AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearType
John D. Feerick COVID-19'S IMPACT ON BEST PRACTICES IN ARBITRATION AND MEDIATION 39 Alternatives to the High Cost of Litigation 105 (July/August, 2021) The Covid-19 pandemic has been referred to as a liminal point in time--the in-between. It is a good time to pause and evaluate where we are as individuals and as an ADR profession. During this time, many turn to reflecting on what was and what will or should be. There are at least three categories of challenges that have been magnified by the... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  CTTI ISSUES COVID-19 CLINICAL TRIAL PLAYBOOK 28 Guide to Good Clinical Practice Newsletter 24 (May, 2021) The Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative (CTTI) released a new playbook Feb. 4 outlining eight essential elements for high-quality, diverse COVID-19 trials. While these best practices are specific to COVID-19 trials, CTTI recommends that these principles should be used for all clinical trials, in line with CTTI Quality by Design... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  CTTI ISSUES COVID-19 CLINICAL TRIAL PLAYBOOK 28 No. 2 Guide to Good Clinical Practice Newsl. 24, Guide to Good Clinical Practice Newsletter (May, 2021); (Publication Name: Guide to Good Clinical Practice Newsletter) (May, 2021) The Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative (CTTI) released a new playbook Feb. 4 outlining eight essential elements for high-quality, diverse COVID-19 trials. While these best practices are specific to COVID-19 trials, CTTI recommends that these principles should be used for all clinical trials, in line with CTTI Quality by Design... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Joseph Choi Democrats call on CDC to release demographic breakdowns for long-term COVID-19 patients The Hill (January 25, 2022) Democratic Reps. Ayanna Pressley (Mass.) and Don Beyer (Va.) on Tuesday called on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to release data on long COVID-19 broken down by demographic. 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Rafael Bernal and Alex Gangitano Democrats worry their grip on Hispanic vote is loosening The Hill (December 13, 2021) Democrats are worried they could be losing their electoral grip on Hispanics, the country's second-largest voter bloc by ethnicity. A Wall Street Journal poll released last week showed Hispanic voters evenly split between Democrats and Republicans, and while that polls data faced substantive questions over its tiny sample size, its results sounded... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Bijal Shah DEPLOYING THE INTERNAL SEPARATION OF POWERS AGAINST RACIAL TYRANNY 116 Northwestern University Law Review Online 244 (October 29, 2021) The separation of powers in the federal government exists to ensure a lack of tyranny in the United States. This Essay grounds the separation of powers in tyranny perpetuated by racialized hierarchy, violence, and injustice. Recognizing the primacy of racial tyranny also reveals a would-be tyrant: the President. Engaging the branches of... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Catherine Siyue Chen, Fernando P. Cosio, Deja Ostrowski, Dina Shek DEVELOPING A PEDAGOGY OF COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIP AMIDST COVID-19: MEDICAL-LEGAL PARTNERSHIP FOR CHILDREN IN HAWAI'I 28 Clinical Law Review 107 (Fall, 2021) The Medical-Legal Partnership for Children in Hawai'i (MLPC) has partnered with low-income families in community health and public housing settings for over a decade to provide direct legal services and engage in systemic advocacy. The MLPC model of legal services is rooted in our pedagogy of community partnership that seeks to confront the... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  Dhs Statement on Equal Access to Covid-19 Vaccines Interpreter Releases Daily 4 02-03-21 (2/3/2021) (2/3/2021) On February 1, 2021, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) released a statement regarding providing equal access to COVID-19 vaccines and vaccine distribution sites for undocumented immigrants: DHS and its Federal government partners fully support equal access to the COVID-19 vaccines and vaccine distribution sites for undocumented immigrants.... 2021 Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources
Nicholas Loh DIASPORIC DREAMS: LAW, WHITENESS, AND THE ASIAN AMERICAN IDENTITY 48 Fordham Urban Law Journal 1331 (October, 2021) Introduction. 1331 I. Historical Artifacts--Anti-Asian Animus. 1335 A. Exclusion and Litigating Whiteness. 1335 B. Alien Land Laws and Internment. 1341 II. Assimilation, Covering, and Honorary Whiteness. 1345 A. Assimilation and the Model Minority Myth. 1346 B. Covering. 1348 C. The Choice for a New Generation of Assimilated Asian Americans. 1351... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
George M. Powers , Lex Frieden , Vinh Nguyen DISABILITY, ACCESS, AND OTHER CONSIDERATIONS: A TITLE II FRAMEWORK FOR A PANDEMIC CRISIS RESPONSE (COVID-19) 14 Saint Louis University Journal of Health Law & Policy 345 (2021) This Article examines how plans for emergency medical rationing during the COVID-19 pandemic may discriminate against those with disabilities. More specifically, this Article lays out the obligation of state and local governments under Title II of the ADA in creating and enforcing equitable and fair rationing plans during this COVID-19 crisis. For... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Matiangai Sirleaf DISPOSABLE LIVES: COVID-19, VACCINES, AND THE UPRISING 121 Columbia Law Review Forum 71 (June 1, 2021) If I can be provocative, shouldn't this study be done in Africa, where there are no masks, no treatment, no intensive care, a bit like some studies on AIDS or among prostitutes. We try things, because we know they . are highly exposed and they don't protect themselves. What do you think about that? --Jean-Paul Mira, Head of the Intensive Care... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Melissa Ballengee Alexander DISTRIBUTIVE JUSTICE AND RACIAL HEALTH EQUITY: WHAT COVID-19 TEACHES ABOUT MEDICARE'S BLANKET PRIORITY FOR AMERICANS OF ADVANCED AGE 51 University of Memphis Law Review 823 (Summer, 2021) I. Introduction. 824 II. The United States Rations Health Care Based on Ability to Pay While Providing Special Assistance to Individuals of Advanced Age. 828 A. A Third of Americans Lack Access to Needed, Beneficial Care Because They Cannot Afford to Pay. 828 B. The Government Funds Care for Individuals of Advanced Age Regardless of Wealth, While... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
By Victoria Moran, J.D., M.H.A. DRUGS AND BIOLOGICS-FDA GUIDANCE NOTICES: FDA ISSUES GUIDANCE ON PHASE 2 AND 3 CLINICAL TRIALS FOR DRUGS TO TREAT OR PREVENT COVID-19 Wolters Kluwer Health Law Daily (May 13, 2021) The FDA's revised guidance addresses COVID-19 developments, such as the emergence of SARS-CoV-2 variants and the availability of vaccines. It also details recommendations for trials, including patient population, trial design, efficacy endpoints, safety considerations, and statistical considerations. On May 12, 2021, the FDA announced the... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  EEOC Condemns Violence Against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in the United States 38 No. 9 Emp. Alert NL 4, Employment Alert (4/28/2021); (Publication Name: Employment Alert) (4/28/2021) 9.4 The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission recently announced it has unanimously approved a resolution condemning the recent violence, harassment, and acts of bias against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in the United States. The resolution (provided below) reaffirms the Commissions commitment to combat all forms of harassment and... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  EEOC EXAMINES CONNECTIONS BETWEEN COVID-19 AND CIVIL RIGHTS No Citation Available (4/30/2021) (4/28/2021)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
  EEOC Examines Connections Between COVID-19 And Civil Rights 38 Employment Alert 3 (June 10, 2021) 12.3 In April, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) explored the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on civil rights in the workplace at its first all-virtual Commission hearing. Excerpts are provided below. Todays testimony makes clear that, while the pandemic continues to have serious impacts on public health and our economy, it... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  EEOC HOSTS "CIVILITY FOR ALL: NAVIGATING THE IMPACT OF COVID-19 ON THE ASIAN AMERICAN COMMUNITY' (May 12, 2021)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
  EEOC HOSTS FREE EVENT HIGHLIGHTING THE IMPACT OF COVID-19 ON THE ASIAN AMERICAN COMMUNITY (May 17, 2021)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
By Pamela Wolf, J.D. EEOC NEWS-COVID-19 Q&AS UPDATED WITH NEW SECTION ON RETALIATION Wolters Kluwer Employment Law Daily (November 17, 2021) The update also supports the EEOC's participation in an interagency initiative launched the same day in a push to end retaliation against workers who exercise their protected labor and employment law rights. On November 17, 2021, the EEOC again updated its question-and-answer (Q&A) technical assistance on COVID-19-related employment issues, this... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Pamela Wolf, J.D. EEOC NEWS-EXPERTS SHARE INSIGHTS ON INTERSECTION BETWEEN COVID-19 PANDEMIC AND CIVIL RIGHTS ISSUES No Citation Available, Wolters Kluwer Employment Law Daily (4/29/2021); (Publication Name: Wolters Kluwer Employment Law Daily) (4/29/2021) One panelist pressed for Commission guidance on workplace vaccination policies. At a hearing on April 28, 2021, the EEOC heard from a dozen invited experts on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on civil rights in the workplace. It was the Commission's first all-virtual hearing. The panelists represented a very broad group of stakeholders,... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  EL SUPER GROCERY STORES CITED MORE THAN $1.1 MILLION FOR COVID-19 SUPPLEMENTAL PAID SICK LEAVE VIOLATIONS - CALIFORNIA - AGENCY NEWS Labor & Employment Law 5067608 (2021) The California Labor Commissioner's Office has cited Bodega Latina dba El Super grocery stores in Southern California $1,164,500 for failing to provide or delaying supplemental paid sick leave or other benefits to 240 workers at 38 locations affected by COVID-19. An investigation found that some workers were forced to work while sick, others were... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Kate Holcombe ENSURING NON-DISCRIMINATION IN THE CONTEXT OF COVID-19 TRIAGE PROTOCOLS 36 American University International Law Review 1053 (2021) First, I want to express how very honored I am to be here today and to express my sincere thanks to the Conference Organizers and Sponsors, Members of the International Law Commission and fellow panelists here today. As other panelists have expressed, international law has a critical role to play in adopting and facilitating the implementation of... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Rebecca Bratspies, Vanessa Casado Perez, Robin Kundis Craig, Lissa Griffin, Keith Hirokawa, Sarah Krakoff, Katrina Kuh, Jessica Owley, Melissa Powers, Shannon Roesler, Jonathan Rosenbloom, J.B. Ruhl, Erin Ryan, David Takacs ENVIRONMENTAL LAW, DISRUPTED BY COVID-19 51 Environmental Law Reporter (ELI) 10509 (June, 2021) For over a year, the COVID-19 pandemic and concerns about systemic racial injustice have highlighted the conflicts and opportunities currently faced by environmental law. Scientists uniformly predict that environmental degradation, notably climate change, will cause a rise in diseases, disproportionate suffering among communities already facing... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Michael Karanicolas EVEN IN A PANDEMIC, SUNLIGHT IS THE BEST DISINFECTANT: COVID-19 AND GLOBAL FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION 22 Oregon Review of International Law 1 (2021) I. Misinformation Laws and Human Rights. 2 II. From a Public Health Crisis to a Human Rights Crisis. 6 III. Protecting Speech in Times of Crisis. 10 IV. Assessing Global Responses. 12 V. Finding Solutions. 14 A. Narrowing and Clarifying the Prohibitions. 14 B. Positive Solutions. 16 Conclusion. 20 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  EXECUTIVE ORDER ON ADVANCING EQUITY, JUSTICE, AND OPPORTUNITY FOR ASIAN AMERICANS, NATIVE HAWAIIANS, AND PACIFIC ISLANDERS (May 28, 2021)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
  Executive Order on Organizing and Mobilizing the United States Government to Provide a Unified and Effective Response to Combat Covid-19 and to Provide United States Leadership on Global Health and Security White House (1/20/2021) Search Snippet: ...GOVERNMENT TO PROVIDE A UNIFIED AND EFFECTIVE RESPONSE TO COMBAT COVID- 19 AND TO PROVIDE UNITED STATES LEADERSHIP ON GLOBAL HEALTH AND... 2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
  Executive Order on Organizing and Mobilizing the United States Government to Provide a Unified and Effective Response to Combat Covid-19 and to Provide United States Leadership on Global Health and Security (1/20/2021) (White House) (1/20/2021)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
  EXECUTIVE ORDER ON THE WHITE HOUSE INITIATIVE ON ADVANCING EDUCATIONAL EQUITY, EXCELLENCE, AND ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY FOR NATIVE AMERICANS AND STRENGTHENING TRIBAL COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES (October 11, 2021)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
  EXECUTIVE ORDER ON WHITE HOUSE INITIATIVE ON ADVANCING EDUCATIONAL EQUITY, EXCELLENCE, AND ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY FOR HISPANICS (September 13, 2021)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
Nia Johnson, MBE, JD EXPANDING ACCOUNTABILITY: USING THE NEGLIGENT INFLICTION OF EMOTIONAL DISTRESS CLAIM TO COMPENSATE BLACK AMERICAN FAMILIES WHO REMAINED UNHEARD IN MEDICAL CRISIS 72 Hastings Law Journal 1637 (August, 2021) Black Americans have constantly been victims of health disparities and unequal treatment in healthcare facilities. This is not new. However, more attention has been paid to accounts from Black Americans alleging that their providers ignored them or their families in crisis, leading to grave consequences. Though we do have a medical malpractice... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
By Kenneth C. Broodo of Foley & Lardner EXPERT INSIGHTS-NEW EEOC GUIDANCE: YOUR EMPLOYEES CAN SUE YOU FOR COVID-19 RETALIATION (IF IT'S BASED ON A PROTECTED CLASSIFICATION) Wolters Kluwer Employment Law Daily (December 8, 2021) Employees can be savvy about their rights, and retaliation claims can be among the most dangerous under equal protection laws. The latest series of Covid-19 news is discomfiting. The Biden administration is fighting in court for its vaccinate-or-test mandate. Europe, Asia, and parts of the U.S. are suffering from a heavy uptick in Delta variant... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Marc Edelman , Thomas A. Baker III , John T. Holden , Dr. Andrew Shuman EXPLORING COLLEGE SPORTS IN THE TIME OF COVID-19: A LEGAL, MEDICAL, AND ETHICAL ANALYSIS 2021 Michigan State Law Review 469 (2021) The emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic threatens the safety of people attending large social gatherings, including organized sporting events. As the number of deaths and hospitalizations from COVID-19 skyrocketed in March 2020, the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) suspended all member colleges' spring sports seasons. The NCAA has... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  FACT SHEET: BIDEN ADMINISTRATION INVESTS $4 BILLION IN AMERICAN RESCUE PLAN FUNDING TO COMBAT COVID-19 IN INDIAN COUNTRY No Citation Available (4/20/2021) (4/16/2021)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
  FACT SHEET: BIDEN-HARRIS ADMINISTRATION ADVANCES EQUITY AND OPPORTUNITY FOR ASIAN AMERICAN, NATIVE HAWAIIAN, AND PACIFIC ISLANDER COMMUNITIES ACROSS THE COUNTRY (January 20, 2022)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
  FACT SHEET: PRESIDENT BIDEN ESTABLISHES THE WHITE HOUSE INITIATIVE ON ASIAN AMERICANS, NATIVE HAWAIIANS, AND PACIFIC ISLANDERS (May 28, 2021)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
  FACT SHEET: THE BIDEN-HARRIS ADMINISTRATION ADVANCES EQUITY AND OPPORTUNITY FOR LATINO COMMUNITIES ACROSS THE COUNTRY (October 14, 2021)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
Kate Weisburd FALL 2020 SYMPOSIUM: ADDRESSING THE CRISIS IN POLICING TODAY: RACE, MASCULINITY, AND POLICE USE OF FORCE IN AMERICA 89 George Washington Law Review 1357 (December, 2021) The year 2020 was a year of reckoning. The COVID-19 pandemic, along with the protests in support of the Black Lives Matter movement and against police violence toward unarmed Black, Brown, and Indigenous peoples, revealed our collective, but also differing, vulnerability to violence, sickness, death, and economic harm. Meanwhile, the #metoo... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  FCC ANNOUNCES AN ADDITIONAL $40.46 MILLION AWARDED AS PART OF COVID-19 TELEHEALTH PROGRAM (October 21, 2021)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
  FCC ANNOUNCES NEW COVID-19 TELEHEALTH PROGRAM AWARDS TOTALING MORE THAN $41.11 MILLION TO HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS (September 29, 2021)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
  FCC AWARDS ADDITIONAL $42.7 MILLION IN ROUND 2 OF COVID-19 TELEHEALTH PROGRAM (December 21, 2021)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
  FCC REACHES $150 MILLION BENCHMARK FOR COVID-19 TELEHEALTH PROGRAM ROUND 2 (November 9, 2021)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
Jonathan L. Iwry FDA EMERGENCY USE AUTHORIZATION FROM 9/11 TO COVID-19: HISTORICAL LESSONS AND ETHICAL CHALLENGES 76 Food & Drug Law Journal 337 (2021) Emergency use authorization (EUA) is a power granted by Congress to FDA to expedite the availability and distribution of medical countermeasures during public health emergencies. This Article reviews the history of FDA's EUA authority from its inception in the post-9/11 era to its present-day use in response to COVID-19 in order to better... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  First Amended Complaint For Injunctive and Declaratory Relief (May 28, 2021) Admitted pro hac vice 52 U.S.C. § 10301, 42 U.S.C. § 1983; First, Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution FN1. Plaintiffs' counsel served a 90-day notice... 2021 Trial Court Documents
Julia M. Puaschunder FOCUSING COVID-19 BAILOUT AND RECOVERY 16 Ohio State Business Law Journal 91 (2021) The novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 imposes the most unexpected external economic shock to modern humankind, triggering abrupt consumption and behavior pattern shifts around the world with widespread socio-economic impacts. In order to alleviate unexpected negative fallouts from the crisis, attention to governmental bailouts and recovery packages... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
T. Alexander Aleinikoff FOREWORD TO THE REPUBLICATION OF THE CONSTITUTION IN CONTEXT: THE CONTINUING SIGNIFICANCE OF RACISM 92 University of Colorado Law Review 1315 (Special Issue 2021) It is disturbing--to say the least--that an article written nearly three decades ago based on an assertion of the continuing existence of racism in the United States can be seen as meriting republication, not for its historical interest but because of its current relevance. The article began with descriptions of the brutal murder of Emmet Till in... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT--DUE PROCESS--ELEVENTH CIRCUIT HOLDS THAT A FLORIDA JAIL WAS NOT DELIBERATELY INDIFFERENT TO THE SPREAD OF COVID-19.-- SWAIN v. JUNIOR, 961 F.3D 1276 (11TH CIR. 2020) 134 Harvard Law Review 2622 (May, 2021) The COVID-19 pandemic has had a catastrophic impact on incarcerated individuals and their families: nearly 390,000 incarcerated people have contracted the virus, and over 2,400 have died. Overall, the rate of COVID-19 in prisons has been over five times that of the general population. People in prisons and jails looked to the judiciary for... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Cinnamon P. Carlarne FROM COVID-19 TO CLIMATE CHANGE: DISASTER & INEQUALITY AT THE CROSSROADS 12 San Diego Journal of Climate & Energy Law 19 (2020-2021) C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 19 II. The Globalization & Localization of Disaster & Inequality. 22 III. Climate Amplification of Disaster & Inequality. 27 IV. Rebuilding Stronger: Mobilizing Climate Law at the Disaster-Inequality Intersection. 31 V. Conclusion. 38 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
By Sherri M. Schroeder, J.D. GENERAL HEALTH CARE NEWS: MIXED NEWS FROM MOST RECENT KFF PUBLIC OPINION POLL ON COVID-19 VACCINATION Wolters Kluwer Health Law Daily (December 2, 2021) Number of booster shots up sharply since October, but public is less optimistic and more frustrated with vaccinations now than in January. The November 2021 COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor poll from the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF), part of an ongoing research project tracking the American public's attitudes and experiences with COVID-19 vaccinations,... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
By Susan L. Smith, JD, MA GENERAL HEALTH CARE NEWS: RACIAL, ETHNIC DISPARITIES IN HEALTH CARE EXAMINED Wolters Kluwer Health Law Daily (January 27, 2022) The Kaiser Family Foundation provides an updated analysis of various measures of racial and ethnic disparities in health, the provision of health care, and factors that contribute to the disparities. The Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) has updated chart packs to analyze racial and ethnic disparities in terms of health coverage and access to and use... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION OF PROVIDER RELIEF FUNDS TO COMMUNITIES DISPROPORTIONATELY IMPACTED BY ADVERSE COVID-19 OUTCOMES - OCTOBER 2021 Health Care Compliance Reporter 5162770 (2021) As information on rates of infection and outcomes for the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic emerges, numerous reports document racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic disparities in rates of adverse outcomes from COVID-19, including death. This study will review the locations of hospitals that received Provider Relief Funds, with particular attention to... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
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