AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYear
Mary Pearl Williams Partial Justice: a Study of Bias in Sentencing 53 Texas Law Review 1369 (August, 1975) As its subtitle declares, Dr. Gaylin's book studies bias in sentencing. The author is a practicing psychoanalyst, professor of law and psychiatry at Columbia Law School, and President of the Institute of Society, Ethics, and Life Sciences, Hastings-on-Hudson, New York. His credentials make him well-qualified to conduct the kind of investigation... 1975
  Supreme Court Declines to Consider Whether Due Process Requires Impartial Grand Juries on Record Presenting Speculative Evidence of Bias 111 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 1000 (May, 1963) Acting upon information uncovered by the McClellan Committee's labor racketeering hearings of 1957, the State of Washington convened a special grand jury to investigate David D. Beck. After the return of an indictment charging grand larceny, Beck moved to dismiss the bill on the ground that the impaneling judge had failed to examine the prospective... 1963
  Bias-based Cyberbullying: The next Hate Crime Frontier? 49 Criminal Law Bulletin ART 3 (No Date) Associate Professor, Department of Justice Studies, Montclair State University.  
  Dehumanization and Implicit Bias: Why Courts Should Preclude References to Animal Imagery in Criminal Trials 51 Criminal Law Bulletin ART 4 (No Date) Law clerk to the Honorable Francis M. Allegra of the United States Court of Federal Claims. J.D., University of California, Berkeley, School of Law (2014). Special thanks to Professor Mary Louise Frampton and to Allison Elgart for their invaluable advice and mentoring throughout my writing process; to James Robertson for his hard work and...  
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