AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearType
Christian Sundquist The Future of Law Schools: Covid-19, Technology, and Social Justice 53 Connecticut Law Review Online 1 (December, 2020) (12/1/2020) The COVID-19 pandemic has laid bare not only the social and racial inequities in society, but also the pedagogical and access to justice inequities embedded in the traditional legal curriculum. The need to re-envision the future of legal education existed well before the current pandemic, spurred by the shifting nature of legal practice as well as... 2020 Law Review Articles and Secondary Sources
Raleigh D. Kalbfleisch The Impact of the Covid-19 Pandemic on Legal Services 33 DCBA Brief 14 (December, 2020) (12/1/2020) On March 13, 2020, the White House issued a Proclamation on Declaring a National Emergency Concerning the Novel Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) Outbreak, known as SARS-CoV-2 (the virus). The COVID-19 pandemic has taken all nations on the planet by surprise and continues to drive the quest for efficient and effective remedies, both scientific and... 2020 Law Review Articles and Secondary Sources
Niall Stanage The Memo: Political world grapples with long coronavirus shutdown The Hill (3/31/2020) Americans are coming to grips with the fact that there will be no quick end to the coronavirus crisis a realization that will shake up the 2020 presidential race in profound ways. 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Niall Stanage The Memo: Trump's coronavirus briefings face criticism The Hill (3/24/2020) President Trumps daily press briefings on the coronavirus are facing a backlash from critics who say they are hindering rather than helping the nations efforts to combat the pandemic. 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Niall Stanage The Memo: Trump's race tactics fall flat The Hill (7/7/2020) President Trump waded anew into racial controversy on Monday, criticizing NASCAR for banning the Confederate flag at its events. 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Jeff Thaler The next Surges Are Here: What Can American Governments Lawfully Do in Response to the Ongoing Covid-19 Pandemic? 42 Mitchell Mitchell Hamline Law Journal of Public Policy and Practice 165 (Fall, 2020) (2020) Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it. George Santayana The choice is not between order and liberty. It is between liberty with order and anarchy without either. There is danger that, if the Court does not temper its doctrinaire logic with a little practical wisdom, it will convert the constitutional Bill of Rights into a... 2020 Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources
Matthew Rimmer The Race to Patent the SARS Virus: The TRIPS Agreement and Access to Essential Medicines 5 Melbourne Journal of International Law 335 (2020) (2020) This article considers the race to sequence the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome virus (the SARS virus') in light of the debate over patent law and access to essential medicines. Part II evaluates the claims of public research institutions in Canada, the United States, and Hong Kong, and commercial companies, to patent rights in respect of the; 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Naomi Seiler, Anya Vanecek, Claire Heyison, Katherine Horton THE RISKS OF CRIMINALIZING COVID-19 EXPOSURE: LESSONS FROM HIV 24 Human Rights Brief 5 (Summer, 2020) (9/14/2020) Introduction. 7 I. Background: A History of HIV Criminalization in the United States. 8 II. Analysis. 10 A. COVID-19 Criminalization Would Have Inequitable Impacts. 10 B. Prosecuting COVID-19 Exposure Absent Intent to Transmit Risks Broad Criminalization. 12 C. Potential Affirmative Defenses Are Not Equitably Available. 13 D. Criminalization May... 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Paul C. Farr , et. Al. THE UTAH COURTS' RESPONSE TO THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC 33-DEC Utah B.J. 21, Utah Bar Journal (11/30/2020) On March 11, 2020, the regular season basketball game between the Utah Jazz and Oklahoma City Thunder was cancelled, right at tipoff, as it was announced that a player, later determined to be Rudy Gobert, had tested positive for COVID-19. The following day the National Basketball Association, which had over $8.7 billion in revenue in 2019, ... 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Nathaniel Weixel Tillis appears to reinforce question about COVID-19 death toll The Hill (9/24/2020) Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) on Thursday appeared to reinforce doubts about the total number of Americans who have died from COVID-19 after a woman called into a virtual town hall saying many of the fatalities include deaths from things like heart attacks and slip and falls."" 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
H. Timothy Lovelace Jr. To Restore the Soul of America: How Domestic Anti-racism Might Fuel Global Anti-racism 115 AJIL Unbound 63 (2021) (2020) On November 7, 2020, President Joe Biden proclaimed that his administration would restore the soul of America. He declared that U.S. voters had given him a mandate to achieve racial justice and root out systemic racism in this country, and that he plans to use the nation's restored moral leadership to create international consensus around U.S.... 2020 Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources
Gopal Ratnam, CQ Roll Call Top brands help spread COVID-19 disinformation, report says CQ Roll Call Washington Data Privacy Briefing (7/15/2020) The world's top brands ranging from well-known cosmetic names and computer makers to healthcare and technology companies are unwittingly funneling their advertising dollars to websites that traffic in COVID-19 disinformation, according to a study released July 8; ; Top brands help spread COVID- 19 disinformation, report says July 15, 2020 The world's top brands; the Global Disinformation Index. If you're an organization supporting the Asian- American community but you're on sites that call COVID- 19 as the 'Wuhan virus' then you can see how it; " 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Andrea Renda , Rosa Castro Towards Stronger EU Governance of Health Threats after the COVID-19 Pandemic 11 European Journal of Risk Regulation 273 (June, 2020) (6/1/2020) In just a few months, COVID-19 - a disease caused by a novel coronavirus known as SARS-CoV-2 - appeared in China and quickly spread to the rest of the world, including Europe and the USA. With confirmed cases surpassing 1.2 million, reported deaths approaching 70, 000 and dramatic projections for the next months, many governments are now facing; 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Brett Samuels Trump acknowledged downplaying COVID-19 threat, says Woodward book The Hill (9/9/2020) Recordings of President Trump privately acknowledging he downplayed the coronaviruss threat to the nation put the White House on defense Wednesday, reinserting the pandemic as the central issue in the presidential race eight weeks before Election Day. 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Morgan Chalfant Trump courts Hispanic voters in Florida amid tight race with Biden The Hill (9/25/2020) President Trump on Friday courted Hispanic voters in Florida, arguing he had delivered record-low unemployment for Hispanic Americans before the coronavirus pandemic and would do so again while attacking Joe Biden over the Democratic nominee's economic agenda. 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Brett Samuels Trump expresses support for Asian Americans after repeatedly using term 'Chinese virus' The Hill (3/23/2020) President Trump on Monday expressed support for Asian Americans after repeatedly referring to the coronavirus as the Chinese virus" despite critics who say the term is racist and fosters discrimination." 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Sylvan Lane Trump pitches fair housing repeal to 'suburban housewife' with racist tropes The Hill (8/12/2020) President Trump on Wednesday claimed that his decision to scrap an Obama-era rule meant to quash racial discrimination would win the support of suburban women afraid of living near low-income housing projects, channeling decades of racist attacks on such developments; Trump pitches fair housing repeal to 'suburban housewife' with racist tropes August 12, 2020 President Trump on Wednesday claimed that; 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Tal Axelrod Trump rallies supporters at White House in first event since COVID-19 diagnosis The Hill (10/10/2020) President Trump rallied his supporters at the White House Saturday in the first public event hes held since he was diagnosed with COVID-19. 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Morgan Chalfant and Brett Samuels Trump seeks to change race with final debate The Hill (10/22/2020)   2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Kyle Balluck Trump to announce 'breakthrough' coronavirus therapeutic, White House says The Hill (8/23/2020) President Trump is expected to announce on Sunday evening a major therapeutic breakthrough on the novel coronavirus, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany tweeted; ; Trump to announce 'breakthrough' coronavirus therapeutic, White House says August 23, 2020 President Trump is; pledged that the U.S. would not cut corners in its race to develop a coronavirus vaccine. "Let me assure you that we will not cut; " 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  Trump uses coronavirus briefing to fire back at critics 2020 WL 1852439 (4/13/2020) President Trump on Monday used the White House briefing room to lash out at critics of his response to the coronavirus outbreak, rattling off a litany of grievances about press coverage and airing a reel of cable news footage that portrayed his actions in a positive light. 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  U.S. ATTORNEY SEEKS REPORTING OF DISCRIMINATION AND SEXUAL HARASSMENT IN HOUSING RESULTING FROM COVID-19 PANDEMIC (5/8/2020)   2020 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
Monika Batra Kashyap U.s. Settler Colonialism, White Supremacy, and the Racially Disparate Impacts of Covid-19 11 California Law Review Online 517 (November, 2020) (11/1/2020) This Essay contextualizes the racially disproportionate impacts of COVID-19 in the United States within a framework of settler colonialism in order to broaden the understanding of how structural inequality is produced, imposed, and maintained. A settler colonialism framework recognizes that the United States is a present-day settler colonial... 2020 Law Review Articles and Secondary Sources
  Understanding Time to Exoneration: Race, Other Factors, and Why it Matters 57 Criminal Law Bulletin 1 (2021) (2020) Lauren O'Neill Shermer earned an M.A. and Ph.D. in Criminology and Criminal Justice from The University of Maryland, College Park. She is currently an Associate Professor and Chair of the Criminal Justice Department at Widener University in Chester, PA. Her research spans a wide range of topics, but most recently focuses on exonerations, eyewitness... 2020 Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources
Henry Kenyon, CQ Roll Call Warren bill would require collection of demographic data on coronavirus CQ Roll Call Insurance Briefing (4/17/2020) Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., introduced bicameral legislation requiring the Health and Human Services Department to collect and report coronavirus demographic data, including the race and ethnicity of those afflicted. 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Henry Kenyon, CQ Roll Call Warren bill would require HHS to collect COVID-19 demographic data CQ Roll Call Washington Data Privacy Briefing (4/16/2020) Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., introduced bicameral legislation requiring the Health and Human Services Department to collect and report coronavirus demographic data, including the race and ethnicity of those afflicted. 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Keith Lewis, CQ Roll Call Warren, Pressley question HHS over healthcare racial disparities CQ Roll Call Insurance Briefing (7/16/2020) Massachusetts Democrats Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Rep. Ayanna S. Pressley are asking the Health and Human Services Department to address racial disparities in COVID-19 infection and death rates, as well as in overall healthcare outcomes; ; Warren, Pressley question HHS over healthcare racial disparities July 16, 2020 Massachusetts Democrats Sen. Elizabeth Warren and; are asking the Health and Human Services Department to address racial disparities in COVID- 19 infection and death rates, as well as in overall healthcare; and Indigenous communities have been disproportionately infected and killed by COVID- 19 underscores that racism, discrimination, and bias are public health problems that the federal; as their white counterparts, they said. Without successfully addressing these racial disparities in health outcomes and health care access 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Christopher W. Adams What Is Nacdl Doing for You and Your Clients in Covid-19? 44-NOV Champion 5 (November, 2020) (11/1/2020) This has been a severely challenging year for individuals, law offices, and bar organizations. Health concerns, death of loved ones, economic disruption, the necessary closure of most courts, work-from-home orders, and the like have created strains on us all. Unfortunately, these hardships may continue for some time, as it looks like the United... 2020 Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources
Morgan Chalfant White House defends Trump's use of term as not racist The Hill (6/22/2020) White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany repeatedly defended President Trump for describing the coronavirus as the kung flu despite widespread criticism that it is racist. 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Pamela Wolf, J.D. WHITE HOUSE NEWS-CITING COVID-19, PRESIDENT TRUMP SUSPENDS ENTRY OF CERTAIN ALIENS FOR 60 DAYS Wolters Kluwer Employment Law Daily (4/23/2020) Many question the actual impact and true motivation for the suspension. On April 22, President Trump issued a proclamation suspending the entry of immigrants he deems to present a risk to the U.S. labor market as the country attempts to recover from the COVID-19 public health crisis. Among other things, Trump noted that with the behavior changes; 2020 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  WHITE HOUSE RE-ESTABLISHES COUNCIL ON NATIVE AMERICAN AFFAIRS TO SUPPORT CONTINUED INTER-AGENCY COORDINATION WITH INDIAN COUNTRY (4/28/2020)   2020 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
Michael H. LeRoy Whitewashing Coaching Racism in Ncaa Sports: Enforcing Civil Rights Through the Ku Klux Klan Act 10 Arizona State Sports & Entertainment Law Journal 53 (Fall, 2020) (2020) Coaching racism in college sports may be facilitated by NCAA transfer waivers silencing players who complain about racial harassment. Athletic directors and other school officials may have conspired with the NCAA to resolve racism complaints by using nondisclosure agreements and liability releases while avoiding independent investigations and... 2020 Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources
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