconduct Confidentiality Laws. 113 A. Overview of Confidentiality Legislation. 114 B. The Argument for Confidentiality. 115 C. Countervailing Public Interest: Transparency and Accountability. 117 1. Accountable and Transparent Decision-making. 118 2. Trust and Community Relations. 119... |
2017 |
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| Monique Peterkin, Editor-in-Chief, Volume 60 |
LETTER FROM THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF |
60 Howard Law Journal vii (Winter, 2017) |
If Volume 60, Issue 1 of the Howard Law Journal represented the United States in its current form, Issue 2 represents its transcendence over time. With the Journal being in its sixtieth year, our hope is that this Volume as a whole leads to meaningful discussion and reflection about the state of our country. In the past sixty years, what exactly... |
2017 |
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LITIGATING POLICE MISCONDUCT: DOES THE LITIGATION PROCESS MATTER? DOES IT WORK? |
11 Northwestern Journal of Law & Social Policy 366 (Fall, 2017) |
TRANSCRIPT OF PROCEEDINGS held at Northwestern University School of Law, Thorne Auditorium, 375 East Chicago Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, on the 13th day of November, A.D. 2015, at 11:00 a.m. MODERATOR: MR. LOCKE E. BOWMAN, Clinical Professor of Law at Northwestern University School of Law, and Executive Director of the Roderick and Solange MacArthur... |
2017 |
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| Laura I Appleman |
LOCAL DEMOCRACY, COMMUNITY ADJUDICATION, AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE |
111 Northwestern University Law Review 1413 (2017) |
Abstract--Many of our criminal justice woes can be traced to the loss of the community's decisionmaking ability in adjudicating crime and punishment. American normative theories of democracy and democratic deliberation have always included the participation of the community as part of our system of criminal justice. This type of democratic localism... |
2017 |
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| Courtney Harper Turkington |
LOUISIANA'S ADDICTION TO MASS INCARCERATION BY THE NUMBERS |
63 Loyola Law Review 557 (Fall, 2017) |
I. INTRODUCTION. 557 II. THE HISTORY AND CURRENT STATE OF THE WAR ON DRUGS. 559 A. The Fabrication of a Drug and Racial Threat. 559 B. Public Belief in the Drug Threat and the Subsequent Marginalization of Minorities. 562 C. Impact of Successive Administrations' War on Drugs. 563 III. MASS INCARCERATION IN LOUISIANA: THE WORLD'S PRISON CAPITAL. 566... |
2017 |
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| Shon Hopwood |
MARIE GOTTSCHALK, CAUGHT: THE PRISON STATE AND THE LOCKDOWN OF AMERICAN POLITICS, PRINCETON, NJ: PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS, 2015, PP. 474, $35.00 CLOTH; $24.95 PAPER |
66 Journal of Legal Education 445 (Winter, 2017) |
The American criminal justice system is a mess. It criminalizes too much conduct, disproportionately targets the poor and people of color, and overly relies on incarceration. It has become so immense that millions of Americans are starting to feel its squeeze as its grip fails every demographic of America from crime victims and taxpayers to those... |
2017 |
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| Nicholas F. Stump |
MOUNTAIN RESISTANCE: APPALACHIAN CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE IN CRITICAL LEGAL RESEARCH MODELED LAW REFORM |
41-FALL Environs Environmental Law and Policy Journal 69 (Fall, 2017) |
John Rawls authored the modern seminal work on civil disobedience in A Theory of Justice. Like all Rawlsian political theory, civil disobedience is very much conceived vis-à-vis the liberalism paradigm. Through this restrictive lens, the role of civil disobedience is in communicating injustices to the societal majority and to legal-institutional... |
2017 |
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| Scott L. Cummings |
MOVEMENT LAWYERING |
2017 University of Illinois Law Review 1645 (2017) |
This Article explores an important development in American legal theory and practice over the past decade: the rise of movement lawyering as an alternative model of public interest advocacy focused on building the power of nonelite constituencies through integrated legal and political strategies. Its central goal is to explain why movement... |
2017 |
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| Sameer M. Ashar |
MOVEMENT LAWYERS IN THE FIGHT FOR IMMIGRANT RIGHTS |
64 UCLA Law Review 1464 (December, 2017) |
As immigration reform initiatives driven by established advocacy organizations in Washington, D.C. were successively defeated in the mid-to-late 2000s, movement-centered organizations and newly created formations of undocumented youth mobilized against the federal-local immigration enforcement regime of the Bush and Obama administrations. This... |
2017 |
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| Jeff Esparza |
MURDER WAS THE CASE: MISSOURI'S FIRST-DEGREE MURDER STATUTES ARE LITTERED WITH CONSTITUTIONAL DEFECTS |
85 UMKC Law Review 773 (Spring, 2017) |
Missouri's first-degree murder statutes are so riddled with facial and implied constitutional errors that they cannot survive even cursory scrutiny. Certainly, murder statutes, and the death penalty in particular, have received a good deal of commentary, but none have directly addressed the constitutional infirmities which so permeate Missouri's... |
2017 |
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| Nida Siddiqui |
N Σ NATIONAL SECURITY FRAT PARTY: GOVERNMENT SURVEILLANCE ON COLLEGE CAMPUSES |
9 Northeastern University Law Review 453 (Summer, 2017) |
I. Introduction. 455 II. Initiation: History of Surveillance on College Campuses. 457 A. The Early Beginnings of the College Surveillance Era. 457 B. The Court's Evolving Interpretation of the University-Student Relationship. 459 III. House Rules: Governing Case Law and Statutes Concerning Student Privacy. 461 A. The Fourth Amendment & Reasonable... |
2017 |
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| Lucy Jewel |
NEURORHETORIC, RACE, AND THE LAW: TOXIC NEURAL PATHWAYS AND HEALING ALTERNATIVES |
76 Maryland Law Review 663 (2017) |
Persuasion happens in both the brain and the body. Departing from a Cartesian view of rationality, neuroscience explains that the mind and the body are highly integrated. It is a fallacy to believe that we engage with arguments in an abstract, analytical, and unemotional fashion. Instead, neuroscience explains that when rhetoric influences us, it... |
2017 |
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| Jeffrey Fagan , Elliott Ash |
NEW POLICING, NEW SEGREGATION: FROM FERGUSON TO NEW YORK |
106 Georgetown Law Journal Online 33 (2017) |
In popular and political culture, many observers credit nearly twenty-five years of declining crime rates to the New Policing. Breaking with a past tradition of reactive policing, the New Policing emphasizes advanced statistical metrics, new forms of organizational accountability, and aggressive tactical enforcement of minor crimes. The... |
2017 |
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| Glenn Harlan Reynolds |
OF COUPS AND THE CONSTITUTION |
48 Columbia Human Rights Law Review 111 (Spring, 2017) |
Military coups are, for the most part, outside the American political tradition. Talk of military coups, however, tends to surface at times when politics are divided and the nation is under stress. Such talk has resurfaced during the recent election season and a YouGov poll of Americans even found that support for a military coup, while perhaps not... |
2017 |
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| David L. Johnson |
OFFICE POLITICS: PREVENTING DISRUPTIVE POLITICAL DISCOURSE |
32 Tennessee Employment Law Letter 3 (May 1, 2017) |
Recently, a Pennsylvania YMCA stopped showing cable news shows on the TVs in its gym because they were prompting political squabbles among its members. When filtered into the diverse workplace, passionate opposing political viewpoints can harm productivity and morale and even create liability issues for employers. Sometimes political discussions... |
2017 |
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| Jeremy Dunham, Holly Lawford-Smith, University of Sheffield, Department of Philosophy, j.dunham@sheffield.ac.uk, University of Sheffield, Department of Philosophy, h.lawford-smith@sheffield.ac.uk |
OFFSETTING RACE PRIVILEGE |
11 Journal of Ethics & Social Philosophy 1 (January, 2017) |
ON SATURDAY, AUGUST 9, 2014, Michael Brown was shot - six times - and killed by Darren Wilson, a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri (see e.g., Buchanan et al. (2014)). Since that date, Ferguson has been the center of a movement in the United States against what amounts to modern racial separation. Brown was the fourth unarmed black man to... |
2017 |
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| Lisa Loo |
ON RACE, TOUGH TALKING, HARDER HEARING |
53-APR Arizona Attorney 6 (April, 2017) |
Race. National Origin. Ethnicity. Skin color. Black Lives. Religion. Women. LGBTQIA. Disabled. These are not fighting words, but sometimes just uttering these words--and others--can cause uneasiness. I hear from many people that we should have conversations on these issues. But why are we uncomfortable when conversations touch on these words?... |
2017 |
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On The Beat |
25 Police Department Disciplinary Bulletin 3 (July 1, 2017) |
A ballot measure to significantly change the way the Los Angeles Police Department handles serious officer misconduct has won easily, despite warnings from some community activists that it will result in more lenient treatment for problem officers. According to unofficial results, with 99.9% of precincts counted, Charter Amendment C passed with... |
2017 |
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| Cynthia H. Conti-Cook |
OPEN DATA POLICING |
106 Georgetown Law Journal Online 1 (2017) |
More than any other promised police reform, the public would benefit from the government adopting an open data philosophy towards police accountability data. Open data in the context of public policy is the philosophy that when the government provides people access to its process, decision-making, and data, a more effective ecosystem for... |
2017 |
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| Henry Ordower, J.S. Onésimo Sandoval, Kenneth Warren |
OUT OF FERGUSON: MISDEMEANORS, MUNICIPAL COURTS, TAX DISTRIBUTION, AND CONSTITUTIONAL LIMITATIONS |
61 Howard Law Journal 113 (Fall, 2017) |
ABSTRACT & KEYWORDS. 113 INTRODUCTION. 114 I. ST. LOUIS COUNTY POLICE AND COURTS. 120 II. FINES, FEES, AND IMPLICIT TAXES. 129 III. FINES AS TAXES: STATE CONSTITUTIONAL TAX LIMITATIONS. 136 IV. MUNICIPAL JUSTICE AND THE U.S. CONSTITUTION. 142 CONCLUSION. 143 |
2017 |
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| Professor Ann Freedman, moderator, RuWhite Starr, Fraidy Reiss, Lisalyn R. Jacobs, Esq. |
PANEL TWO: VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN: BEIJING+20 |
38 Women's Rights Law Reporter 236 (Spring/Summer, 2017) |
Okay folks, if you could have a seat. We are going to start our next panel. Our next panel is about violence. I'm pleased to introduce my colleague, Professor Ann Freedman, who will be moderating this panel. Hi folks. As with the other panels, I'm going to direct you to the biographies in the program to learn about our speakers. I also have the sad... |
2017 |
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| J.S. Nelson |
PAPER DRAGON THIEVES |
105 Georgetown Law Journal 871 (April, 2017) |
L1-2Introduction . L3872 a. the dangers of form-hardening. 873 b. how the corporate form is hardening. 877 I. The Paper Dragon of Corporate Animation. 882 a. distinctions from related analysis and academic literature. 882 b. the dragon's dance. 888 c. the law that should hold agents accountable. 896 II. Nomura and Patterns of Agent Misconduct. 901... |
2017 |
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| Daniel Breen |
PARSONS'S CHARGE: THE STRANGE ORIGINS OF STAND YOUR GROUND |
16 Connecticut Public Interest Law Journal 39 (Winter, 2017) |
In the last decade, over half of the states have passed so-called Stand Your Ground statutes, allowing for successful pleas of self-defense even when the defendant made no attempt to retreat from a non-lethal assault. Modern commentators have challenged these laws on the grounds that they are racist in application, that they only worsen the... |
2017 |
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| Scott Skinner-Thompson |
PERFORMATIVE PRIVACY |
50 U.C. Davis Law Review 1673 (April, 2017) |
Broadly speaking, privacy doctrine suggests that the right to privacy is non-existent once one enters the public realm. Although some scholars contend that privacy ought to exist in public, public privacy has been defended largely with reference to other, ancillary values privacy may serve. For instance, public privacy may be necessary to make... |
2017 |
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| Corinthia A. Carter |
POLICE BRUTALITY, THE LAW & TODAY'S SOCIAL JUSTICE MOVEMENT: HOW THE LACK OF POLICE ACCOUNTABILITY HAS FUELED #HASHTAG ACTIVISM |
20 CUNY Law Review 521 (Spring, 2017) |
C1-2Contents I. Introduction. 522 II. Contextual Perception of the Laws. 525 III. The Law. 528 A. 18 U.S.C. § 242. 528 B. 42 U.S.C. § 1983. 529 C. 42 U.S.C. § 14141. 530 D. Successes and Shortcomings of the Federal Provisions. 531 IV. Current State and Local Remedies. 537 A. Criminal Code. 537 B. Civilian (Complaint) Review Boards. 538 C.... |
2017 |
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POLICE IN AMERICA: ENSURING ACCOUNTABILITY AND MITIGATING RACIAL BIAS |
11 Northwestern Journal of Law & Social Policy 385 (Fall, 2017) |
KEYNOTE ADDRESS held at Northwestern Pritzker School of Law, Thorne Auditorium, 375 East Chicago Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, on the 13th day of November, A.D. 2015. KEYNOTE SPEAKER: MR. PAUL BUTLER, Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center (Washington, D.C.). PROFESSOR BEDI: Okay. Welcome back, everybody. We are going to get started with... |
2017 |
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| Monica C. Bell |
POLICE REFORM AND THE DISMANTLING OF LEGAL ESTRANGEMENT |
126 Yale Law Journal 2054 (May, 2017) |
In police reform circles, many scholars and policymakers diagnose the frayed relationship between police forces and the communities they serve as a problem of illegitimacy, or the idea that people lack confidence in the police and thus are unlikely to comply or cooperate with them. The core proposal emanating from this illegitimacy diagnosis is... |
2017 |
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| Stephen Rushin |
POLICE UNION CONTRACTS |
66 Duke Law Journal 1191 (March, 2017) |
This Article empirically demonstrates that police departments' internal disciplinary procedures, often established through the collective bargaining process, can serve as barriers to officer accountability. Policymakers have long relied on a handful of external legal mechanisms like the exclusionary rule, civil litigation, and criminal prosecution... |
2017 |
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| Catherine L. Fisk, L. Song Richardson |
POLICE UNIONS |
85 George Washington Law Review 712 (May, 2017) |
No issue has been more controversial in the discussion of police union responses to allegations of excessive force than statutory and contractual protections for officers accused of misconduct, as critics assail such protections and police unions defend them. For all the public controversy over police unions, there is relatively little legal... |
2017 |
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| Osagie K. Obasogie, Zachary Newman |
POLICE VIOLENCE, USE OF FORCE POLICIES, AND PUBLIC HEALTH |
43 American Journal of Law & Medicine 279 (2017) |
Racialized police violence is a recurring issue. Recent social movements have re-centered police violence as a subject of public discourse, yet there has been little progress in reducing the number of people killed by police. Without further efforts in research and legal reform, this everyday crisis will continue. Thus, material interventions... |
2017 |
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| Alberto R. Gonzales , Donald Q. Cochran |
POLICE-WORN BODY CAMERAS: AN ANTIDOTE TO THE "FERGUSON EFFECT"? |
82 Missouri Law Review 299 (Spring, 2017) |
You are a police officer working the night shift in a major U.S. city. In the dark hours of the early morning, you come across a group of young males in a part of the city known for criminal activity. When they see your patrol car, the young men stop what they are doing and look away quickly. All of your training, as well as the instincts that you... |
2017 |
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| Tracey Meares |
POLICING AND PROCEDURAL JUSTICE: SHAPING CITIZENS' IDENTITIES TO INCREASE DEMOCRATIC PARTICIPATION |
111 Northwestern University Law Review 1525 (2017) |
Abstract--Like the education system, the criminal justice system offers both formal, overt curricula--found in the Bill of Rights, and informal or hidden curricula--embodied in how people are treated in interactions with legal authorities in courtrooms and on the streets. The overt policing curriculum identifies police officers as peace... |
2017 |
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| Kali Murray |
POLICING IN PLACE: A COMMUNITY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY? |
26 Journal of Affordable Housing & Community Development Law 69 (2017) |
One way Black Lives Matter has built its critique as to the thicket of dispossession that has enmeshed the lives of African-Americans in the twenty-first century is to invoke a litany of places: Ferguson, West Baltimore, Sherman Park. This mournful litany has become a shorthand way to describe how communities and their residents are marginalized... |
2017 |
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| Andrew Guthrie Ferguson |
POLICING PREDICTIVE POLICING |
94 Washington University Law Review 1109 (2017) |
Predictive policing is sweeping the nation, promising the holy grail of policing--preventing crime before it happens. The technology has far outpaced any legal or political accountability and has largely escaped academic scrutiny. This article examines predictive policing's evolution with the goal of providing the first practical and theoretical... |
2017 |
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| Angela Onwuachi-Willig |
POLICING THE BOUNDARIES OF WHITENESS: THE TRAGEDY OF BEING "OUT OF PLACE" FROM EMMETT TILL TO TRAYVON MARTIN |
102 Iowa Law Review 1113 (March, 2017) |
ABSTRACT: This Article takes what many view as an extraordinary case about racial hatred from 1955, the Emmett Till murder and trial, and analyzes it against the Trayvon Martin killing and trial outcome in 2012 and 2013. Specifically, this Article exposes one important, but not yet explored similarity between the two cases: their shared role in... |
2017 |
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| Debo P. Adegbile |
POLICING THROUGH AN AMERICAN PRISM |
126 Yale Law Journal 2222 (May, 2017) |
Policing practices in America are under scrutiny. Video clips, protests, and media coverage bring attention and a sense of urgency to fatal police civilian incidents that are often accompanied by broader calls for reform. Tensions often run high after officer involved shootings of unarmed civilians, and minority communities, law enforcement, and... |
2017 |
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| Bennett Capers |
POLICING, TECHNOLOGY, AND DOCTRINAL ASSISTS |
69 Florida Law Review 723 (May, 2017) |
Sounding the alarm about technology, policing, and privacy has become an almost daily occurrence. We are told that the government's use of technology as a surveillance tool is an insidious assault on our freedom. That it is nearly impossible to live today without generating thousands of records about what we watch, read, buy and do--and the... |
2017 |
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| Felice Batlan |
POLITICS AND MYTHOLOGY IN THE EARLY WOMEN'S RIGHTS MOVEMENT |
52 Tulsa Law Review 405 (Spring, 2017) |
Lisa Tetrault, The Myth of Seneca Falls: Memory and The Women's Suffrage Movement, 1848-1898 (University of North Carolina Press 2014) Pp. 296. Hardcover $34.95. Paperback $27.95. I know now the personal heartbreak and pain of losing an election. I first drafted this review while the 2016 Democratic Convention played in the background. My first... |
2017 |
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