AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYear
Michael Omi THE RACIALIZATION OF ASIAN-AMERICANS IN THE UNITED STATES 19 Hastings Race and Poverty Law Journal 169 (Summer, 2022) Michael Omi, co-author of the groundbreaking book Racial Formation in the United States, gave a speech at the Center for Racial and Economic Justice Conference titled, The Racialization of Asian-Americans in the United States. Featured here is a transcript of a Q&A between the moderator Carol Izumi and Omi. Professor Emeritus of Ethnic Studies at... 2022
Milan Chatterjee, Esq. THE SOUTH ASIAN BAR ASSOCIATION OF LAS VEGAS: A YOUNG ORGANIZATION MAKING A STRONG IMPACT 30-AUG Nevada Lawyer 20 (August, 2022) The South Asian Bar Association of North America (SABA) has 29 chapters across the U.S. and Canada. SABA strengthens the rapidly growing South Asian legal community with a recognized and trusted forum for professional growth, civil rights, diversity, and inclusion, and increasing access to justice within the South Asian community. Prominent... 2022
William Chaskes THE THREE LAWS: THE CHINESE COMMUNIST PARTY THROWS DOWN THE DATA REGULATION GAUNTLET 79 Washington and Lee Law Review 1169 (Summer, 2022) Criticism of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) runs a wide gamut. Accusations of human rights abuses, intellectual property theft, authoritarian domestic policies, disrespecting sovereign borders, and propaganda campaigns all have one common factor: the CCP's desire to control information. Controlling information means controlling data. Lurking... 2022
Gabriel J. Chin , Sam Chew Chin THE WAR AGAINST ASIAN SAILORS AND FISHERS 69 UCLA Law Review 572 (April, 2022) Beginning in the 1880s, maritime unions sought federal legislation to prevent Chinese, Japanese, Filipino, and Asian Indian sailors from serving as crew members on U.S.-flag vessels. The campaign succeeded and mandatory citizenship requirements for crews remain in the U.S. Code to this day. Similarly, federal and state laws limited the ability of... 2022
Peter K. Yu , Jorge L. Contreras , Yu Yang TRANSPLANTING ANTI-SUIT INJUNCTIONS 71 American University Law Review 1537 (April, 2022) When adjudicating high-value cases involving the licensing of patents covering industry standards such as Wi-Fi and 5G (standards-essential patents or SEPs), courts around the world have increasingly issued injunctions preventing one party from pursuing parallel litigation in another jurisdiction (anti-suit injunctions or ASIs). In response, courts... 2022
Miriam Driessen , University of Oxford TRIALS OF TRUSTWORTHINESS BETWEEN ETHIOPIAN LAWYERS AND CHINESE CLIENTS 45 PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review 274 (November, 2022) Legal representation requires trust. How is trust given and gained in lawyer-client relations that are tainted by mistrust? In this article I examine interactions between Ethiopian lawyers and their Chinese clients to show how both parties mitigate mistrust to enable productive legal representation across radical difference. This process not only... 2022
  UNITED STATES INDICTS IRANIAN AND CHINESE GOVERNMENT AGENTS FOR TARGETING INDIVIDUALS IN THE UNITED STATES 116 American Journal of International Law 179 (January, 2022) In July 2021, the U.S. Department of Justice announced two indictments charging Iranian and Chinese government officials and others acting at their behest with a variety of crimes stemming from two separate plots to coerce U.S. residents to return to those countries. The first involved four Iranians and a U.S. resident who took steps to kidnap a... 2022
Andrew Masaru Orita VOTE BY BLOOD: THE PERPETUATING FUNCTION OF PROXIES IN THE JAPANESE NATIONALITY LAW 17 University of Pennsylvania Asian Law Review 441 (2022) Citizenship is one of the main methods that governments use to delineate which persons have certain rights and which do not. In Japan, like in many other countries, citizenship also serves to indicate who belongs' under the moniker of Japanese. In recent years, more and more children are being born as dual citizens between Japan and another... 2022
Benjamin H. Pollak "A NEW ETHNOLOGY": THE LEGAL EXPANSION OF WHITENESS UNDER EARLY JIM CROW 39 Law and History Review 513 (August, 2021) Scholars of race and law have long agreed that American courts protected whiteness as any other form of property by defining it in ways that increased its value by reinforcing its exclusivity. This narrative has proved particularly seductive to scholars of the postbellum South, who have emphasized the ways in which Southern jurists and... 2021
Michael Heise, Jason P. Nance "DEFUND THE (SCHOOL) POLICE"? BRINGING DATA TO KEY SCHOOL-TO-PRISON PIPELINE CLAIMS 111 Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 717 (Summer, 2021) Nationwide calls to Defund the Police, largely attributable to the resurgent Black Lives Matter demonstrations, have motivated derivative calls for public school districts to consider defunding (or modifying) school resource officer (SRO/police) programs. To be sure, a school's SRO/police presence-- and the size of that presence--may... 2021
Vinay Harpalani "TRUMPING" AFFIRMATIVE ACTION 66 Villanova Law Review: Tolle Lege 1 (2021) This Essay examines the Trump administration's actions to eliminate affirmative action, along with the broader ramifications of these actions. While former-President Trump's judicial appointments have garnered much attention, the Essay focuses on the actions of his Department of Justice, Civil Rights Division. It lays out the Department of... 2021
Michelle Lyon Drumbl #AUDITED: SOCIAL MEDIA AND TAX ENFORCEMENT 99 Oregon Law Review 301 (2021) Introduction. 302 I. Tensions Arising from the Collision of Automation, Convenience, Privacy, and Expectations. 307 A. Is Our Collective Notion of Privacy Slowly Changing? Examples Outside the Realm of Tax Administration. 308 1. Government Agency Use of Social Media Mining and Big Data. 309 2. Private Actor Use of Social Media Mining and Big Data.... 2021
Xuan-Thao Nguyen #METOO INNOVATORS: DISRUPTING THE RACE AND GENDER CODE BY ASIAN AMERICANS IN THE TECH INDUSTRY 28 Asian American Law Journal 17 (2021) This Article focuses on how Asian American women innovators of the #MeToo generation are disrupting the code of conduct in the tech industry. The code is hard-wired into the tech bro culture of mirrortocracy, resulting in hiring practices that perpetuate existing company demographics and statistics that show that Asian American women face 2.91... 2021
Dominique Marangoni-Simonsen A FORGOTTEN HISTORY: HOW THE ASIAN AMERICAN WORKFORCE CULTIVATED MONTEREY COUNTY'S AGRICULTURAL INDUSTRY, DESPITE NATIONAL ANTI-ASIAN RHETORIC 27 Hastings Environmental Law Journal 229 (Winter, 2021) This paper analyzes the implementation of exclusionary citizenship laws against Chinese and Japanese immigrants from 1880 to 1940. It further analyzes the application of these exclusionary mechanisms to the Asian immigrant populations in Monterey County, California. It identifies how the agricultural industry in Monterey County by-passed these... 2021
Dominique Marangoni-Simonsen A Forgotten History: How the Asian American Workforce Cultivated Monterey County's Agricultural Industry, Despite National Anti-asian Rhetoric 27 Hastings Environmental Law Journal 229 (Winter, 2021) This paper analyzes the implementation of exclusionary citizenship laws against Chinese and Japanese immigrants from 1880 to 1940. It further analyzes the application of these exclusionary mechanisms to the Asian immigrant populations in Monterey County, California. It identifies how the agricultural industry in Monterey County by-passed these... 2021
Govind Persad ALLOCATING MEDICINE FAIRLY IN AN UNFAIR PANDEMIC 2021 University of Illinois Law Review 1085 (2021) America's COVID-19 pandemic has both devastated and disparately harmed minority communities. How can the allocation of scarce treatments for COVID-19 and similar public health threats fairly and legally respond to these racial disparities? Some have proposed that members of racial groups who have been especially hard-hit by the pandemic should... 2021
Laura Clark Fey , Sarah D. Wiese AMERICA THE VULNERABLE: THE NATION STATE HACKING THREAT TO OUR ECONOMY, OUR PRIVACY, AND OUR WELFARE 30-SUM Kansas Journal of Law & Public Policy 370 (Summer, 2021) Two thousand twenty, arguably one of the most challenging years in American history, went out with a bang as news developed of our Cyber Pearl Harbor. On December 13, 2020, while investigating a hack of its systems, cybersecurity firm FireEye discovered a single line of malicious code in a software update received from software vendor,... 2021
The Honorable Kirk H. Nakamura, The Honorable Deborah C. Servino ANTI-ASIAN HATE IS NOT A NEW PHENOMENON 63-SEP Orange County Lawyer 36 (September, 2021) The COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act was passed by Congress and signed into law by the president this May, which was also Asian Pacific Islander Heritage Month. The legislation noted that, following the spread of COVID-19 in 2020, there has been a dramatic increase in hate crimes and violence against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. Pub. L. No.... 2021
The Honorable Kirk H. Nakamura, The Honorable Deborah C. Servino ANTI-ASIAN VIOLENCE IN ORANGE COUNTY: A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE 63-OCT Orange County Lawyer 28 (October, 2021) On December 8, 1945, a renowned Army captain took the podium at what would become Santa Ana Stadium to honor Staff Sgt. Kazuo Masuda, who was killed in Europe fighting the Nazis as part of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, the most decorated unit of its size and length of service in American military history. It was United America Day in Santa Ana,... 2021
Joshua D. Lee , Sarah Tejada , Kristina Vu , Nadine Ona BEARING WITNESS TO HATE 58-JUN Houston Lawyer 31 (May/June, 2021) Violent attacks targeting Asian American-Pacific Islander (AAPI) communities are on the rise worldwide. They represent a grim reversal of a once downward trend. In the United States, over 3,700 reported hate incidents have been recorded since the beginning of the pandemic. New incidents are reported daily, including in Texas. Just last March, a... 2021
Monica Ramsy BEYOND THE U VISA AND CARCERAL FEMINIST "CRIMMIGRATION": TRANSFORMING THE VAWA SELF-PETITION TO REMEDY SEXUAL VIOLENCE IN IMMIGRATION DETENTION 45 New York University Review of Law and Social Change 37 (2021) When, and on what terms and conditions, do the experiences of an immigrant survivor of sexual violence matter? On what basis do we, and should we, devise our immigration laws in relation to gender-based violence? In wrestling with these questions, this Article seeks to develop a framework with which to more meaningfully support survivors of sexual... 2021
Kevin R. Johnson BRINGING RACIAL JUSTICE TO IMMIGRATION LAW 116 Northwestern University Law Review Online 1 (May 13, 2021) From at least as far back as the anti-Chinese laws of the 1800s, immigration has been a place of heated racial contestation in the United States. Although modern immigration laws no longer expressly mention race, their enforcement unmistakably impacts people of color from the developing world. Specifically, the laws, as enacted and... 2021
Ayyan Zubair BROWN'S LOST PROMISE: NEW YORK CITY SPECIALIZED HIGH SCHOOLS AS A CASE STUDY IN THE ILLUSORY SUPPORT FOR CLASS-BASED AFFIRMATIVE ACTION 11 California Law Review Online 557 (March, 2021) Introduction. 557 I. Background: New York City's Specialized High Schools and Christa McAuliffe Intermediate School PTO, Inc. v. de Blasio. 558 A. A Primer on New York City's Specialized High Schools. 558 B. The Barriers Created by the Specialized High School System. 560 II. The Effect of The U.S. Supreme Court's Latest Additions on Race-Conscious... 2021
Mary A. Lynch BUILDING AN ANTI-RACIST PROSECUTORIAL SYSTEM: OBSERVATIONS FROM TEACHING A DOMESTIC VIOLENCE PROSECUTION CLINIC 73 Rutgers University Law Review 1515 (Summer, 2021) Introduction and Background. 1516 II. Local Prosecutors, Intimate Crimes, and Traditionally Marginalized Survivors. 1525 A. Local Prosecutors, Reform, and Anti-Racism. 1525 B. Intimate Crimes and Women of Color. 1533 C. Listening to the Wisdom of Survivors of Color. 1543 III. Observations and Suggestions for Anti-Racism Work and Prosecution of... 2021
Vinay Harpalani, J.D., Ph.D. CAN "ASIANS" TRULY BE AMERICANS? 27 Washington and Lee Journal of Civil Rights and Social Justice 559 (Spring, 2021) Recent, tragic events have brought more attention to hate and bias crimes against Asian Americans. It is important to address these crimes and prevent them in the future, but the discourse on Asian Americans should not end there. Many non-Asian Americans are unaware or only superficially aware of the vast diversity that exists among us, along with... 2021
  CHAPTER 17 SOUTH KOREA 86 IUS Gentium 723 (2021) South Korea, with a population of 54.6 million in 2018, has been described as a country that once served as the world's largest source of unwanted children, driven by poverty, governmental regulation, a culture of racial purity, homogeneity, family bloodlines, shame, and taboos against domestic adoption. Much has changed in recent years,... 2021
Catherine Powell COLOR OF COVID AND GENDER OF COVID: ESSENTIAL WORKERS, NOT DISPOSABLE PEOPLE 33 Yale Journal of Law & Feminism 1 (2021) We live in a viral moment--a moment of interconnected pandemics. The COVID-19 crisis provides a window into the underlying pandemics of inequality, economic insecurity, and injustice. In fact, the viruses of sexism, racism, and economic instability are pre-existing conditions of an unjust legal system--baked into our nation at the... 2021
Jasmine Mitchell COMMENTARY AND BOOK REVIEW: MULTIRACIALS AND CIVIL RIGHTS: MIXED-RACE STORIES OF DISCRIMINATION 34 Journal of Civil Rights & Economic Development 1 (Spring, 2021) Can a drop of whiteness or looking white save someone from anti-Blackness? Are mixed-race peoples special, and should they be a protected class under the law? Did Loving v. Virginia's legalization of interracial marriage lead to race becoming insignificant? Tanya Hernández's Multiracials and Civil Rights: Mixed-Race Stories of Discrimination... 2021
  CRIMINAL PROCEDURE--SEARCHES--SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT OF MASSACHUSETTS HOLDS THAT CONTINUOUS, LONG-TERM POLE CAMERA SURVEILLANCE OUTSIDE HOMES IS A SEARCH UNDER STATE CONSTITUTIONAL LAW.--COMMONWEALTH v. MORA, 150 N.E.3D 297 (MASS. 2020) 134 Harvard Law Review 1268 (January, 2021) Today's digital world brings advanced police surveillance as never seen before, with more vulnerable communities bearing the brunt of these increased interactions and intrusions. And the stakes are high: repeated police exposure, digital or not, increases the risk of violent outcomes. The Fourth Amendment, which has come to regulate police actions... 2021
Bobbi K. Dominick CRITICAL RACE THEORY AND WORKPLACE DIVERSITY EFFORTS 64-DEC Advocate 36 (November/December, 2021) Across the country, debates about critical race theory (CRT) are raging in legislatures, school boards and organizations, and in diverse locales. While it may seem like a passing fad, or cultural hot button issue, diversity practitioners and leaders should pay close attention. Now is the time to reexamine the most effective, and defensible,... 2021
D. Carolina Núñez DARK MATTER IN THE LAW 62 Boston College Law Review 1555 (May, 2021) Introduction. 1556 I. The Chinese Exclusion Case and Its Progeny: Ordinary Matter in an Extraordinary Immigration Law Universe. 1565 A. The Origins of Immigration Law's Plenary Power Doctrine. 1566 B. Plenary Power and the Constitution After Chinese Exclusion. 1570 1. Plenary Power and Political Opinion. 1571 2. Plenary Power and Gender. 1574 II.... 2021
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
George A. Acosta DEVOLVING STANDARDS OF DECENCY: HOW EIGHTH AMENDMENT JURISPRUDENCE FAILS TRANSGENDER INMATES SEEKING NECESSARY MEDICAL CARE 36 Wisconsin Journal of Law, Gender & Society 59 (Spring, 2021) The Supreme Court of the United States has long held that denying necessary medical care to prison inmates may constitute cruel and unusual punishment within the meaning of the Eighth Amendment. Transgender inmates suffering from gender dysphoria often do not receive essential medical care, particularly the crucial treatments of hormone therapy and... 2021
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
Cristina Isabel Ceballos, David Freeman Engstrom, Daniel E. Ho DISPARATE LIMBO: HOW ADMINISTRATIVE LAW ERASED ANTIDISCRIMINATION 131 Yale Law Journal 370 (November, 2021) Administrative law has a blind spot. It is blackletter doctrine that an agency's failure to consider the impacts of its conduct can lead to court invalidation of its decision as arbitrary and capricious. Judges have set aside agency action for failures to consider differential impacts on subgroups of business owners, park visitors, and animals. Yet... 2021
Shreya Santhanam, Stephanie Tilden, Elizabeth Cheng, Editors-in-Chief and Managing Editor, 2020-2021, Volume 28, Asian American Law Journal EDITORS' NOTE 28 Asian American Law Journal 1 (2021) Every year the Editors' Note highlights and celebrates the scholarship produced by the Asian American Law Journal (AALJ). We would like to recognize these articles, but also take a moment to acknowledge some of the struggles faced by our members and members of Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) communities over the past year. In 2020-2021,... 2021
David Tipson , Rene Kathawala , Nyah Berg , Lauren Webb EFFECTIVE SCHOOL-INTEGRATION MOBILIZATION: THE CASE FOR NON-LITIGATION ADVOCACY AND IMPACT 48 Fordham Urban Law Journal 475 (February, 2021) Introduction. 475 I. Historical Background. 477 A. School Desegregation in the United States. 477 B. School Integration in New York City. 487 C. Status Quo in 2011. 489 II. Framing the Role for Legal Advocacy. 493 III. Implementation. 500 A. Challenging Legal and Regulatory Structures Inhibiting NYCDOE Action. 500 B. Creating a Precedential... 2021
  EQUAL PROTECTION--AFFIRMATIVE ACTION--FIRST CIRCUIT HOLDS THAT HARVARD'S ADMISSIONS PROGRAM DOES NOT VIOLATE THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT.-- STUDENTS FOR FAIR ADMISSIONS, INC. v. PRESIDENT & FELLOWS OF HARVARD COLLEGE, 980 F.3D 157 (1ST CIR. 2020) 134 Harvard Law Review 2630 (May, 2021) In 2014, a nonprofit called Students for Fair Admissions (SFFA) sued Harvard University, alleging that its race-conscious admissions program discriminated against Asian American applicants. Over the next few years, the lawsuit drew both attention and controversy. Some criticized Harvard for imposing de facto Asian American quotas. Others suggested... 2021
Laura Smalarz , Yueran Yang , Gary L. Wells EYEWITNESSES' FREE-REPORT VERBAL CONFIDENCE STATEMENTS ARE DIAGNOSTIC OF ACCURACY 45 Law and Human Behavior 138 (April, 2021) Objectives: We assessed recent policy recommendations to collect eyewitnesses' confidence statements in witnesses' own words as opposed to numerically. We conducted an experiment to test whether eyewitnesses' free-report verbal confidence statements are as diagnostic of eyewitness accuracy as their numeric confidence statements and whether the... 2021
Jessica A. Shoemaker FEE SIMPLE FAILURES: RURAL LANDSCAPES AND RACE 119 Michigan Law Review 1695 (June, 2021) Property law's roots are rural. America pursued an early agrarian vision that understood real property rights as instrumental to achieving a country of free, engaged citizens who cared for their communities and stewarded their physical place in it. But we have drifted far from this ideal. Today, American agriculture is industrialized, and rural... 2021
Pamela Foohey , Nathalie Martin FINTECH'S ROLE IN EXACERBATING OR REDUCING THE WEALTH GAP 2021 University of Illinois Law Review 459 (2021) Research shows that Black, Latinx, and other minorities pay more for credit and banking services, and that wealth accumulation differs starkly between their households and white households. The link between debt inequality and the wealth gap, however, remains less thoroughly explored, particularly in light of new credit products and debt-like... 2021
Eric K. Yamamoto , Susan K. Serrano FOREWORD TO THE REPUBLICATION OF RACIALIZING ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE 92 University of Colorado Law Review 1383 (Special Issue 2021) Systemic racism! The burgeoning 2020 Black Lives Matter protests vaulted this formerly whispered phrase into mainstream public consciousness. Through news headlines, social media, educational classes, opinion essays, word of mouth, and more, America grappled with the enormity of racism as a form of oppression of people and communities, as... 2021
Cristina M. Rodríguez FOREWORD: REGIME CHANGE 135 Harvard Law Review 1 (November, 2021) C1-2CONTENTS Introduction. 2 I. Elements of Regime Change. 11 A. Switching Sides. 16 1. Enlisting the Court. 18 2. The Interests of the United States. 32 B. A New Order. 40 1. The Legal Regime. 41 2. The Bureaucracy. 48 II. In Defense of Power. 58 A. Asserting Power. 63 1. Democracy and Social Welfare. 63 2. Presidential and Political Control. 70... 2021
Sara K. Rankin HIDING HOMELESSNESS: THE TRANSCARCERATION OF HOMELESSNESS 109 California Law Review 559 (April, 2021) Cities throughout the country respond to homelessness with laws that persecute people for surviving in public spaces, even when unsheltered people lack a reasonable alternative. This widespread practice--the criminalization of homelessness--processes vulnerable people through the criminal justice system with damaging results. But recently, from the... 2021
Jennifer M. Smith , Elliot O. Jackson HISTORICALLY BLACK COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES: A MODEL FOR AMERICAN EDUCATION 14 Florida A & M University Law Review 103 (Winter, 2021) The whole world opened to me when I learned to read. ~ Mary McLeod Bethune Hungry for freedom and knowledge, enslaved Blacks engaged in a massive general strike against slavery by transferring their labor from the Confederate planter to the Northern invader, and this decided the Civil War. In 1865, the North conquered the South, and slavery... 2021
Rachel D. Godsil, Sarah E. Waldeck HOME EQUITY: RETHINKING RACE AND FEDERAL HOUSING POLICY 98 Denver Law Review 523 (Spring, 2021) Neighborhoods shape every element of our lives. Where we live determines economic opportunities; our exposure to police and pollution; and the availability of positive amenities for a healthy life. Home inequity--both financial and racial--is not accidental. Federal government programs have armed white people with agency to construct white spaces... 2021
Ayushi Neogi HOW DOES IT FEEL TO BE A SOLUTION?: HOW SOUTH ASIAN MIGRATION FROM 1885 TO 1923 CREATED A MODERN SOUTH ASIAN "OTHER" USED TO PROMOTE CONSERVATIVE RHETORIC 48 Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly 508 (Spring, 2021) This note seeks to understand the place of a South Asian American in a country that considers itself bi-racial. The note analyzes the racial ambiguity of the South Asian in two major historical contexts. First, it provides an overview of the legal history of South Asian migration, the first wave of which occurred from 1885 to 1923. It analyzes... 2021
Emma Mendelson HOW THE FALLOUT FROM POST-9/11 SURVEILLANCE PROGRAMS CAN INFORM PRIVACY PROTECTIONS FOR COVID-19 CONTACT TRACING PROGRAMS 24 CUNY Law Review 35 (Winter, 2021) INTRODUCTION. 35 I. The Bush Administration and the Broadened Scope of Surveillance. 38 A. The Law and the NSA. 38 B. The Wave of Backlash Comes Crashing Down. 44 II. National Security and Public Health Surveillance During COVID-19. 46 A. Background on the Data Changes Since 9/11. 47 B. What Does Surveillance During the COVID-19 Pandemic Look... 2021
Dorothy A. Brown INTRODUCTION 70 Emory Law Journal 1413 (2021) The idea for this Special Issue began with a conversation between me and Mr. Sam Reilly, the then Editor-in-Chief of the Emory Law Journal. Mr. Reilly and I go way back--all the way to his first semester in law school when he was a student in my Legislation and Regulation class. I subsequently selected him to become one of my research assistants... 2021
Craig Cowie IS THE CFPB STILL ON THE BEAT? THE CFPB'S (NON)RESPONSE TO THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC 82 Montana Law Review 41 (Winter, 2021) I. Introduction. 42 II. The Economic Impact of the Pandemic to Date. 44 III. The CFPB's Enforcement Response to the Pandemic. 52 A. The CFPB Took No Public Enforcement Action Under Director Kraninger Specifically Related to the Pandemic. 57 B. Instead, CFPB Brought Smaller Enforcement Actions. 62 1. Methodology. 64 2. The CFPB Initially Filed Few... 2021
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12