AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearKey Terms
Timothy Zick Framing the Second Amendment: Gun Rights, Civil Rights and Civil Liberties 106 Iowa Law Review 229 (November, 2020) ABSTRACT: Gun rights proponents and gun control advocates have devoted significant energy to framing the constitutional right to keep and bear arms. In constitutional discourse, advocates and commentators have referred to the Second Amendment as a collective, civic republican, individual, and fundamental right. Gun rights advocates have... 2020  
Alan K. Chen Free Speech, Rational Deliberation, and Some Truths about Lies 62 William and Mary Law Review 357 (November, 2020) Could fake news have First Amendment value? This claim would seem to be almost frivolous given the potential for fake news to undermine two core functions of the freedom of speech--promoting democracy and facilitating the search for truth, as well as the corollary that to be valuable, speech must promote rational deliberation. Some would... 2020  
Justin Driver Freedom of Expression Within the Schoolhouse Gate 73 Arkansas Law Review Rev. 1 (2020) In the late 1960s, the Supreme Court began contemplating how the First Amendment's commitment to the freedom of speech should protect the right of students to introduce their own ideas into the schoolhouse. This constitutional question extended well beyond the matter addressed in West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, because that... 2020  
Molly Connor From First Steps to Second Chances: Addressing Mass Incarceration in State Prisons 95 Notre Dame Law Review 1699 (March, 2020) It is said that no one truly knows a nation until one has been inside its jails. A nation should not be judged by how it treats its highest citizens, but its lowest ones .. --Nelson Mandela The United States contains only 5% of the world's population, but incarcerates over 20% of the world's prisoners. For the 2.3 million people currently behind... 2020  
Megan Armstrong From Lynching to Central Park Karen: How White Women Weaponize White Womanhood 32 Hastings Women's Law Journal 27 (Winter, 2020) In recent years, we have seen an influx of Karens and otherwise nicknamed white women gain infamy on the internet. Though sometimes the behavior of these women is innocuous and merely entitled, the pejorative nickname Karen has also become a term for white women engaging in racist behavior. A typical scenario involves a white woman calling the... 2020  
Bandana Purkayastha From Suffrage to Substantive Human Rights: the Continuing Journey for Racially Marginalized Women 42 Western New England Law Review 419 (2020) This Article highlights racially marginalized women's struggles to substantively access rights. Suffrage was meant to acquire political rights for women, and through that mechanism, move towards greater equality between women and men in the public and private spheres. Yet, racial minority women, working class and immigrant women, among others,... 2020  
Myra C. Selby From the Chair 26No.3 Dispute Resolution Magazine Mag. 3 (September, 2020) The first Chair column of the bar year probably ought to be an inspirational and uplifting discussion of goals for the coming year, ending with a polite invitation to keep up the good work. As I sat down to write that column, the uplifting words just would not flow because other words spoke louder and with unrelenting urgency. THE WORLD IS ON... 2020  
  From the Desk of Jessica Klein 26No.8 National Bulletin on Domestic Violence Prevention NL 3 (8/1/2020) Note: Jessicas column this month is written by Dominique Rémy. Dominique is a NYC-based writer and producer who is currently working on video and written projects about issues that impact Black and Brown communities. She is producing a feature-length documentary about maternal mortality and morbidity in communities of color. by Dominique Rémy Dear... 2020  
Lindsay R. Johnson , Mary-Kathryn Hawes From the Trail of Tears to Tam: How United States Trademark Law Fails Native Americans 21 Wake Forest Journal of Business and Intellectual Property Law 29 (Fall, 2020) Abstract. 32 I. Introduction. 32 II. The Psychology of Trademarks. 34 A. Overview. 34 B. The Psychological Difference Between Design and Word Marks. 35 C. The Psycho-Socio-Economic Effects of Misappropriation of Racial Representations in Design Marks. 37 III. The Indian Arts and Crafts Act. 38 A. Background and Legislative History of the Indian and... 2020  
Christopher Williams Gatekeeping the Profession 26 Cardozo Journal of Equal Rights & Social Justice 171 (Winter, 2020) Introduction. 171 Part I: Social Stratification. 175 Part II. The Structure of U.S. Legal Education. 179 A. Introduction to The Gate. 182 1. Test Prep. 182 2. LSAC Costs. 183 3. LSAT Bias. 185 4. Admission Bias. 186 B. Navigating Law School. 189 1. In Class. 190 2. Activities. 190 3. Community. 192 C. Exiting Law School. 193 Part III: Adapting to... 2020  
Helen M. Alvaré Gender Mistrust as a Public Health Crisis: a Preliminary Proposal 108 Georgetown Law Journal 1401 (May, 2020) C1-3Table of Contents L1-2Introduction . L31401 I. Impaired Relations and Negative Stereotypes as a Public Health Crisis?. 1403 a. what makes a public health crisis?. 1403 b. impaired relations as a public health crisis: gun violence, racism, and opioid addiction. 1405 II. Gender Mistrust Has the Characteristics of a Public Health Crisis. 1408 a.... 2020  
Trina Jones , Jessica L. Roberts Genetic Race? Dna Ancestry Tests, Racial Identity, and the Law 120 Columbia Law Review 1929 (November, 2020) Can genetic tests determine race? Americans are fascinated with DNA ancestry testing services like 23andMe and AncestryDNA. Indeed, in recent years, some people have changed their racial identity based upon DNA ancestry tests and have sought to use test results in lawsuits and for other strategic purposes. Courts may be similarly tempted to use... 2020  
Zack Budryk George Floyd's Brother: Trump Kept 'Pushing Me Off' During Call The Hill (5/31/2020) The brother of George Floyd, the man whose death in Minneapolis on Monday set off nationwide protests, expressed disappointment with a conversation he had with President Trump, saying the president kept pushing me off. 2020  
Girardeau A. Spann Good Trouble 10/30/2020 University of Chicago Law Review Online 35 (10/30/2020) The widespread, controversial protests against racial injustice that began in the spring of 2020 offer hope that U.S. culture may be evolving to a more sophisticated conception of racial equality. The contemporary clash between competing visions of race is illustrated perhaps most clearly in the debate about affirmative action--a debate that often... 2020  
  Goodyear Stock Falls after Trump Tweet Calling for Boycott The Hill (8/19/2020) Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company stock fell by as much as 3.5 percent on Wednesday after President Trump called for a boycott over reports that employees in Kansas were told that Make America Great Again" apparel and other politically affiliated gear is not acceptable at work." 2020  
Mark Stricherz, CQ Roll Call Google, Netflix, Paypal to Bolster Black-owned Startups, Banks with Capital CQ Briefing Roll Call Washington Capital Markets (7/1/2020) Alphabet Inc.'s Google and Netflix Inc. said they will spend hundreds of millions of dollars to support Black-owned startups and banks in underserved communities after the technology companies were criticized over their hiring practices and other polices amid the Black Lives Matter movement. PayPal Holdings Inc. is also pitching in. 2020  
Juliegrace Brufke Gop Rep Calls on Primary Opponent to Condemn Campaign Surrogate's Racist Video The Hill (6/4/2020) Rep. Denver Riggleman (R-Va.) called on his primary opponent Bob Good to condemn a video containing racist and homophobic remarks made by Goods campaign surrogate circulating social media on Thursday. 2020  
Scott Wong Gop Struggles to Confront Racial Issues The Hill (6/14/2020) Less than five months before the election, congressional Republicans are struggling to confront a host of thorny racial issues that have been unexpectedly thrust into the 2020 campaign spotlight. 2020  
Marty Johnson Grand Jury Charges No Officers in Breonna Taylor Death The Hill (9/23/2020) A Kentucky grand jury on Wednesday did not bring any charges against police officers in the killing of Breonna Taylor, and instead announced three lesser counts of wanton endangerment against Louisville police officer Brett Hankison. 2020  
Caitlyn Grey Fiebrich Guns, Gundy, Gorsuch: Could a New Nondelegation Doctrine Change the Course of the Aumf? 58 Houston Law Review 453 (Fall, 2020) One congressional grant of authority, aimed explicitly at the forces involved in the September 11 attacks, has become the legal basis for effectively all military operations in the Middle East and Northern Africa to date. The Authorization for Use of Military Force of 2001 (AUMF) was passed hastily during a time of national crisis, yet it remains... 2020  
Andrea Giampetro-Meyer , Nancy Kubasek Harvey: Environmental Justice and Law 31 Fordham Environmental Law Review 37 (Winter, 2020) Disasters provide moments in which fractures and inequalities in society are exposed for all to see. The true injustice of Harvey is that many of the people who have lost their homes and lives to Harvey are the same people who have had to live with the environmental degradation, polluted water and toxic air from the oil and gas refineries along... 2020  
John Bowden Hawley Calls for Civil Rights Probe of Prosecutor Investigating Gun-wielding St. Louis Couple The Hill (7/16/2020) Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) called on the Justice Department to launch a civil rights investigation into St. Louis Circuit Attorney Kimberly Gardner and her office after Gardner herself announced an investigation into a white couple who were seen on video threatening Black Lives Matter protesters at gunpoint. 2020  
GabBirenbaum Hawley Fires Back at Espn, Nba over China The Hill (7/13/2020) Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) in an interview on Monday called ESPNs suspension of reporter Adrian Wojnarowski a distraction from the NBA's relationship with China and said he would support a Senate subpoena of NBA Commissioner Adam Silver. 2020  
  Headlines on School Law 47No.14 School Law Bulletin NL 1 (7/25/2020) In 2015-2016 federal data indicates that while black children constitute 15% of K-12 U.S. students, they make up 31% of those arrested at school or referred to law enforcement. Many believe this kind of data forms the underpinning of what is commonly referred to as the school-to-prison pipeline, a pattern of discrimination sending young people of... 2020  
George J. Annas Health and Human Rights 45 Human Rights Rts. 1 (2020) The American health care industry is killing us, and the casualties are mounting daily. Instead of saving lives, it is more often taking them, and not only by failing to seriously confront the coronavirus pandemic and racism in the industry, but also by the way health care is financed. We have the most expensive health care system in the world, and... 2020  
  Hernández V. Mesa and Police Liability for Youth Homicides Before and after the Death of Michael Brown 56 Criminal Law Bulletin ART 3 (2020) Delores Jones-Brown: Dr. Jones-Brown earned a J.D. and a Ph.D. in criminal justice from Rutgers University. She is retired from the Department of Law, Police Science, and Criminal Justice Administration at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York (CUNY). She was the founding director of the John Jay College Center on Race,... 2020  
  Highlights 45No.1 Federal Rules of Evidence Newsletter NL 1 (1/1/2020) The January 2020 issue of Federal Rules of Evidence News discusses several recent federal court decisions involving the Federal Rules of Evidence, including: RULES CONSTRUED IN THIS ISSUE: 201, 401, 402, 403, 404, 414, 701, 702, 1006 2020  
Mike Lillis and Cristina Marcos House Panel Advances Police Reform Bill The Hill (6/17/2020) Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday advanced historic legislation to reform police practices in the wake of the death of George Floyd, an African American man who died while in police custody last month.The partisan 24-14 vote after a marathon 11-hour markup sends the package to the full House for consideration next week and... 2020  
Jonathan Easley How Trump Cleared the Park Around the White House The Hill (6/1/2020) Tensions between President Trump, law enforcement and protesters demanding justice for George Floyd reached ominous new heights Monday night when military personnel fired tear gas into a crowd of demonstrators just outside White House grounds. 2020  
Aziz Rana How We Study the Constitution: Rethinking the Insular Cases and Modern American Empire 130 Yale Law Journal Forum 312 (11/2/2020) abstract. Few American law classes actually teach the Insular Cases. This Essay argues that this is due to a profound lacuna in mainstream constitutional study--the failure to adequately confront the extent to which the United States from its founding has been a project of empire. In part, for this reason, the field tends to have little to say... 2020  
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