AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearKey Terms
Fady. J.G. Aoun THE BELATED AWAKENING OF THE PUBLIC SPHERE TO RACIST BRANDING AND RACIST STEREOTYPES IN TRADEMARKS 61 IDEA: L. Rev. Franklin Pierce Center for Intell. Prop. 545 [IDEA®: The Law Review of the Franklin Pierce Center for Intellectual Property] (2021) *Readers are advised that this Article contains highly offensive, demeaning, and derogatory representations of Indigenous Australians, Native Americans, Black and ethnic minorities. While these may cause serious offense, they have been included here to provide a more accurate account of the racist trademarks and racist branding circulating in... 2021  
Shelley Welton THE BOUNDS OF ENERGY LAW 62 B.C. L. Rev. 2339 [Boston College Law Review] (October, 2021) Introduction. 2341 I. A Materialist Account of the Field and Its Failings. 2347 A. New Energy Sources and Uses Emerge: 1850-1930. 2348 B. New Deal Legal Gap-Filling and the Mid-Century Détente: 1930-1970. 2353 C. The (Partial) Collapse of the Consensus: 1970-2000. 2357 D. 1990s--2020: Energy Law Meets Climate Change, First Generation. 2361 II. The... 2021  
Eliana Machefsky THE CALIFORNIA ACT TO SAVE [BLACK] LIVES? RACE, POLICING, AND THE INTEREST-CONVERGENCE DILEMMA IN THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA 109 Calif. L. Rev. 1959 [California Law Review] (October, 2021) In January 2020, the California Act to Save Lives became law, raising the state's standard for justifiable police homicide to cover only those police homicides that were necessary in defense of human life. Although the Act was introduced in the wake of protests against officer-involved shootings of Black and Latinx people, the Act itself does not... 2021  
Robert M. Bloom , Nina Labovich THE CHALLENGE OF DETERRING BAD POLICE BEHAVIOR: IMPLEMENTING REFORMS THAT HOLD POLICE ACCOUNTABLE 71 Case W. Res. L. Rev. 923 [Case Western Reserve Law Review] (Spring, 2021) Systemic racism in the United States is pervasive. It runs through every aspect of society, from healthcare to education. Changing all of the parts of society touched by racism is necessary; however, this Article does not provide a cure for systemic racism. It seeks to address a byproduct of this racism: police brutality. Over and over, headlines... 2021  
Timothy Zick THE COSTS OF DISSENT: PROTEST AND CIVIL LIABILITIES 89 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 233 [George Washington Law Review] (March, 2021) This Article examines the civil costs and liabilities that apply to individuals who organize, participate in, and support protest activities. Costs ranging from permit fees to punitive damages significantly affect First Amendment speech, assembly, and petition rights. A variety of common law and statutory civil claims also apply to protest... 2021  
Sara E. Yates THE DIGITIZATION OF THE CARCERAL STATE: THE TROUBLING NARRATIVE AROUND POLICE USAGE OF FACIAL RECOGNITION TECHNOLOGY 19 Colo. Tech. L.J. 483 [Colorado Technology Law Journal] (Summer, 2021) The technological veil conceals the reproduction of inequality and enslavement. -Herbert Marcuse This Note applies a racial social control frame to the problem of facial recognition technology (FRT), showing how this technology may entrench preexisting inequalities and disparate treatment of people of color by law enforcement. Police usage of FRT... 2021  
Maryam Jamshidi THE DISCRIMINATORY EXECUTIVE AND THE RULE OF LAW 92 U. Colo. L. Rev. 77 [University of Colorado Law Review] (Winter, 2021) Today, the executive enjoys unprecedented power, particularly in the area of national security. By and large, this authority is not meaningfully restrained by Congress or the courts. However, some scholars argue that the presidency is still kept in check by the rule of law and politics. According to this view, substantive and procedural laws and... 2021  
Janel A. George THE END OF "PERFORMATIVE SCHOOL DESEGREGATION": REIMAGINING THE FEDERAL ROLE IN DISMANTLING SEGREGATED EDUCATION 22 Rutgers Race & L. Rev. 189 [Rutgers Race & the Law Review] (2021) Research demonstrates that current trends of racial segregation in public education rival rates that preceded the Brown v. Board of Education ruling. The social and economic consequences of segregation are profound. Although these consequences are well known, little has been done to dismantle school segregation. While federal courts have espoused... 2021  
Janel A. George THE END OF "PERFORMATIVE SCHOOL DESEGREGATION": REIMAGINING THE FEDERAL ROLE IN DISMANTLING SEGREGATED EDUCATION 22 Rutgers Race & L. Rev. 189 [Rutgers Race & the Law Review] (2021) Research demonstrates that current trends of racial segregation in public education rival rates that preceded the Brown v. Board of Education ruling. The social and economic consequences of segregation are profound. Although these consequences are well known, little has been done to dismantle school segregation. While federal courts have espoused... 2021  
Andrew Lanham THE GEOPOLITICS OF AMERICAN POLICING 119 Mich. L. Rev. 1411 [Michigan Law Review] (April, 2021) Badges Without Borders: How Global Counterinsurgency Transformed American Policing. By Stuart Schrader. Oakland: University of California Press. 2019. Pp. xi, 393. Cloth, $85; paper, $29.95 On July 9, 2016, Jonathan Bachman, a freelance photographer for Reuters, snapped a photograph of Ieshia Evans, a nurse from Pennsylvania, as she confronted the... 2021  
Tatiana Hyman THE HARMS OF RACIST ONLINE HATE SPEECH IN THE POST-COVID WORKING WORLD: EXPANDING EMPLOYEE PROTECTIONS 89 Fordham L. Rev. 1553 [Fordham Law Review] (March, 2021) In one year, the COVID-19 pandemic and egregious incidents of racial violence have created significant shifts in the United States's workplace culture and social climate. Many employers are transitioning employees to long-term or permanent remote work, and conversations about racial justice are more pervasive and divisive, especially on social... 2021  
Zinaida Miller THE INJUSTICES OF TIME: RIGHTS, RACE, REDISTRIBUTION, AND RESPONSIBILITY 52 Colum. Hum. Rts. L. Rev. 647 [Columbia Human Rights Law Review] (Winter, 2021) Resurgent debates in U.S. law and politics over reparations and racialized inequality reflect what this Article argues is a significant transnational legal phenomenon: courts, policymakers, and social justice advocates mobilizing pasts of racial and ethnic violence and dispossession to justify competing rules for the distribution of resources and... 2021  
Nadine Strossen THE INTERDEPENDENCE OF RACIAL JUSTICE AND FREE SPEECH FOR RACISTS 1 J. Free Speech L. 51 [Journal of Free Speech Law] (2021) The ACLU is committed to the fundamental rights to equality and justice embodied in the Fourteenth Amendment and civil rights laws .. We are determined to fight racism in all its forms .. We are also firmly committed to fighting bigotry and oppression against other marginalized groups .. And the ACLU understands that speech that denigrates such... 2021  
Nadine Strossen THE INTERDEPENDENCE OF RACIAL JUSTICE AND FREE SPEECH FOR RACISTS [Journal of Free Speech Law] (2021) The ACLU is committed to the fundamental rights to equality and justice embodied in the Fourteenth Amendment and civil rights laws .. We are determined to fight racism in all its forms .. We are also firmly committed to fighting bigotry and oppression against other marginalized groups .. And the ACLU understands that speech that denigrates such... 2021  
Kenneth R. Davis THE INVISIBLE BAN: NEGLIGENT DISPARATE IMPACT 70 Am. U. L. Rev. 1879 [American University Law Review] (August, 2021) Title VII provides two primary anti-discrimination theories: disparate treatment and disparate impact. Disparate-treatment law prohibits intentional employment discrimination against a member of a protected class. Disparate-impact law imposes strict liability on employers for using facially neutral employment practices that have a... 2021  
Ion Meyn THE INVISIBLE RULES THAT GOVERN USE OF FORCE 2021 Wis. L. Rev. 593 [Wisconsin Law Review] (2021) Police departments reject the idea that use of force can be governed by hard and fast rules. Under this rule-resistant view, using rules to regulate use of force would be dangerous and in practice impossible, as officers must retain broad discretion to respond to ever-changing conditions in the field. Despite the prevalence of this view, the... 2021  
Ion Meyn THE INVISIBLE RULES THAT GOVERN USE OF FORCE 2021 Wis. L. Rev. 593 [Wisconsin Law Review] (2021) Police departments reject the idea that use of force can be governed by hard and fast rules. Under this rule-resistant view, using rules to regulate use of force would be dangerous and in practice impossible, as officers must retain broad discretion to respond to ever-changing conditions in the field. Despite the prevalence of this view, the... 2021  
Courtney Hinkle THE MODERN LIE DETECTOR: AI-POWERED AFFECT SCREENING AND THE EMPLOYEE POLYGRAPH PROTECTION ACT (EPPA) 109 Geo. L.J. 1201 [Georgetown Law Journal] (April, 2021) Predictive algorithms are increasingly being used to screen and sort the modern workforce. The delegation of hiring decisions to AI-powered software systems, however, will have a profound impact on the privacy of individuals. This Note builds on the foundational work of legal scholars studying the growing trend of algorithmic decisionmaking in... 2021  
Anthony Michael Kreis THE NEW REDEEMERS 55 Ga. L. Rev. 1483 [Georgia Law Review] (Summer, 2021) This Article is about the long arc of a Second Redemption. A new life to the politics of racial grievance surfaced in the wake of a diversifying polity, a decline of rural power, and a Black man's rise to the American presidency. And that reinvigorated force was the linchpin of Donald Trump's ascendency to power. Trump was a part of a broader... 2021  
Aaron Tang THE RADICAL-INCREMENTAL CHANGE DEBATE, RACIAL JUSTICE, AND THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF TEACHERS' CHOICE 169 U. PA. L. Rev. Online 186 [University of Pennsylvania Law Review Online] (2021) L1-2Introduction . L3186 I. Teachers, Schools, and (Suburban) Parents. 193 A. Teachers. 193 B. Schools. 195 1. Integration. 195 2. School Choice. 197 C. Suburban Parents. 198 II. The Political Economy of Teachers' Choice. 200 A. Teachers' Choice. 201 B. The Political Economy of Teachers' Choice. 205 C. The Political Economy of Teachers' Unions. 207... 2021  
Aaron Tang THE RADICAL-INCREMENTAL CHANGE DEBATE, RACIAL JUSTICE, AND THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF TEACHERS' CHOICE 169 U. PA. L. Rev. Online 186 [University of Pennsylvania Law Review Online] (2021) L1-2Introduction . L3186 I. Teachers, Schools, and (Suburban) Parents. 193 A. Teachers. 193 B. Schools. 195 1. Integration. 195 2. School Choice. 197 C. Suburban Parents. 198 II. The Political Economy of Teachers' Choice. 200 A. Teachers' Choice. 201 B. The Political Economy of Teachers' Choice. 205 C. The Political Economy of Teachers' Unions. 207... 2021  
Mira Edmonds THE REINCORPORATION OF PRISONERS INTO THE BODY POLITIC: ELIMINATING THE MEDICAID INMATE EXCLUSION POLICY 28 Geo. J. on Poverty L. & Pol'y 279 [Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy] (Spring, 2021) Incarcerated people are excluded from Medicaid coverage due to a provision in the Social Security Act Amendments of 1965 known as the Medicaid Inmate Exclusion Policy (MIEP). This Article argues for the elimination of the MIEP as an anachronistic remnant of an earlier era prior to the massive growth of the U.S. incarcerated population and the... 2021  
John D. Bessler THE RULE OF LAW: A NECESSARY PILLAR OF FREE AND DEMOCRATIC SOCIETIES FOR PROTECTING HUMAN RIGHTS 61 Santa Clara L. Rev. 467 [Santa Clara Law Review] (2021) This essay traces the history and development of the concept of the Rule of Law from ancient times through the present. It describes the elements of the Rule of Law and its importance to the protection of human rights in a variety of contexts, including under domestic and international law. From ancient Greece and Rome to the Enlightenment, and... 2021  
John D. Bessler THE RULE OF LAW: A NECESSARY PILLAR OF FREE AND DEMOCRATIC SOCIETIES FOR PROTECTING HUMAN RIGHTS 61 Santa Clara L. Rev. 467 [Santa Clara Law Review] (2021) This essay traces the history and development of the concept of the Rule of Law from ancient times through the present. It describes the elements of the Rule of Law and its importance to the protection of human rights in a variety of contexts, including under domestic and international law. From ancient Greece and Rome to the Enlightenment, and... 2021  
Tung Yin THE TIME IS NOW: CRIMINAL JUSTICE REFORM IN THE WAKE OF GEORGE FLOYD'S KILLING 25 Lewis & Clark L. Rev. 397 [Lewis & Clark Law Review] (2021) On May 25, 2020, an encounter between George Floyd (Black) and Minneapolis police officers Derek Chauvin (white), Tou Thao (Asian), J. Alexander Keung (Black), and Thomas Lane (white)--most of which was recorded by numerous bystanders--turned deadly. After arresting Floyd for allegedly passing a counterfeit bill, Keung and Lane tried to put Floyd... 2021  
Tung Yin THE TIME IS NOW: CRIMINAL JUSTICE REFORM IN THE WAKE OF GEORGE FLOYD'S KILLING 25 Lewis & Clark L. Rev. 397 [Lewis & Clark Law Review] (2021) On May 25, 2020, an encounter between George Floyd (Black) and Minneapolis police officers Derek Chauvin (white), Tou Thao (Asian), J. Alexander Keung (Black), and Thomas Lane (white)--most of which was recorded by numerous bystanders--turned deadly. After arresting Floyd for allegedly passing a counterfeit bill, Keung and Lane tried to put Floyd... 2021  
Angela Onwuachi-Willig THE TRAUMA OF AWAKENING TO RACISM: DID THE TRAGIC KILLING OF GEORGE FLOYD RESULT IN CULTURAL TRAUMA FOR WHITES? 58 Hous. L. Rev. 817 [Houston Law Review] (Symposium, 2021) The act of witnessing the killing of George Floyd, a forty-six-year-old, African-American father, brother, partner, and son, at the hands of the police caused many white individuals to experience an epiphany about racism, specifically structural racism, in the United States. Following the horrific killing of George Floyd, many white people began to... 2021  
Angela Onwuachi-Willig THE TRAUMA OF AWAKENING TO RACISM: DID THE TRAGIC KILLING OF GEORGE FLOYD RESULT IN CULTURAL TRAUMA FOR WHITES? 58 Hous. L. Rev. 817 [Houston Law Review] (Symposium, 2021) The act of witnessing the killing of George Floyd, a forty-six-year-old, African-American father, brother, partner, and son, at the hands of the police caused many white individuals to experience an epiphany about racism, specifically structural racism, in the United States. Following the horrific killing of George Floyd, many white people began to... 2021  
Kiel Brennan-Marquez, Darryl K. Brown, Stephen E. Henderson THE TRIAL LOTTERY 56 Wake Forest L. Rev. 1 [Wake Forest Law Review] (2021) Juries are the lifeblood of our criminal justice system. As the Framers clearly understood, and as the Supreme Court has consistently reaffirmed in recent years, their value goes far beyond accuracy in individual cases. Criminal juries are a democratic bulwark against overzealous state power; they keep prosecutors and police in check. Accordingly,... 2021  
Kiel Brennan-Marquez, Darryl K. Brown, Stephen E. Henderson THE TRIAL LOTTERY 56 Wake Forest L. Rev. 1 [Wake Forest Law Review] (2021) Juries are the lifeblood of our criminal justice system. As the Framers clearly understood, and as the Supreme Court has consistently reaffirmed in recent years, their value goes far beyond accuracy in individual cases. Criminal juries are a democratic bulwark against overzealous state power; they keep prosecutors and police in check. Accordingly,... 2021  
Brandon Hasbrouck THE UNCONSTITUTIONAL POLICE 56 Harv. C.R.-C.L. L. Rev. 239 [Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review] (Summer, 2021) Most Fourth Amendment cases arise under a basic fact pattern. Police decide to do something--say, stop and frisk a suspect. They find some crime--say, a gun or drugs--they arrest the suspect, and the suspect is subsequently charged with a crime. The suspect--who is all too often Black--becomes a defendant and challenges the police officers' initial... 2021  
Caleb L. Green THE VISUAL ARTISTS RIGHTS ACT 13 No. 3 Landslide 36 [Landslide] (January/February, 2021) The death of George Floyd has resulted in an international outcry for social and criminal justice reform, sparking a wave of protests throughout the United States and various countries. On May 26, 2020, the day after George Floyd's death, Minnesota locals took to the streets to participate in protest demonstrations. These protests swiftly swept... 2021  
Jane K. Stoever TITLE IX, ESPORTS, AND #ETOO 89 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 857 [George Washington Law Review] (July, 2021) As colleges and universities increasingly award video gaming scholarships, field competitive esports teams, construct esports arenas in the centers of campuses, and promote student interaction through gaming, schools should anticipate the sexual cyberviolence, harassment, and technology-enabled abuse that commonly occur through gaming. This Article... 2021  
Jessica M. Eaglin TO "DEFUND" THE POLICE 73 Stan. L. Rev. Online 120 [Stanford Law Review Online] (June, 2021) Much public debate circles around grassroots activists' demand to defund the police, raised in public consciousness in the summer of 2020. Yet confusion about the demand is pervasive. This Essay adopts a literal interpretation of defund to clarify and distinguish four alternative, substantive policy positions that legal reforms... 2021  
Deborah J. Cantrell TRANSFORMATIVE SILENCE AND PROTEST 22 Rutgers J. L. & Religion 83 [Rutgers Journal of Law & Religion] (2021) Social movement protests have become common place in the last several years. Images come easily to mind of protestors marching down streets holding signs and chanting. Just as easily, images come to mind of counter-protestors yelling back, and law enforcement engaging protestors, often trying to control them with notable force. This Article... 2021  
Deborah J. Cantrell TRANSFORMATIVE SILENCE AND PROTEST 22 Rutgers J. L. & Religion 83 [Rutgers Journal of Law & Religion] (2021) Social movement protests have become common place in the last several years. Images come easily to mind of protestors marching down streets holding signs and chanting. Just as easily, images come to mind of counter-protestors yelling back, and law enforcement engaging protestors, often trying to control them with notable force. This Article... 2021  
E. Tendayi Achiume TRANSNATIONAL RACIAL (IN)JUSTICE IN LIBERAL DEMOCRATIC EMPIRE 134 Harv. L. Rev. F. 378 [Harvard Law Review Forum] (6/1/2021) On June 17, 2020, Philonise Floyd addressed the United Nations Human Rights Council, the United Nations' paramount human rights body, demanding justice for the murder of his brother and the many other Black people who have been subject to the regime of racial extrajudicial killings endemic in the United States. His testimony was part of a... 2021  
  Trump: LeBron James's 'racist rants' are divisive, nasty (4/22/2021) Former President Trump slammed NBA superstar LeBron James on Thursday night, calling the basketball stars racist rants divisive 2021  
Elizabeth M. Iglesias TRUMP'S INSURRECTION: PANDEMIC VIOLENCE, PRESIDENTIAL INCITEMENT AND THE REPUBLICAN GUARANTEE 11 U. Miami Race & Soc. Just. L. Rev. 7 [University of Miami Race & Social Justice Law Review] (Spring, 2021) Our own experience has corroborated the lessons taught by the examples of other nations; . that seditions and insurrections are, unhappily, maladies as inseparable from the body politic as tumors and eruptions from the natural body; that the idea of governing at all times by the simple force of law (which we have been told is the only admissible... 2021  
Hayley A. Valla UNCLE SAM'S DILEMMA: WHETHER PRIORITIZING CONFEDERATE MEMORIALS OVER NATIONAL SENTIMENT IS A MONUMENTAL MISTAKE 37 Touro L. Rev. 1107 [Touro Law Review] (2021) When asked to make an appearance at an event to commemorate Civil War monuments, General Robert E. Lee replied, I think it wiser . not to keep open the sores of war, but to follow the example of those nations who endeavored to obliterate the marks of civil strife, and to commit to oblivion the feelings it engendered. Unfortunately, the... 2021  
Hayley A. Valla UNCLE SAM'S DILEMMA: WHETHER PRIORITIZING CONFEDERATE MEMORIALS OVER NATIONAL SENTIMENT IS A MONUMENTAL MISTAKE 37 Touro L. Rev. 1107 [Touro Law Review] (2021) When asked to make an appearance at an event to commemorate Civil War monuments, General Robert E. Lee replied, I think it wiser . not to keep open the sores of war, but to follow the example of those nations who endeavored to obliterate the marks of civil strife, and to commit to oblivion the feelings it engendered. Unfortunately, the... 2021  
Meera E. Deo UNEQUAL PROFESSION, UNLEASHED 73 Rutgers U. L. Rev. 857 [Rutgers University Law Review] (Spring, 2021) C1-3Table of Contents I. Claiming My Worth. 860 II. Jumping on the Bandwagon. 862 III. Centering Structural Solutions. 864 IV. Being Part of the Solution--Not the Solution. 865 V. Understanding Pandemic Effects on Legal Academia. 866 2021  
James O. Pearson, Jr., J.D. Use of peremptory challenge to exclude from jury persons belonging to a class or race 79 A.L.R.3d 14 (Originally published in 1977) [American Law Reports ALR3d] (2021) This annotation collects and analyzes the civil and criminal cases in which the courts have considered whether it is proper for either a plaintiff (usually the prosecution) or a defendant to use the peremptory challenge to exclude members of a race or class from the petit jury, either in a single case or in case after case over a period of time.... 2021  
Jane Snoddy Smith V. WHAT DOES THE RESEARCH SAY? 2021 Advanced Real Est. Drafting 18-V [State Bar of Texas] (32nd Annual) Robert Rosenthal's Research in 1963 was one of the first studies to recognize that how we treat others affects what they think of themselves and their ultimate success. In the first part of the study, three children were picked at random and the teachers were told that those three children (the bloomers) were very smart but not to tell the... 2021  
Amy F. Kimpel VIOLENT VIDEOS: CRIMINAL DEFENSE IN A DIGITAL AGE 37 Ga. St. U. L. Rev. 305 [Georgia State University Law Review] (Winter, 2021) Digital video evidence has exploded into criminal practice with far-reaching consequences for criminal defendants, their attorneys, and the criminal legal system as a whole. Defense attorneys now receive police body-worn camera footage, surveillance video footage, and cell phone video footage in discovery in even the most routine criminal cases.... 2021  
G. Alex Sinha VIRTUOUS LAW-BREAKING 13 Wash. U. Jurisprudence Rev. 199 [Washington University Jurisprudence Review] (2021) A rapidly growing body of scholarship embraces virtue jurisprudence, a series of (often ad hoc) attempts to incorporate the philosophical tradition of virtue ethics into legal theory. Broadly understood, virtue ethics describes an approach to moral questions that emphasizes the importance of developing and embodying various virtues, often as... 2021  
G. Alex Sinha VIRTUOUS LAW-BREAKING 13 Wash. U. Jurisprudence Rev. 199 [Washington University Jurisprudence Review] (2021) A rapidly growing body of scholarship embraces virtue jurisprudence, a series of (often ad hoc) attempts to incorporate the philosophical tradition of virtue ethics into legal theory. Broadly understood, virtue ethics describes an approach to moral questions that emphasizes the importance of developing and embodying various virtues, often as... 2021  
  WALT DISNEY CO. SEC No Action Ltrs. WSB File No. 0119202101 [SEC No Action Letters] (2021) WSB File No. 0119202101 WSB Subject Category: 77 Public Availability Date: January 8, 2021. Prepared By: Wilmer Cutler References: Securities Exchange Act of 1934, Section 14(a); Rule 14a-8 ________________Washington Service Bureau Summary________________ October 31, 2020 Via E-mail to shareholderproposals@sec.gov U.S. Securities and Exchange... 2021  
Skye M. Walker WARS, WALLS, AND WRECKED ECOSYSTEMS: THE CASE FOR PRIORITIZING ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION IN A NATIONAL SECURITY-CENTRIC LEGAL SYSTEM 51 Envtl. L. 913 [Environmental Law] (Summer, 2021) Maintaining a strong military. Furthering national security by securing the skies, seas, and borders. Promoting peace and order by using tear gas to diffuse chaotic and potentially dangerous situations. To the U.S. government, these are laudable objectives--objectives that often outweigh other policy goals such as environmental conservation. As a... 2021  
Arline T. Geronimus, ScD WEATHERING THE PANDEMIC: DYING OLD AT A YOUNG AGE FROM PRE-EXISTING RACIST CONDITIONS 27 Wash. & Lee J. Civil Rts. & Soc. Just. 409 [Washington and Lee Journal of Civil Rights and Social Justice] (Spring, 2021) C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 410 A. What Is Weathering from a Biological Mechanistic Perspective?. 413 B. Weathering Populations and the Pandemic. 425 II. Distinction Between the Constructs of Weathering vs. Pre-Existing Medical Conditions. 430 A. Legal Applications of Weathering Knowledge in the Pandemic. 435 III. Conclusion. 440 2021  
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