AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYear
Gregory S. Parks , Jeffrey J. Rachlinski , Richard A. Epstein Implicit Race Bias and the 2008 Presidential Election: Much Ado about Nothing? 157 University of Pennsylvania Law Review PENNumbra 210 (2009) The election of Barack Obama marks a significant milestone for race relations in our nation--on this much our debaters agree. The meaning of this milestone for the future of race-based policies, such as affirmative action and antidiscrimination laws, is where they disagree. Dr. Gregory Parks and Professor Jeffrey Rachlinski argue that any... 2009
Kate Nace Day , Russell G. Murphy Just Trying to Be Human in this Place: Storytelling and Film in the First-year Law School Classroom 39 Stetson Law Review 247 (Fall 2009) Law school reform is in the air. -- Susan Sturm & Lani Guinier The plain fact is that American legal education, and especially its formative first year, remains remarkably similar to the curriculum invented at the Harvard Law School by Christopher Columbus Langdell over a century and a quarter ago. Invented, that is, not just before the Internet,... 2009
Judy L. Marchman Justice for All? 72 Texas Bar Journal 494 (June, 2009) Southern Methodist University Dedman School of Law, in conjunction with the American Bar Association Judicial Division, held a symposium in early April to explore the perception of racial and ethnic bias in the courts. The symposium, titled Justice for All?, brought together three panels composed of academics, judges, and lawyers to discuss the... 2009
Rachael A. Ream Limitedvoirdire 23-WTR Criminal Justice 22 (Winter, 2009) Within the framework of constitutional guarantees to trial by jury is the Sixth Amendment promise of an impartial jury in federal criminal cases. Individual jurors, though, come with preconceived ideas and prejudices based on life experiences that often interfere with the ability to provide such impartiality. The concepts of jury selection and voir... 2009
Antony Page , Michael J. Pitts Poll Workers, Election Administration, and the Problem of Implicit Bias 15 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 1 (Fall 2009) Racial bias in election administration--more specifically, in the interaction between poll workers and voters at a polling place on election day--may be implicit, or unconscious. Indeed, the operation of a polling place may present an optimal setting for unconscious racial bias. Poll workers sometimes have legal discretion to decide whether or... 2009
Robert V. Wolf Race, Bias, and Problem-solving Courts 21 National Black Law Journal 27 (2009) Introduction. 27 I. Race and the Justice System. 30 A. Racial/Ethnic Disparities. 31 B. Attitudes Toward the Justice System. 32 C. Sources of Disparities. 33 D. Problems with the Data. 34 E. Attempts to Address Bias in the Justice System. 35 II. Problem-Solving Courts. 37 A. Linking Participants to Social Services. 38 B. Legal Services. 41 C.... 2009
Melanie A. Conroy Real Bias: How Real Id's Credibility and Corroboration Requirements Impair Sexual Minority Asylum Applicants 24 Berkeley Journal of Gender, Law & Justice 1 (Spring 2009) I. Introduction. 2 II. Sexual Minorities and the Law of Asylum. 3 III. Pre-Real ID Credibility and Corroboration Law and Problems. 5 A. Pre-Real ID Corroboration Law. 5 B. Pre-Real ID Corroboration Problems. 7 1. Corroborating the Persecution of Similarly-Situated Individuals. 8 2. Corroborating One's Sexual Minority Membership. 10 C. Pre-Real ID... 2009
Regina A. Schuller, Veronica Kazoleas, Kerry Kawakami The Impact of Prejudice Screening Procedures on Racial Bias in the Courtroom 33 Law and Human Behavior 320 (August, 2009) Abstract The current study examines the impact of the challenge for cause procedure and its effectiveness in curbing racial prejudice in trials involving Black defendants. Participants were provided with a trial summary of a defendant charged with either drug trafficking or embezzlement. The race of the defendant was either White or Black, with... 2009
Tiffani N. Darden The Law Firm Caste System: Constructing a Bridge Between Workplace Equity Theory & the Institutional Analyses of Bias in Corporate Law Firms 30 Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law 85 (2009) Diversity eludes the most prestigious legal employers--the federal judiciary, academia, and elite law firms--despite enlightened scholarship diagnosing the quandaries of workplace equity in professional settings. While recruitment efforts stream attorneys of color into the lower ranks of corporate law firms, management and the legal profession... 2009
Reid Griffith Fontaine The Wrongfulness of Wrongly Interpreting Wrongfulness: Provocation, Interpretational Bias, and Heat of Passion Homicide 12 New Criminal Law Review 69 (Winter, 2009) In U.S. criminal law, a defendant charged with murder can invoke the heat of passion defense, an affirmative, partial-excuse defense so that he may be instead found guilty of the lesser crime of manslaughter. This defense requires the defendant to demonstrate that he was significantly provoked and, as a direct result of the provocation, became... 2009
Antony Page Unconscious Bias and the Limits of Director Independence 2009 University of Illinois Law Review 237 (2009) Corporate directors make difficult decisions: How much should we pay our CEO? Should we permit a lawsuit against a fellow director? Should we sell the company? Directors are legally obligated to decide in good faith based on the business merits of the issue rather than extraneous considerations and influences. Naturally, some directors may have... 2009
David L. Faigman , Nilanjana Dasgupta , Cecilia L. Ridgeway A Matter of Fit: the Law of Discrimination and the Science of Implicit Bias 59 Hastings Law Journal 1389 (June, 2008) Integrating the insights gleaned from scientific research into the framework of the law requires courts to appreciate the empirical complexities of the former and the analytical details of the latter. This is no simple feat. It requires juxtaposing the lessons and limitations of science with the demands of the law. This feat has proved particularly... 2008
Morrison Torrey Actually Begin to Satisfy Aba Standards 211(a) and 212(a): Eliminate Race and Sex Bias in Legal Education 43 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 615 (Summer 2008) The American Bar Association Standards for Approval of Law Schools mandate non-discrimination and equality of opportunity, requiring law schools to demonstrate by concrete action a commitment to providing full opportunities for the study of law and entry into the profession by members of underrepresented groups, particularly racial and ethnic... 2008
Wendy Richards An Analysis of Recent Tax Reforms from a Marital-bias Perspective: it Is Time to Oust Marriage from the Tax Code 2008 Wisconsin Law Review 611 (2008) As the American family dynamic continues to change, the tax code should change to reflect current population demographics. The tax treatment of marriage contrasts sharply with the actual role that marriage currently plays in society. The recent tax reforms took steps toward alleviating the burdens created by the marital bias but did little to... 2008
Stephen J. Choi, G. Mitu Gulati Bias in Judicial Citations: a Window into the Behavior of Judges? 37 Journal of Legal Studies 87 (January, 2008) This article tests for the presence of bias in judicial citations within federal circuit court opinions. Our findings suggest bias along three dimensions. First, judges base outside-circuit citation decisions in part on the political party of the cited judge. Judges tend to cite judges of the opposite political party less often than would be... 2008
Deborah J. Merritt Bias, the Brain, and Student Evaluations of Teaching 82 Saint John's Law Review 235 (Winter 2008) The complaints are never-ending, voluminous, and contradictory. I talk too loud or not loud enough. I walk too close to people and make them nervous. If I look at students, they are nervous. If I do not look at them they are angry. If I call on them, I am picking on them. If I do not call on them, I have a personal vendetta against them . . . .... 2008
Curtis J. Thomas Cat's in the Cradle: Tenth Circuit Provides Silver Spoon of Subordinate Bias Liability in Eeoc V. Bci Coca-cola Bottling Co. Of Los Angeles 61 Oklahoma Law Review 629 (Fall, 2008) Many old cats, cunning, subtle, and sharp, and bearing a grudge against the whole race of mice beside, lay in wait for them, caught them, and cleared them out of the house, much to the advantage of the master of the establishment. Stephen Peters, an African-American merchandiser for BCI Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Los Angeles (BCI), was terminated... 2008
Stephen Benard , In Paik , Shelley J. Correll Cognitive Bias and the Motherhood Penalty 59 Hastings Law Journal 1359 (June, 2008) When women become mothers, their labor market prospects tend to suffer. A number of studies have documented that mothers experience worse labor market outcomes than women without children. Perhaps most well established is the motherhood wage penalty: mothers earn approximately 5% less per child than other workers, over and above any gender wage... 2008
Arin N. Reeves Colored by Race 37-SPG Brief 28 (Spring, 2008) Does race color the way in which minority practitioners are evaluated by hiring committees in large law firms? Although there have always been stories and egregious examples, these anecdotes have often been dismissed as atypical and not representative of a profession that says it is committed to diversity. But Colored by Race: The Evaluation of... 2008
Taran S. Kaler Controlling the Cat's Paw: Circuit Split Concerning the Level of Control a Biased Subordinate must Exert over the Formal Decisionmaker's Choice to Terminate 48 Santa Clara Law Review 1069 (2008) In a recent survey, fifteen percent of American workers perceived that they had been the subject of employment discrimination or bias at their workplace. In 2005, the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) received approximately 75,000 claims from employees alleging employment discrimination. To combat discrimination,... 2008
Jeffrey L. Needle Defeat the 'Cat's Paw' Defense to Vicarious Liability 44-JUN Trial 52 (June, 2008) Numerous federal civil rights statutes protect employees from illegal discrimination, and a vital civil justice system is the mechanism for the enforcement of these statutes. However, recent developments concerning vicarious liability in employment discrimination cases threaten to replace the civil justice system with a system of corporate... 2008
Martin H. Malin , Monica Biernat Do Cognitive Biases Infect Adjudication? A Study of Labor Arbitrators 11 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Business Law 175 (Fall 2008) Parties adjudicate their differences before numerous bodies, including judges, juries, administrative agencies, and arbitrators. One of the most fundamental requirements of due process is that the adjudicators be free from bias. Much bias, however, is not overt. Rather, it results from the way in which our brains operate. Every object is unique in... 2008
Eric A. Posner Does Political Bias in the Judiciary Matter?: Implications of Judicial Bias Studies for Legal and Constitutional Reform 75 University of Chicago Law Review 853 (Spring 2008) This issue attests to the increasing significance of the empirical study of judges and judicial decisions. The two new empirical articles are just the latest in a cataract of studies that show that the political biases of judges, and other legally irrelevant characteristics of judges (such as race and sex), influence the voting patterns of judges... 2008
Jordan Blair Woods Ensuring a Right of Access to the Courts for Bias Crime Victims: a Section 5 Defense of the Matthew Shepard Act 12 Chapman Law Review 389 (Fall 2008) Congress recently invoked its power under the Commerce Clause to pass the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2007 (The Matthew Shepard Act). On December 6, 2007, Congressional Democrats dropped the Matthew Shepard Act from the U.S. Department of Defense authorization bill. With Democrats now in control of Congress and the election... 2008
Nelson P. Miller , Tracey Brame , Dale Iverson , Goldie Adele Equality as Talisman: Getting Beyond Bias to Cultural Competence as a Professional Skill 25 Thomas M. Cooley Law Review 99 (2008) We hold these truths to be self-evident, as Thomas Jefferson's Declaration of Independence so eloquently invokes that which was also inspired by the ancients, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. In calling... 2008
Phyliss Craig-Taylor Lifting the Veil: the Intersectionality of Ethics, Culture, and Gender Bias in Domestic Violence Cases 32 Rutgers Law Record 31 (Spring, 2008) This article will explore both theoretical and pragmatic questions which arise out of deconstructing the term objective and competent representation inside the paradigm of zealous representation, when viewed through the lens of domestic violence cases. These cases invoke highly problematic issues when examined in a homogeneous, rather than a... 2008
Jordan Blair Woods Taking the "Hate" out of Hate Crimes: Applying Unfair Advantage Theory to Justify the Enhanced Punishment of Opportunistic Bias Crimes 56 UCLA Law Review 489 (December, 2008) Should bias crime perpetrators who, for personal gain, intentionally select victims from social groups that they perceive to be more vulnerable be punished similarly to typical bias crime perpetrators who are motivated by group hatred? In this Comment, I apply unfair advantage theory to argue that enhancing the punishment of opportunistic bias... 2008
Ronen Perry The Economic Bias in Tort Law 2008 University of Illinois Law Review 1573 (2008) Economic loss is moving to the forefront of tort discourse on both sides of the Atlantic. A Council draft of the Restatement (Third) of Torts: Economic Torts and Related Wrongs is being appraised and discussed by prominent American tort scholars, and European academics are seeking common ground regarding liability for economic loss in the European... 2008
Joan C. Williams , Stephanie Bornstein The Evolution of "Fred": Family Responsibilities Discrimination and Developments in the Law of Stereotyping and Implicit Bias 59 Hastings Law Journal 1311 (June, 2008) When Regina Sheehan announced that she was pregnant with her third child, her supervisor exclaimed, Oh, my God, she's pregnant again. That month, Sheehan was the only employee in her department placed into a performance matrix program, in which her supervisor, alone, set goals for her that she was expected to meet. Three months later, her... 2008
Frederick M. Lawrence The Evolving Federal Role in Bias Crime Law Enforcement and the Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2007 19 Stanford Law and Policy Review 251 (2008) Debate over the proper role of federal law enforcement concerning bias-motivated crimes, popularly known as hate crimes, implicates criminal law doctrine and theory, issues of federalism, definitions of equality, and questions of free expression. The highest aspiration of a federal hate crime law is to demonstrate a national commitment to the... 2008
Ivan E. Bodensteiner The Implications of Psychological Research Related to Unconscious Discrimination and Implicit Bias in Proving Intentional Discrimination 73 Missouri Law Review 83 (Winter, 2008) In most cases alleging discrimination in violation of a federal statute or the U.S. Constitution, the plaintiff must prove disparate treatment, i.e., intentional discrimination. These cases arise under several federal statutes that prohibit race discrimination, including (a) Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (Title VII), which prohibits... 2008
Catherine Smith Unconscious Bias and "Outsider" Interest Convergence 40 Connecticut Law Review 1077 (May, 2008) In 1987, Charles Lawrence articulated an inherent flaw of the discriminatory intent requirement in equal protection jurisprudence by leveraging social science research to demonstrate that the behavior that produces racial discrimination is influenced by unconscious racial motivation. Twenty years later, the debate continues with increasing social... 2008
Honorable Janet Bond Arterton Unconscious Bias and the Impartial Jury 40 Connecticut Law Review 1023 (May, 2008) In these remarks, Judge Arterton examines the relationship between the scholarly research into unconscious bias and the judiciary's role in addressing the phenomenon in courtroom practice. Through several decades of evolution, the Supreme Court has acknowledged the existence of covert prejudice and recognized its pervasiveness in formulating... 2008
Dale Larson Unconsciously Regarded as Disabled: Implicit Bias and the Regarded-as Prong of the Americans with Disabilities Act 56 UCLA Law Review 451 (December, 2008) Much scholarly work has been written detailing the shift away from the original congressional intent behind the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), starting with the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision in Sutton v. United Air Lines. While the U.S. Congress intended the protections under the ADA to be broad, courts have interpreted the act very... 2008
Jessica Fink Unintended Consequences: How Antidiscrimination Litigation Increases Group Bias in Employer-defendants 38 New Mexico Law Review 333 (Spring, 2008) Since the passage of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, countless individuals have turned to the courts to redress alleged violations of their civil rights. Indeed, in the four-plus decades since the passage of Title VII, discrimination claims brought under Title VII (along with its counterparts within the federal antidiscrimination... 2008
Keaton Wong Weighing Influence: Employment Discrimination and the Theory of Subordinate Bias Liability 57 American University Law Review 1729 (August, 2008) Introduction. 1729 I. Background. 1735 A. The Anti-Discrimination Statutes. 1735 B. Agency Principles. 1737 II. The Theory of Subordinate Bias Liability. 1739 A. The Mere Influence or Involvement Standard. 1740 1. Influence. 1741 2. Involvement. 1742 3. Influence and involvement. 1743 B. The Actual Decision-Maker Standard. 1744 C. The Causal Nexus... 2008
Stephen F. Befort , Alison L. Olig Within in Grasp of the Cat's Paw: Delineating the Scopre of Subordinate Bias Liability under Federal Antidiscrimination Statutes 60 South Carolina Law Review 383 (Winter 2008) I. Introduction. 383 II. The Origins of Subordinate Bias Liability. 387 III. Current Circuit Court Positions. 389 A. The Lenient Standard. 389 B. The Strict Standard. 392 C. The Intermediate Standards. 395 IV. Three Crucial Issues. 397 A. Causation. 398 1. Proving Causation. 398 2. Causation in the Context of Subordinate Bias Liability. 401 B.... 2008
Amitai Aviram Bias Arbitrage 64 Washington and Lee Law Review 789 (Summer, 2007) The production of law-including the choice of a law's subject matter, the timing of its enactment and the manner in which it is publicized and perceived by the public-is significantly driven by an extra-legal market in which politicians and private parties compete over the opportunity to engage in bias arbitrage. Bias arbitrage is the extraction of... 2007
Sandra T. Azar , Phillip Atiba Goff Can Science Help Solomon? Child Maltreatment Cases and the Potential for Racial and Ethnic Bias in Decision Making 81 Saint John's Law Review 533 (Summer 2007) Over the last three decades, there has been an increasing debate, both domestically and internationally, regarding the consideration that is given to children's rights within the legal system. Nowhere has the protection of children's rights been upheld more strongly than in the passage and application of child protection reporting laws and related... 2007
Dorothy E. Roberts Constructing a Criminal Justice System Free of Racial Bias: an Abolitionist Framework 39 Columbia Human Rights Law Review 261 (Fall 2007) In her last speech before her death in 1965, playwright Lorraine Hansberry incisively described the nature of racial bias in America. She did not speak about a fairer way of punishing the crimes of black people; rather, she identified the paramount crime in the United States as the refusal of its ruling classes to admit or acknowledge in any way... 2007
David G. Savage Court Takes Cases out of the Office 6 No. 14 ABA Journal E-Report E-Report 4 (April 6, 2007) Decisions about employees--whom to hire or fire, to promote or not--tend to be group affairs. A supervisor may manage a few workers. An office manager or site manager may, in turn, oversee those lower-level supervisors. In most companies and agencies, the human resources department oversees the process of hiring and firing employees. And at the top... 2007
Marybeth Herald Deceptive Appearances: Judges, Cognitive Bias, and Dress Codes 41 University of San Francisco Law Review 299 (Winter 2007) THERE WAS A TIME when bartending was considered men's work. Michigan even passed a law to ensure that the professional pouring of alcohol remained a male-only occupation. When women challenged the restriction as a violation of equal protection principles, the Supreme Court rebuffed the argument, applied the weak rational basis relationship standard... 2007
Leah A. Hill Do You See What I See? Reflections on How Bias Infiltrates the New York City Family Court - the Case of the Court Ordered Investigation 40 Columbia Journal of Law and Social Problems 527 (Summer 2007) I am an invisible man. No, I am not a spook like those who haunted Edgar Allan Poe; nor am I one of your Hollywood-movie ectoplasms. I am a man of substance, of flesh and bone, fiber and liquids and I might even be said to possess a mind. I am invisible, understand, simply because people refuse to see me. Like the bodiless heads you see sometimes... 2007
  Employment Law -- Title Vii -- Tenth Circuit Clarifies Causation Standard for Subordinate Bias Claims. -- Eeoc V. Bci Coca-cola Bottling Co. Of Los Angeles, 450 F.3d 476 (10th Cir. 2006), Cert. Granted, 127 S. Ct. 852 (2007). 120 Harvard Law Review 1699 (April, 2007) In order to fulfill Title VII's purpose of rooting out discrimination in employment, courts have held that employers may be liable for subordinate bias. Under this theory, also known as cat's paw or rubber-stamp liability, an employer is liable when the plaintiff's supervisor, who has no official decisionmaking authority, is biased against... 2007
Justin D. Levinson Forgotten Racial Equality: Implicit Bias, Decisionmaking, and Misremembering 57 Duke Law Journal 345 (November, 2007) In this Article, I claim that judges and jurors unknowingly misremember case facts in racially biased ways. Drawing upon studies from implicit social cognition, human memory research, and legal decisionmaking, I argue that implicit racial biases affect the way judges and jurors encode, store, and recall relevant case facts. I then explain how this... 2007
Samuel R. Bagenstos Implicit Bias, "Science," and Antidiscrimination Law 1 Harvard Law & Policy Review 477 (Summer, 2007) In recent years, scholars of antidiscrimination law have increasingly focused on the problem of implicit or unconscious bias. They have pointed to an expanding mass of evidence from experimental psychology that appears to demonstrate the pervasiveness of unconscious bias based on race, gender, and other legally protected characteristics,... 2007
Michael Vitiello Liberal Bias in the Legal Academy: Overstated and Undervalued 77 Mississippi Law Journal 507 (Winter 2007) By many accounts, universities are hotbeds of left-wing radicalism. Often fueled by overreaching administrators, right-wing bloggers and radio talk show hosts rail against the suppression of free speech by the politically correct left wing. Over the past twenty years, numerous and mostly conservative commentators have published books decrying... 2007
David Rudovsky Litigating Civil Rights Cases to Reform Racially Biased Criminal Justice Practices 39 Columbia Human Rights Law Review 97 (Fall 2007) The roadblocks to reform of racially biased and other unfair and unconstitutional practices and policies in the criminal justice system that have emerged in the era following the Supreme Court's decision in McCleskey v. Kemp are daunting. The Supreme Court has placed significant obstacles to the pursuit of racial justice and equality in the... 2007
Lenese Herbert Othello Error: Facial Profiling, Privacy, and the Suppression of Dissent 5 Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law 79 (Fall, 2007) In this article, Professor Herbert challenges the U.S. Transportation Security Administration's post-September 11, 2001, use of Paul Ekman and Wallace Friesen's Facial Action Coding System (FACS) to identify potential terrorists in American airports. Professor Herbert asserts that invasive visual examination of travelers' faces and facial... 2007
Deborah L. Brake Perceiving Subtle Sexism: Mapping the Social-psychological Forces and Legal Narratives That Obscure Gender Bias 16 Columbia Journal of Gender and Law 679 (2007) In early January of 2007, the AALS Section on Women in Legal Education held a panel discussion on Subtle Sexism in Our Everyday Lives at the AALS Annual meeting in Washington, D.C. Such discussions about the barriers facing women in the legal profession often trigger a fatigue with talking about gender and a denial by some that gender remains... 2007
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