AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearKey Terms
Madeleine Sharp THE EROSION OF CIVIL RIGHTS REMEDIES: HOW ASHCROFT v. AL-KIDD ALTERED QUALIFIED IMMUNITY 10 DePaul Journal for Social Justice 1 (Summer, 2017) The United States justice system was designed to ensure that there is equal access under the law. Such a system is truly legitimate only if the government can be held accountable in court. In that vein, the Bivens cause of action was created to protect the people and to contain government overreach by allowing the public to sue under the... 2017  
Renee C. Hatcher THE EVERYDAY ECONOMIC VIOLENCE OF BLACK LIFE 25 Journal of Affordable Housing & Community Development Law 275 (2017) Ferguson's Fault Lines: The Race Quake That Rocked a Nation Kimberly Jade Norwood, Editor American Bar Association 276 pages, $24.95 There are two Fergusons. There are two Americas. We cannot change this reality unless we first acknowledge it. --Kimberly Jade Norwood The truth about the racism and brutality of the police has broken through the veil... 2017  
Beau C. Tremitiere THE FALLACY OF A COLORBLIND CONSENT SEARCH DOCTRINE 112 Northwestern University Law Review 527 (2017) Abstract--Most searches conducted by police officers are consensual and thus beyond the reach of the Fourth Amendment. However, such searches violate the Fourth Amendment when, under the totality of circumstances, consent appears to be a product of coercion--that is, when the consent was involuntary. In 1980, in Mendenhall v. United States, the... 2017  
Diane M. Zhang THE FIGHT FOR A BETTER AMERICA 53-OCT Trial 26 (October, 2017) Attorney Benjamin Crump was nine years old when he attended a new, integrated school in Lumberton, N.C. It was there that he first noticed the inequality between his community and the white community in the area--and vowed to do something about it. Today, Crump is a civil rights attorney who has represented the families of Trayvon Martin, Michael... 2017  
Kermit V. Lipez THE FIRST AMENDMENT AND THE POLICE IN THE DIGITAL AGE 69 Maine Law Review 215 (2017) I. Introduction II. Background A. The Boston Common B. Simon Glik C. The Incident III. Glick in Court A. Proceedings Below B. At the First Circuit 1. Qualified Immunity 2. The Constitutional Question 3. Clearly Established Law IV. Reaction to Glick A. Media Response B. Police Response 1. Increased Public Recording Capacity: Cell Phone Cameras 2.... 2017  
Mary-Rose Papandrea THE FREE SPEECH RIGHTS OF UNIVERSITY STUDENTS 101 Minnesota Law Review 1801 (May, 2017) In March 2014, University of Oklahoma President David Boren reacted swiftly when a video surfaced online revealing members of the SAE fraternity singing a racist song on a bus. Two young men leading the singing were immediately expelled. Boren explained in a letter to the students that they had been expelled due to their leadership role in leading... 2017  
Guido Calabresi THE FUTURE OF LAW AND ECONOMICS: COMMENTS AND REFLECTIONS 16 Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies 167 (December, 2017) I am grateful to each of the commentators who have not only pushed the quest further but have also helped me to understand my own book better. Let me begin by explaining what I believe this book is about at its most general level; then, in the light of that, make some brief remarks about each of the papers here presented; and finally mention some... 2017  
Garry A. Gabison THE GRAY PROBLEM: SHOULD ATHLETES BE PUNISHED FOR THEIR SOCIAL MEDIA POSTS? 13 DePaul Journal of Sports Law 31 (Spring, 2017) This article discusses athletes' use of social media and how their parent organizations have dealt with their social media activities. This article argues that sports associations may not need to regulate athletes' use of social media. Athletes have their own private incentives: they want to maximize their financial gains and career opportunities... 2017  
John D. Bessler THE INEQUALITY OF AMERICA'S DEATH PENALTY: A CROSSROADS FOR CAPITAL PUNISHMENT AT THE INTERSECTION OF THE EIGHTH AND FOURTEENTH AMENDMENTS 73 Washington and Lee Law Review Online 487 (January 2, 2017) C1-3Table of Contents I. Introduction. 487 II. The Legacy of Slavery and Discrimination: Race, Gender and Class in Early America. 502 III. From Black Codes to Civil Rights and Constitutional Protection. 515 IV. The Geography of Arbitrariness and Discrimination: The Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment Implications of the Death Penalty's Inequality. 542... 2017  
Shiri Krebs THE LEGALIZATION OF TRUTH IN INTERNATIONAL FACT-FINDING 18 Chicago Journal of International Law 83 (Summer, 2017) Do legal judgments influence people's attitudes and beliefs concerning contested events? This Article builds on studies from three disciplines--law, psychology, and political science--and employs experimental methods to shed light on the impact of legal institutions on their intended audiences. The Article identifies a rising legalization of... 2017  
Risa E. Kaufman, JoAnn Kamuf Ward THE LOCAL TURN IN U.S. HUMAN RIGHTS: INTRODUCTION TO THE SPECIAL SYMPOSIUM ISSUE 49 Columbia Human Rights Law Review 1 (Fall, 2017) Human rights in the United States are at an inflection point, and the orientation is local. In the wake of the 2016 presidential election and renewed threats to human rights and democratic institutions, state and local officials and human rights advocates are working locally to resist harmful federal policies and to fill the gaps in federal civil... 2017  
Stacy L. Hawkins THE LONG ARC OF DIVERSITY BENDS TOWARDS EQUALITY: DECONSTRUCTING THE PROGRESSIVE CRITIQUE OF WORKPLACE DIVERSITY EFFORTS 17 University of Maryland Law Journal of Race, Religion, Gender and Class 61 (Spring, 2017) Workplace diversity efforts have many critics. More notable perhaps than the attack from the right in the form of legal challenges alleging workplace diversity efforts amount to reverse discrimination is the normative critique of workplace diversity efforts from the left. Progressive responses to workplace diversity efforts range from cautious... 2017  
Valerie E. Anias THE MILLENNIAL ATTORNEY 50-JUN Maryland Bar Journal 22 (May/June, 2017) Millennials, also known as Generation Y, are the largest--and an often-misunderstood--generation. A millennial will have used a laptop throughout law school, maintained an email address likely since middle school, seen and entered Facebook near its onset, and had a cell phone glued to her hip for most of her life. Unlike most, a millennial will... 2017  
William S. Laufer THE MISSING ACCOUNT OF PROGRESSIVE CORPORATE CRIMINAL LAW 14 NYU Journal of Law & Business 71 (Fall, 2017) This Article offers a modern, progressive account of corporate criminal law using foundational principles of twentieth century progressivism. The central role of science and advancing technology define the architecture of this account. Some of the intractable challenges of using the criminal law to regulate corporations are reviewed, followed by a... 2017  
Suzette M. Malveaux THE MODERN CLASS ACTION RULE: ITS CIVIL RIGHTS ROOTS AND RELEVANCE TODAY 66 University of Kansas Law Review 325 (December, 2017) It is a golden anniversary. The modern class action rule recently turned fifty years old. However, the occasion is marred by troubled times. Hate crimes, violence and discrimination on the basis of race, religion, gender, immigration status, sexual orientation and more are on the rise. Prejudice that lay dormant has recently erupted, unleashing... 2017  
Carrie L. Rosenbaum THE NATURAL PERSISTENCE OF RACIAL DISPARITIES IN CRIME-BASED REMOVALS 13 University of Saint Thomas Law Journal 532 (Fall, 2017) This Article suggests that the replacement of Secure Communities with the Priority Enforcement Program (PEP) did not, and would not have ameliorated the problem of disparate criminal immigration deportation of Latina/o noncitizens. It explores the implications of de-coupling criminal and immigration enforcement and gives theoretical consideration... 2017  
Marion Crain, Kenneth Matheny THE 'NEW' LABOR REGIME 126 Yale Law Journal Forum 478 (April 19, 2017) In The New Labor Law, Professor Kate Andrias describes a labor regime founded upon politicized social bargaining emerging from the wreckage of the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA). This regime rejects (for the most part) the NLRA's employer-employee dyad model of private ordering through worksite-based representation and collective bargaining,... 2017  
Mari Matsuda The Next Dada Utopian Visioning Peace Orchestra: Constitutional Theory and the Aspirational 62 McGill Law Journal 1203 (June, 2017) I. I Made An Orchestra 1204 II. There Are Two Kinds of People 1205 A. The Personal is the Political 1206 B. The Tool in Your Hand 1209 III. Art and Constitutional Theory: Who Is This Constitution For? 1210 IV. The Imperative of Big Change 1215 V. The Utopian Constitution 1217 VI. Art as a Right 1230 VII. Problematizing Art as a Right 1 239 VIII.... 2017  
  THE NUREMBERG SYMPOSIUM AN INTERNATIONAL LEGAL SYMPOSIUM ON THE NUREMBERG LAWS & THE NUREMBERG TRIALS 39 Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative Law Review 319 (Winter, 2017) Professor Elie Wiesel, Nobel Laureate and esteemed survivor of the Holocaust, served as Honorary Chairman for The Nuremberg Symposium. His recent passing has left an irreplaceable void. His vision, wisdom, and voice were indeed the moral compass of the world. May his memory serve as a blessing. Welcome, Introductions and Overview. 324 Professor... 2017  
Bryan L. Sykes, University of California-Irvine THE POLITICAL ROOTS OF RACIAL TRACKING IN AMERICAN CRIMINAL JUSTICE. BY NINA M. MOORE. NEW YORK: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS, 2015. 406 PP. $30.99 PAPERBACK 51 Law and Society Review 211 (March, 2017) In April 2016, Black Lives Matter (BLM) protesters clashed with Bill Clinton over his role in the passage of the 1994 Crime Bill and Hillary Clinton's use of the term super predators to describe the involvement of black youth in criminal offenses. Demonstrators sought to highlight how policymakers and the general public construct narratives and... 2017  
Gabriel J. Chin THE PROBLEMATIC PROSECUTION OF AN ASIAN AMERICAN POLICE OFFICER: NOTES FROM A PARTICIPANT IN PEOPLE v. PETER LIANG 51 Georgia Law Review 1023 (Summer, 2017) C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 1024 II. Liability for Manslaughter or Negligent Homicide. 1029 III. Being Careful What We Wish For. 1036 A. PUBLIC NOTORIETY AND PRESSURE. 1037 B. REVERSING THE ROLES. 1039 C. JURY DEFERENCE, JURY PREJUDICE. 1041 D. HARMLESS ERROR. 1041 E. OBSCURING REAL CAUSES. 1043 2017  
Michael Kagan THE PUBLIC DEFENDER'S PIN: UNTANGLING FREE SPEECH REGULATION IN THE COURTROOM 111 Northwestern University Law Review Online 125 (March 6, 2017) On a Tuesday morning in September 2016, Erika Ballou, a deputy public defender in Clark County, Nevada, appeared with her client for a sentencing hearing in a Las Vegas courtroom. She wore a black pin on her lapel. Black Lives Matter, it said. District Court Judge Douglas Herndon told her to either take it off or hand her case over to another... 2017  
Tamar R. Birckhead THE RACIALIZATION OF JUVENILE JUSTICE AND THE ROLE OF THE DEFENSE ATTORNEY 58 Boston College Law Review 379 (March, 2017) Introduction. 381 I. The Persistence of Racial Bias Within Juvenile Justice. 394 A. Wayward Youths of the Nineteenth Century. 395 1. Evolution of the Concept of Race. 395 2. Disparate Treatment Based on Race. 398 B. Mid-Century Lads of Tender Years. 401 1. Delinquency as Contagion. 401 2. The Expansion of Children's Rights. 405 C. 1990s... 2017  
Anupam Chander THE RACIST ALGORITHM? 115 Michigan Law Review 1023 (April, 2017) The Black Box Society: The Secret Algorithms That Control Money and Information. By Frank Pasquale. Cambridge and London: Harvard University Press. 2015. P. 218, $35. A pie chart satirizing Google's research and development expenditures imagines a largely tripartite division: omniscience, omnipresence, and omnipotence. Uber offers its staff what it... 2017  
Penney P. Azizi THE REPRODUCIBILITY OF EVOLVING SOCIAL SCIENCE EVIDENCE AND HOW IT SHAPES EQUAL PROTECTION JURISPRUDENCE 44 Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly 433 (Summer, 2017) In Korematsu v. United States, the United States Supreme Court held that strict scrutiny would apply to cases regarding statutes that create classifications based on race. This means that the burden of proof is on the government to show that the challenged statute, law, or classification is narrowly tailored to serve a compelling state interest.... 2017  
Stephen B. Bright THE RICHARD J. CHILDRESS MEMORIAL LECTURE 2016 KEYNOTE: THE CONTINUING DENIAL OF COUNSEL AND ASSEMBLY-LINE PROCESSING OF POOR PEOPLE ACCUSED OF CRIMES 61 Saint Louis University Law Journal 605 (Summer, 2017) My address today concerns the problem of poverty in our court system. There are many poor people with urgent, unmet legal needs who lack access to the courts and have no ability to even confer with a lawyer about their legal problems. I am going to discuss people in the criminal courts, but it is important to mention the people with civil legal... 2017  
Michael M. Oswalt THE RIGHT TO IMPROVISE IN LOW-WAGE WORK 38 Cardozo Law Review 959 (February, 2017) The resurgence of strikes in the non-union fast food and retail sectors has created unprecedented momentum for increases in state, local, and company-specific minimum wages. The once fantastical demand for a $15 an hour wage floor has been legislated into life in two states, four major cities, and counting. Early work, drawing from organizational... 2017  
Deborah L. Brake THE SHIFTING SANDS OF EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION: FROM UNJUSTIFIED IMPACT TO DISPARATE TREATMENT IN PREGNANCY AND PAY 105 Georgetown Law Journal 559 (March, 2017) C1-3Table of Contents L1-2Introduction . L3560 I. A Brief Overview of Employment Discrimination Law: The Tyranny of the Proof Frameworks and the Judiciary's Narrow View of Discriminatory Intent. 563 A. TRACING THE IMPACT AND TREATMENT DIVIDE AND THEIR SEPARATE PROOF FRAMEWORKS. 564 B. THE MEANING OF DISCRIMINATORY INTENT: WHAT COURTS HAVE IN MIND.... 2017  
Steven W. Bender THE TEACHINGS OF POPE FRANCIS SYMPOSIUM: TOWARD A COMMON GOOD FOR OUR COMMON HOME 40 Seattle University Law Review 1167 (Summer, 2017) C1-2Contents Introduction 1168 I. Making Our Common Home Great Again 1169 II. The Moral Voice of Pope Francis as a Catalyst for Cultural Change 1172 III. The Church as a Catalyst for Legal Change Toward Social Justice 1174 A. Leadership from the Top, Looking to the Bottom, and Connected to Other Voices 1174 B. Local Church Officials Must Supply... 2017  
Michael Diamond THE TRANSPOSITION OF POWER: LAW, LAWYERS, AND SOCIAL MOVEMENTS 24 Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy 319 (Spring, 2017) Various groups of people have been the victims of oppression throughout time and across national borders and cultures. Many forms of oppression continue to exist all over the world today, including in the United States. I have been particularly concerned with oppression on the basis of race. The responses to oppression have taken many forms,... 2017  
Professor Steven H. Hobbs THE TRIBES OF MAYCOMB COUNTY: THE CONTINUING QUEST TO TRANSCEND OUR DIFFERENCES 47 Cumberland Law Review 61 (2016-2017) We are a tribal people, we Americans, in spite of our national motto: E pluribus unum. We are subdivided by race, class, culture, religion, education, physical and mental health, and so much more. While multiculturalism is said to be enriching and empowering to our communal life, our celebration of diversity seldom permits us to totally look beyond... 2017  
Michelle S. Jacobs THE VIOLENT STATE: BLACK WOMEN'S INVISIBLE STRUGGLE AGAINST POLICE VIOLENCE 24 William and Mary Journal of Women and the Law 39 (Fall, 2017) Introduction I. The Historical View A. Stereotypes About Black Women 1. Black Women as Governed by Libido and Loose Morals 2. Black Women as Liars 3. Black Women as Man-Like and Aggressive II. Black Women Are Murdered and Assaulted by the Police A. Invisible Homicides Committed by the Police 1. Black Women with Mental Health Issues Are... 2017  
Scott L. Cummings THEMATIC OVERVIEW: COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT LAW AND ECONOMIC JUSTICE--WHY LAW MATTERS 26 Journal of Affordable Housing & Community Development Law 35 (2017) Thank you for the privilege of reading and commenting on these fascinating papers on community economic development (CED). I personally came away from them thinking that CED law is now less a body of activity or doctrine that can be empirically defined or normatively derived, and more a set of basic questions about the content and control of local... 2017  
Lundy Braun THEORIZING RACE AND RACISM: PRELIMINARY REFLECTIONS ON THE MEDICAL CURRICULUM 43 American Journal of Law & Medicine 239 (2017) The current political economic crisis in the United States places in sharp relief the tensions and contradictions of racial capitalism as it manifests materially in health care and in knowledge-producing practices. Despite nearly two decades of investment in research on racial inequality in disease, inequality persists. While the reasons for... 2017  
Dr. Franciska A. Coleman THEY SHOULD BE FIRED: THE SOCIAL REGULATION OF FREE SPEECH IN THE U.S. 16 First Amendment Law Review 1 (Fall, 2017) The debate over First Amendment jurisprudence often assumes that the First Amendment reflects a choice of non-regulation over regulation. This article suggests, however, that it is more accurate to describe the First Amendment as reflecting a choice of social regulation over legal regulation. Social regulation of speech has generally been lauded... 2017  
Rob Kahn THREE FIRST AMENDMENT PUZZLES RAISED BY THE POLICE UNION RESPONSE TO SPEECH CRITICIZING POLICE CONDUCT IN FERGUSON AND NEW YORK CITY 8 Alabama Civil Rights & Civil Liberties Law Review 163 (2017) I. Introduction: Police Unions, Protests Against Police Shootings and Freedom of Speech. 164 A. Football Players, a Big City Mayor, and a Police Union Crackdown. 166 B. American First Amendment Values and Bollinger's Tolerant Society Model. 171 C. Three Puzzles Raised by the Police Union Response. 174 II. Should Police Unions Ever Take Part in... 2017  
Ronen Avraham , Kimberly Yuracko TORTS AND DISCRIMINATION 78 Ohio State Law Journal 661 (2017) Current tort law contains incentives to target individuals and communities based on race and gender. Surprisingly, the basis for such targeting is the seemingly neutral use of three different race- and gender-based statistical tables (for wages, life expectancy, and worklife expectancy) which, when used in tort damage calculations, result in a... 2017  
Justin D. Cummins , Beth Belle Isle TOWARD SYSTEMIC EQUALITY: REINVIGORATING A PROGRESSIVE APPLICATION OF THE DISPARATE IMPACT DOCTRINE 43 Mitchell Hamline Law Review 102 (2017) I. Introduction. 103 II. The Expansion of Civil Rights Enforcement Through the Adoption of the Disparate Impact Doctrine (1960s-1970s). 104 A. The Enactment of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. 104 B. The Affirmation of the Disparate Impact Doctrine Under Title VII: Griggs v. Duke Power Co.. 107 C. A Progressive Application of the... 2017  
MaKenna Rogers , Brittany Wages TRADEMARKING SOCIAL MOVEMENTS MATTER 17 Wake Forest Journal of Business and Intellectual Property Law 372 (Spring, 2017) I. Introduction. 373 A. Past Attempts Foreshadow Today's Problems. 375 B. Movements' Relation to Trademark Law. 379 II. ACQUISITION OF RIGHTS PERSPECTIVE. 380 A. Rules Regarding Collective Groups. 381 1. Native American Tribes. 382 2. Franchisor and Franchisee Relationships. 383 3. Church Organizations. 385 4. Greek Life. 387 B. Suggested... 2017  
Deborah R. Gerhardt TRADEMARKS AS ENTREPRENEURIAL CHANGE AGENTS FOR LEGAL REFORM 95 North Carolina Law Review 1519 (June, 2017) L1-2Introduction . L31519 I. Both Governments and Brands Create Communities Around Core Values. 1524 II. Navigating The Choice To Link A Trademark With politics. 1531 A. Risks Inherent to Political Engagement. 1532 B. Political Hijacking. 1535 III. Affirming brand Values Through Political and Cultural Engagement. 1541 A. Cultural Leadership. 1542... 2017  
Marco Conner TRAFFIC JUSTICE: ACHIEVING EFFECTIVE AND EQUITABLE TRAFFIC ENFORCEMENT IN THE AGE OF VISION ZERO 44 Fordham Urban Law Journal 969 (August, 2017) No goal is more ambitious than zero [traffic fatalities], but at the same time no other goal is acceptable. --New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 970 I. The U.S. Pandemic of Traffic Violence. 973 II. Vision Zero: A New Approach to Address the Pandemic. 975 A. What Is Vision Zero?. 976 B. Equity in Vision Zero.... 2017  
Maureen Johnson TRICKLE-DOWN BULLYING AND THE TRULY GREAT AMERICAN RESPONSE: CAN RESPONSIBLE RHETORIC IN JUDICIAL ADVOCACY AND DECISION-MAKING HELP HEAL THE DIVISIVENESS OF THE TRUMP PRESIDENCY? 25 American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy and the Law 445 (2017) I. Introduction. 446 II. The Impact of an American President. 453 A. Trickle-Down Bullying: What's Good for the Goose is Good for the Goslings. 455 B. System One Thinking: How and Why Deeply Ingrained Values and Beliefs Are so Difficult to Shake. 460 C. A Unique Opportunity: Could President Trump Set an Example that Would Guide His Supporters to... 2017  
Rebecca Savransky Trump promotes book by Sheriff David Clarke 2017 The Hill 3671530 (August 27, 2017) President Trump on Sunday promoted a book by Milwaukee County Sheriff David Clarke, who supported Trump during the presidential campaign. 2017  
Eloise Pasachoff TWO CHEERS FOR EVIDENCE: LAW, RESEARCH, AND VALUES IN EDUCATION POLICYMAKING AND BEYOND 117 Columbia Law Review 1933 (November, 2017) The newest federal education law, the Every Student Succeeds Act of 2015 (ESSA), reflects a recent turn toward basing social policy on research evidence. Proponents suggest that evidence-based policymaking in education and other social policy areas can help cut through ideological debate and provide meaningful limits on the choices made by the... 2017  
Brian Glick TWO, THREE, MANY ROSAS! REBELLIOUS LAWYERS AND PROGRESSIVE ACTIVIST ORGANIZATIONS 23 Clinical Law Review 611 (Spring, 2017) The cast of prototypic rebellious lawyers promoted by Gerald López is incomplete. It leaves out a very important mode of lawyering: that of working for a progressive activist organization. To fill that gap, this essay introduces Rosa, a lawyer on the staff of an organization of low-wage workers fighting for basic change. The essay argues that... 2017  
Jeffrey Fagan , Daniel Richman UNDERSTANDING RECENT SPIKES AND LONGER TRENDS IN AMERICAN MURDERS 117 Columbia Law Review 1235 (June, 2017) Introduction. 1235 I. Exploring the Tension Between Police and Communities. 1236 A. Factors Producing Tension Between Communities and Police. 1238 B. A Vortex of Forces. 1248 II. Understanding the Trends. 1250 A. The Past Two Years. 1252 B. The Past Half Century. 1261 C. A New Epidemic?. 1267 D. Alternate Explanations for the 2015-2016 Trend. 1270... 2017  
Darren Lenard Hutchinson UNDIGNIFIED: THE SUPREME COURT, RACIAL JUSTICE, AND DIGNITY CLAIMS 69 Florida Law Review 1 (January, 2017) The Supreme Court has interpreted the Equal Protection Clause as a formal equality mandate. In response, legal scholars have advocated alternative conceptions of equality, such as antisubordination theory, that interpret equal protection in more substantive terms. Antisubordination theory would consider the social context in which race-based... 2017  
  UNIVERSITIES AND OTHER INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER LEARNING 46 Journal of Law and Education 400 (Summer, 2017) Ethan J. Leib and Stephen R. Galoob, Fiduciary political theory: a critique, 125 Yale L.J. 1820-1878 (2016). James G. Mandilk, Note, The modification of decrees in the original jurisdiction of the Supreme Court, 125 Yale L.J. 1880-1938 (2016). Symposium: A Conversation on Title IX, 125 Yale L.J. 1940-2181 (2016). Michelle J. Anderson, Campus sexual... 2017  
John Inazu UNLAWFUL ASSEMBLY AS SOCIAL CONTROL 64 UCLA Law Review 2 (January, 2017) Public protests from Occupy to Ferguson have highlighted anew the offense of unlawful assembly. This Article advances the simple but important thesis that contemporary understandings of unlawful assembly cede too much discretion to law enforcement by neglecting earlier statutory and common law elements that once constrained liability. Current laws... 2017  
Hannah Walker UNSPOKEN IMMUNITY AND REIMAGINED JUSTICE: THE POTENTIAL FOR IMPLEMENTING RESTORATIVE JUSTICE AND COMMUNITY JUSTICE MODELS IN POLICE-RELATED SHOOTINGS 37 Pace Law Review 789 (Spring, 2017) On July 6, 2016, Philando Castile was shot to death during a routine traffic stop outside of Falcon Heights, Minnesota. As Officer Jeronimo Yanez approached Castile's vehicle, Castile's girlfriend began to live stream the encounter on her smart phone. The graphic footage that followed demonstrates the brutal reality Castile faced as a black man... 2017  
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