| Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year | Key Terms |
| Tamara F. Lawson |
AWAKENING THE AMERICAN JURY: DID THE KILLING OF GEORGE FLOYD ALTER JUROR DELIBERATIONS FOREVER? |
58 Hous. L. Rev. 847 [Houston Law Review] (Symposium, 2021) |
In the summer of 2020, the witnessing of George Floyd's death triggered an outpouring of public expression far beyond other cases in modern times. While the experience led some to advocate for reform and participate in antiracism rallies, marches, and campaigns, it also forced many others into internal reflection, awareness, and awakening to the... |
2021 |
|
| Anna Hales |
BEYOND BORDERS: HOW PRINCIPLES OF PRISON ABOLITION CAN SHAPE THE FUTURE OF IMMIGRATION REFORM |
11 UC Irvine L. Rev. 1415 [UC Irvine Law Review] (August, 2021) |
This Note presents prison abolition theory and discusses how principles of abolition can be applied in the context of immigration enforcement and reform. In doing so, this Note argues for an open borders approach to immigration, presents several viewpoints on what such a regime may look like, and discusses how this vision can shape immigration... |
2021 |
|
| Kate Bass |
BEYOND ELECTIONS: ABOLITIONIST LESSONS FOR THE LAW OF DEMOCRACY |
169 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1901 [University of Pennsylvania Law Review] (June, 2021) |
The prison abolition movement, building on a long history of abolition in the United States, is articulating a vision of democracy that centers the lived experiences of people, particularly marginalized communities. Requiring more than legal standing and a secure right to vote, the abolitionist view of democracy calls for economic and civic... |
2021 |
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| Goldburn P. Maynard, Jr. |
BLACK QUEERS IN EVERYDAY LIFE |
30 Tul. J. L. & Sexuality 139 [Tulane Journal of Law & Sexuality] (2021) |
The rule is that no matter what you do in your artistic expression you are never, ever allowed to upset the alphabet people. You know who I mean. Those people who took twenty percent of the alphabet for themselves. When Dave Chappelle used the words quoted above to suggest that queers were all powerful, I pointed out on social media that these... |
2021 |
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| Goldburn P. Maynard, Jr. |
BLACK QUEERS IN EVERYDAY LIFE |
30 Tul. J. L. & Sexuality 139 [Tulane Journal of Law & Sexuality] (2021) |
The rule is that no matter what you do in your artistic expression you are never, ever allowed to upset the alphabet people. You know who I mean. Those people who took twenty percent of the alphabet for themselves. When Dave Chappelle used the words quoted above to suggest that queers were all powerful, I pointed out on social media that these... |
2021 |
|
| Daniel S. Harawa |
BLACK REDEMPTION |
48 Fordham Urb. L.J. 701 [Fordham Urban Law Journal] (March, 2021) |
Introduction. 701 I. Revamping the Gross Disproportionality Standard for Excessive Punishment. 703 II. Rethinking Juvenile Life Without Parole. 710 III. Revisiting Racial Disparities in Capital Punishment. 714 Conclusion: The Anti-Racist Eighth Amendment. 718 |
2021 |
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| Natalie P. Byfield |
BLACKNESS AND EXISTENTIAL CRIMES IN THE MODERN RACIAL STATE |
53 Conn. L. Rev. 619 [Connecticut Law Review] (September, 2021) |
This Essay presents the concept of existential crime. It argues that our notion of crime has conflated acts that challenge the racial premise on which a state is founded with acts that breach what Karim Murji (2009) calls norms of propriety. It argues that the conflation of these different types of social acts into our conceptualization of... |
2021 |
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| Mary Anne Franks |
BOOK TALK: THE CULT OF THE CONSTITUTION |
13 ConLawNOW 33 [ConLawNOW] (2021) |
Professor Franks delivered the 2020 Constitution Day lecture at The Center for Constitutional Law based on these remarks. When we think of fundamentalists, we often think of religious fundamentalists. People who are zealously attached to a particular interpretation of an idea or text--one that just so happens to serve their world view--and who... |
2021 |
|
| Mary Anne Franks |
BOOK TALK: THE CULT OF THE CONSTITUTION |
13 ConLawNOW 33 [ConLawNOW] (2021) |
Professor Franks delivered the 2020 Constitution Day lecture at The Center for Constitutional Law based on these remarks. When we think of fundamentalists, we often think of religious fundamentalists. People who are zealously attached to a particular interpretation of an idea or text--one that just so happens to serve their world view--and who... |
2021 |
|
| Jordan Martin |
BREONNA TAYLOR: TRANSFORMING A HASHTAG INTO DEFUNDING THE POLICE |
111 J. Crim. L. & Criminology 995 [Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology] (Fall, 2021) |
How can modern policing be reformed to address police violence against Black women when it can occur at no fault of their own and end with a shower of bullets in the middle of the night while within the sanctity of their own home? What is accomplished when her name is said but justice is never achieved? What good does it do when her story is... |
2021 |
|
| Kevin R. Johnson |
BRINGING RACIAL JUSTICE TO IMMIGRATION LAW |
116 Nw. U. L. Rev. Online 1 [Northwestern University Law Review Online] (5/13/2021) |
Abstract--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 |
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| Gowri J. Krishna, Kelly Pfeifer, Dana Thompson |
CARING FOR THE SOULS OF OUR STUDENTS: THE EVOLUTION OF A COMMUNITY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CLINIC DURING TURBULENT TIMES |
28 Clinical L. Rev. 243 [Clinical Law Review] (Fall, 2021) |
Community Economic Development (CED) clinicians regularly address issues surrounding economic, racial, and social justice, as those are the core principles motivating their work to promote vibrant, diverse, and sustainable communities. When COVID-19 arrived, and heightened attention to police brutality and racial injustice ensued, CED clinicians... |
2021 |
|
| Mary E. Carney, J.D. |
Cause of Action for Violation of Constitutional Rights by Law Enforcement Officers Using Nonlethal or Less Lethal Weapons |
99 COA2d 223 [Causes of Action Second Series] (2021) |
In protests throughout the country, law enforcement officials have attempted to control groups of protesters through the use of rubber bullets, tear gas, flashbangs, beanbag rounds, and other implements deemed to be nonlethal or less lethal. Although they are called nonlethal or less lethal weapons, their use can result in serious injuries and... |
2021 |
|
| Don Corbett |
CHANGING THE GAME: GEORGE FLOYD, ATHLETE PROTEST, AND THE COUNTERSPEECH DOCTRINE |
98 U. Det. Mercy L. Rev. 197 [University of Detroit Mercy Law Review] (Winter, 2021) |
On May 25, 2020, George Floyd, an African American man, died at the hands of four police officers in Minneapolis, MN. A convenience store employee believed Floyd, who was unarmed, attempted to use counterfeit money to pay for goods and called 911. Four officers from the Minneapolis Police Department responded, and within thirty minutes, Floyd was... |
2021 |
|
| Alan K. Chen |
CHEAP SPEECH CREATION |
54 U.C. Davis L. Rev. 2405 [U.C. Davis Law Review] (June, 2021) |
As we look back on Professor Eugene Volokh's predictive article about cheap speech, it is worth examining what other elements of the speech and media landscape, as well as the supporting legal infrastructure, have changed over that same period. This Essay focuses on the substantial reduction in the cost of speech creation, as opposed to... |
2021 |
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CHEVRON CORP. (SISTERS OF ST. FRANCIS)) |
SEC No Action Ltrs. WSB File No. 0405202107 [SEC No Action Letters] (2021) |
WSB File No. 0405202107 WSB Subject Category: 77 Public Availability Date: March 30, 2021. Prepared By: Gibson Dunn References: Securities Exchange Act of 1934, Section 14(a); Rule 14a-8 ________________Washington Service Bureau Summary________________ January 18, 2021 VIA E-MAIL Office of Chief Counsel Division of Corporation Finance Securities... |
2021 |
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| |
CHUBB LTD. |
SEC No Action Ltrs. WSB File No. 0329202115 [SEC No Action Letters] (2021) |
WSB File No. 0329202115 WSB Subject Category: 77 Public Availability Date: March 26, 2021 References: Securities Exchange Act of 1934, Section 14(a); Rule 14a-8 ________________Washington Service Bureau Summary________________ January 14, 2021 Via Email Shareholderproposals@sec.gov Securities and Exchange Commission Division of Corporation Finance... |
2021 |
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| Woodworth Winmill |
COERCION, DEFIANCE AND COMPETING AUDIENCES: UNDERSTANDING THE MEANING OF CONTEMPT AND SANCTIONS TO "TRUE BELIEVER" LITIGANTS |
126 Penn St. L. Rev. Penn Statim 10 [Penn State Law Review Penn Statim] (2021) |
Courts have substantial powers to punish entities that disobey their orders. However, despite potentially severe repercussions, litigants with intensely held ideologies--what this Article calls true believer litigants--sometimes choose to defy court orders, which leads to sanctions and contempt charges. This Article argues that, rather than... |
2021 |
|
| Woodworth Winmill |
COERCION, DEFIANCE AND COMPETING AUDIENCES: UNDERSTANDING THE MEANING OF CONTEMPT AND SANCTIONS TO "TRUE BELIEVER" LITIGANTS |
126 Penn St. L. Rev. Penn Statim 10 [Penn State Law Review Penn Statim] (2021) |
Courts have substantial powers to punish entities that disobey their orders. However, despite potentially severe repercussions, litigants with intensely held ideologies--what this Article calls true believer litigants--sometimes choose to defy court orders, which leads to sanctions and contempt charges. This Article argues that, rather than... |
2021 |
|
| Catherine Powell |
COLOR OF COVID AND GENDER OF COVID: ESSENTIAL WORKERS, NOT DISPOSABLE PEOPLE |
33 Yale J.L. & Feminism 1 [Yale Journal of Law & Feminism] (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 |
|
| Catherine Powell |
COLOR OF COVID AND GENDER OF COVID: ESSENTIAL WORKERS, NOT DISPOSABLE PEOPLE |
33 Yale J.L. & Feminism 1 [Yale Journal of Law & Feminism] (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 |
|
| Jennifer Aronsohn |
COMMUNITY CLAIM OF RIGHT |
51 Urb. Law. 135 [Urban Lawyer] (2021) |
Vacant properties are more than an eyesore or a sign of neighborhood blight: they contribute to wider social and legal problems for residents and are a significant expense for cities. Cities across the nation acquire and hold vacant and tax foreclosure properties to abate public nuisances and protect communities from criminal activity. Even though... |
2021 |
|
| Jennifer Aronsohn |
COMMUNITY CLAIM OF RIGHT |
51 Urb. Law. 135 [Urban Lawyer] (2021) |
Vacant properties are more than an eyesore or a sign of neighborhood blight: they contribute to wider social and legal problems for residents and are a significant expense for cities. Cities across the nation acquire and hold vacant and tax foreclosure properties to abate public nuisances and protect communities from criminal activity. Even though... |
2021 |
|
| Matthew B. Kugler , Mariana Oliver |
CONSTITUTIONAL PANDEMIC SURVEILLANCE |
111 J. Crim. L. & Criminology 909 [Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology] (Fall, 2021) |
How do people view governmental pandemic surveillance? And how can their views inform courts considering the constitutionality of digital monitoring programs aimed at containing the spread of a highly contagious diseases? We measure the perceived intrusiveness of pandemic surveillance through two nationally representative surveys of Americans. Our... |
2021 |
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Cori Bush: Marjorie Taylor Greene didn't take back what she said about me |
(2/5/2021) |
Rep. Cori Bush (D-Mo.) on Thursday acknowledged that while Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) apologized to congressional colleagues this week over her past controversial statements, Greene didn't take back or regret claims directed at Bush. |
2021 |
|
| Helen Hershkoff, Arthur R. Miller |
COURTS AND CIVIL JUSTICE IN THE TIME OF COVID: EMERGING TRENDS AND QUESTIONS TO ASK |
23 N.Y.U. J. Legis. & Pub. Pol'y 321 [NYU Journal of Legislation and Public Policy] (2021) |
COVID-19 is a highly infectious virus that has caused worldwide disruption, large numbers of deaths, and economic dislocation. Since its appearance in 2019, containment of COVID-19 has depended, in part, upon forms of social distancing that have strained and made impossible traditional forms of judicial and legal practice. This Article focuses on... |
2021 |
|
| Helen Hershkoff, Arthur R. Miller |
COURTS AND CIVIL JUSTICE IN THE TIME OF COVID: EMERGING TRENDS AND QUESTIONS TO ASK |
23 N.Y.U. J. Legis. & Pub. Pol'y 321 [NYU Journal of Legislation and Public Policy] (2021) |
COVID-19 is a highly infectious virus that has caused worldwide disruption, large numbers of deaths, and economic dislocation. Since its appearance in 2019, containment of COVID-19 has depended, in part, upon forms of social distancing that have strained and made impossible traditional forms of judicial and legal practice. This Article focuses on... |
2021 |
|
| E. Tendayi Achiume , Devon W. Carbado |
CRITICAL RACE THEORY MEETS THIRD WORLD APPROACHES TO INTERNATIONAL LAW |
67 UCLA L. Rev. 1462 [UCLA Law Review] (April, 2021) |
By and large, Critical Race Theory (CRT) and Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL) exist in separate epistemic universes. This Article argues that the borders between these two fields are unwarranted. Specifically, the Article articulates six parallel ways in which CRT and TWAIL have exposed and challenged the racial dimensions of... |
2021 |
|
| Linda S. Greene |
CRITICAL RACE THEORY: ORIGINS, PERMUTATIONS, AND CURRENT QUERIES |
2021 Wis. L. Rev. 259 [Wisconsin Law Review] (2021) |
Critical Race Theory (CRT) emerged from two movements in legal education. One was the Critical Legal Studies movement, which fostered a power critique about American law and emerged at the University of Wisconsin in 1977 and continued through meetings and scholarship until about 1992. The second movement, which came to be known as Critical Race... |
2021 |
|
| Linda S. Greene |
CRITICAL RACE THEORY: ORIGINS, PERMUTATIONS, AND CURRENT QUERIES |
2021 Wis. L. Rev. 259 [Wisconsin Law Review] (2021) |
Critical Race Theory (CRT) emerged from two movements in legal education. One was the Critical Legal Studies movement, which fostered a power critique about American law and emerged at the University of Wisconsin in 1977 and continued through meetings and scholarship until about 1992. The second movement, which came to be known as Critical Race... |
2021 |
|
| Frédéric Gilles Sourgens |
CURIOUS UNILATERALISM |
13 Fed. Cts. L. Rev. 113 [Federal Courts Law Review] (2021) |
Introduction. 114 I. A Working Definition of Unilateralism. 119 II. Unilateralism as Assault on Republican Government. 124 A. The Procedural Problem of Unilateralism. 125 B. The Substantive Problem of Unilateralism. 127 III. Vermeule's Defense of Unilateralism. 130 IV. A Breakdown of Public Reason. 137 A. Two Accounts of Public Reason. 138 B. The... |
2021 |
|
| Frédéric Gilles Sourgens |
CURIOUS UNILATERALISM |
13 Fed. Cts. L. Rev. 113 [Federal Courts Law Review] (2021) |
Introduction. 114 I. A Working Definition of Unilateralism. 119 II. Unilateralism as Assault on Republican Government. 124 A. The Procedural Problem of Unilateralism. 125 B. The Substantive Problem of Unilateralism. 127 III. Vermeule's Defense of Unilateralism. 130 IV. A Breakdown of Public Reason. 137 A. Two Accounts of Public Reason. 138 B. The... |
2021 |
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| W. Kip Viscusi , Scott Jeffrey |
DAMAGES TO DETER POLICE SHOOTINGS |
2021 U. Ill. L. Rev. 741 [University of Illinois Law Review] (2021) |
Many fatal shootings by police are not warranted. These shootings impose losses on the victims and their families and reflect the failure of existing administrative and legal restraints to deter these unwarranted shootings. This Article proposes a revamping of existing incentives to both provide more adequate compensation to the victims' families... |
2021 |
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| W. Kip Viscusi , Scott Jeffrey |
DAMAGES TO DETER POLICE SHOOTINGS |
2021 U. Ill. L. Rev. 741 [University of Illinois Law Review] (2021) |
Many fatal shootings by police are not warranted. These shootings impose losses on the victims and their families and reflect the failure of existing administrative and legal restraints to deter these unwarranted shootings. This Article proposes a revamping of existing incentives to both provide more adequate compensation to the victims' families... |
2021 |
|
| Russell Stetler |
DEATH PENALTY KEYNOTE: WHY MITIGATION MATTERS, NOW AND FOR THE FUTURE |
61 Santa Clara L. Rev. 699 [Santa Clara Law Review] (2021) |
This Article examines the current state of the death penalty in California and nationally through the lens of mitigation--the empathy-evoking evidence that has been a constitutional requirement to ensure individualized sentencing in the era of the modern American death penalty. It situates the discussion in the context of the extraordinary events... |
2021 |
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| Russell Stetler |
DEATH PENALTY KEYNOTE: WHY MITIGATION MATTERS, NOW AND FOR THE FUTURE |
61 Santa Clara L. Rev. 699 [Santa Clara Law Review] (2021) |
This Article examines the current state of the death penalty in California and nationally through the lens of mitigation--the empathy-evoking evidence that has been a constitutional requirement to ensure individualized sentencing in the era of the modern American death penalty. It situates the discussion in the context of the extraordinary events... |
2021 |
|
| Caleb L. Green |
DEFENDING THE RIGHT TO PROTEST THROUGH INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW |
24-JAN NBA Nat'l B. Ass'n Mag. 18 [NBA National Bar Association Magazine] (January, 2021) |
The death of George Floyd has resulted in a recent international outcry for social and criminal justice reform, sparking a wave of creative protests and artistic expressions. Namely, protestors have embraced non-traditional means to amplify their voices and manifest their right to protest through street murals and related artworks. For example,... |
2021 |
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| David J. Oliveiri, M.B.A., J.D. |
Defense of good faith in action for damages against law enforcement official under 42 U.S.C.A. § 1983, providing for liability of person who, under color of law, subjects another to deprivation of rights |
61 A.L.R. Fed. 7 (Originally published in 1983) [American Law Reports ALR Federal] (2021) |
Collected and analyzed in this annotation are those cases in which the federal courts have considered questions related to the availability or establishment by law enforcement officials of a defense of good faith in actions seeking damages under 42 U.S.C.A. § 1983, which provides for liability of persons who, under color of law, subject another to... |
2021 |
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| Mark Goldfeder |
DEFINING ANTISEMITISM |
52 Seton Hall L. Rev. 119 [Seton Hall Law Review] (2021) |
Some people hate Jews. Fine, alright it's been done. I mean, that's part of my problem with it. Could you hate somebody new? -Gary Gulman Antisemitic harassment is illegal, but without a standard definition of what antisemitism includes, that idea is almost meaningless. That is why state legislatures and university administrators across the... |
2021 |
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| Mark Goldfeder |
DEFINING ANTISEMITISM |
52 Seton Hall L. Rev. 119 [Seton Hall Law Review] (2021) |
Some people hate Jews. Fine, alright it's been done. I mean, that's part of my problem with it. Could you hate somebody new? -Gary Gulman Antisemitic harassment is illegal, but without a standard definition of what antisemitism includes, that idea is almost meaningless. That is why state legislatures and university administrators across the... |
2021 |
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Democrats seek to keep spotlight on Capitol siege |
(4/24/2021) |
Democrats are scrambling to keep the Jan. 6 insurrection in the public eye, pressing Republicans to back a months-long investigation into the deadly rampage that would shine a spotlight on former President Trump's role in the attack. |
2021 |
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| Katrina Lee |
DISCRIMINATION AS ANTI-ETHICAL: ACHIEVING SYSTEMIC CHANGE IN LARGE LAW FIRMS |
98 Denv. L. Rev. 581 [Denver Law Review] (Spring, 2021) |
As protests calling for racial justice erupted across the country in 2020, many large law firms issued compelling statements acknowledging systemic inequities and bias. During the preceding few decades, firms had already expressed their commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion; some had launched well-publicized diversity initiatives. Still,... |
2021 |
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| Bianca Velez |
DO THE POLICE PROTECT AND SERVE ALL PEOPLE IN THE UNITED STATES?: A SURVEY OF THE PROBLEMS WITHIN MODERN POLICING AND SOLUTIONS TO ENSURE THE POLICE PROTECT AND SERVE US ALL |
55 U.S.F. L. Rev. 421 [University of San Francisco Law Review] (2021) |
ON MAY 25TH, 2020, MINNEAPOLIS POLICE responded to a call from a convenience store employee alleging that a Black man named George Floyd had made a purchase with a counterfeit twenty-dollar bill. Four police officers subsequently detained Mr. Floyd, and within seventeen minutes of the first squad car arriving at the scene, Mr. Floyd was handcuffed,... |
2021 |
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| Bianca Velez |
DO THE POLICE PROTECT AND SERVE ALL PEOPLE IN THE UNITED STATES?: A SURVEY OF THE PROBLEMS WITHIN MODERN POLICING AND SOLUTIONS TO ENSURE THE POLICE PROTECT AND SERVE US ALL |
55 U.S.F. L. Rev. 421 [University of San Francisco Law Review] (2021) |
ON MAY 25TH, 2020, MINNEAPOLIS POLICE responded to a call from a convenience store employee alleging that a Black man named George Floyd had made a purchase with a counterfeit twenty-dollar bill. Four police officers subsequently detained Mr. Floyd, and within seventeen minutes of the first squad car arriving at the scene, Mr. Floyd was handcuffed,... |
2021 |
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| Corynn Wilson |
DOMESTIC TERRORISM SHOULD BE A CRIME: FIGHTING WHITE SUPREMACIST VIOLENCE LIKE CONGRESS FOUGHT "ANIMAL ENTERPRISE TERRORISM" |
58 Hous. L. Rev. 749 [Houston Law Review] (Winter, 2021) |
White supremacist violence has steadily increased in recent years, leading to hundreds of senseless murders in the United States. The shooting epidemic in the United States has caused cyclical firearm regulation debates and calls to classify the murderers as domestic terrorists. Currently, there is no way to charge mass shooters as domestic... |
2021 |
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| Ana Pajar Blinder |
DON'T (TOWER) DUMP ON FREEDOM OF ASSOCIATION: PROTEST SURVEILLANCE UNDER THE FIRST AND FOURTH AMENDMENTS |
111 J. Crim. L. & Criminology 961 [Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology] (Fall, 2021) |
Government surveillance is ubiquitous in the United States and can range from the seemingly innocuous to intensely intrusive. Recently, the surveillance of protestors--such as those protesting against George Floyd's murder by a police officer--has received widespread attention in the media and in activist circles, but has yet to be successfully... |
2021 |
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| Jenny B. Davis |
DOUBLE JEOPARDY! |
107-JUL A.B.A. J. 12 [ABA Journal] (June/July, 2021) |
If Who is Zach Newkirk? ever became an answer to a Jeopardy! question, writers for the legendary television quiz show would have plenty of angles to choose from. For example, they could go with this: This Washington, D.C.-based voting rights lawyer, a six-time Jeopardy! champion in 2020, took home nearly $125,000 in winnings. Or this one: This... |
2021 |
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| Cesar Hernandez-Villanueva |
DRESS CODE AND RELIGIOUS ACCOMMODATIONS THROUGH THE LENSE OF EEOC v. KROGER |
22 Rutgers J. L. & Religion 161 [Rutgers Journal of Law & Religion] (2021) |
Lawson began working for Kroger ten years ago at the deli department, where she worked until her termination two years ago. Lawson's co-worker Rickerd began her employment with Kroger goods around the same time as a cashier and file maintenance clerk, and she worked in these positions until her termination two years ago. Both Rickerd and Lawson... |
2021 |
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| Cesar Hernandez-Villanueva |
DRESS CODE AND RELIGIOUS ACCOMMODATIONS THROUGH THE LENSE OF EEOC v. KROGER |
22 Rutgers J. L. & Religion 161 [Rutgers Journal of Law & Religion] (2021) |
Lawson began working for Kroger ten years ago at the deli department, where she worked until her termination two years ago. Lawson's co-worker Rickerd began her employment with Kroger goods around the same time as a cashier and file maintenance clerk, and she worked in these positions until her termination two years ago. Both Rickerd and Lawson... |
2021 |
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| M. L. Cross |
Eligibility of women as jurors |
157 A.L.R. 461 (Originally published in 1945) [American Law Reports ALR] (2021) |
The reported case for this annotation is State v. Emery, 224 N.C. 581, 31 S.E.2d 858, 157 A.L.R. 441 (1944). |
2021 |
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