Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year | Type |
Craig Konnoth |
RACE AND MEDICAL DOUBLE-BINDS |
121 Columbia Law Review Forum 135 (October 8, 2021) |
Race and medicine scholarship is beset by a conundrum. On one hand, some racial justice scholars and advocates frame the harms that racial minorities experience through a medical lens. Poverty and homelessness are social determinants of health that medica |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Steven A. Ramirez |
RACE IN AMERICA 2021: A TIME TO EMBRACE BEAUHARNAIS v. ILLINOIS? |
52 Loyola University Chicago Law Journal 1001 (Summer, 2021) |
Hate crimes and racially motivated violence spiked in the United States over the past few years. Our foreign adversaries seek to inflame racial divisions in our nation and turn American against American. This now forms a major threat to our national secur |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Thalia González |
RACE, SCHOOL POLICING, AND PUBLIC HEALTH |
73 Stanford Law Review Online 180 (June, 2021) |
The ever-growing list of names of Black victims who have died at the hands of police has emboldened a new public narrative that frames police violence--and other more commonplace, though less lethal, disparate policing practices--as a public health crisis |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Francis T. Cullen, Leah C. Butler, Amanda Graham |
RACIAL ATTITUDES AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE POLICY |
50 Crime and Justice 163 (2021) |
Empirical research on public policy preferences must attend to Whites' animus toward Blacks. For a quarter-century, studies have consistently found that Kinder and Sanders's four-item measure of racial resentment is a robust predictor of almost every soci |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Yuvraj Joshi |
RACIAL TRANSITION |
98 Washington University Law Review 1181 (2021) |
The United States is a nation in transition, struggling to surmount its racist past. This transitional imperative underpins American race jurisprudence, yet the transitional bases of decisions are rarely acknowledged and sometimes even denied. This Articl |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Vinay Harpalani |
RACIAL TRIANGULATION, INTEREST-CONVERGENCE, AND THE DOUBLE-CONSCIOUSNESS OF ASIAN AMERICANS |
37 Georgia State University Law Review 1361 (Summer, 2021) |
This Essay integrates Professor Claire Jean Kim's racial triangulation framework, Professor Derrick Bell's interest-convergence theory, and W.E.B. Du Bois's notion of double-consciousness, all to examine the racial positioning of Asian Americans and the d |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Charlie Martel |
RACISM AND BIGOTRY AS GROUNDS FOR IMPEACHMENT |
45 New York University Review of Law and Social Change 197 (2021) |
Building on years of anti-racist organizing and advocacy, millions of Americans took to the streets to protest racism and demand racial justice in mid-2020. Much of the protest was directed at President Donald Trump--a president whose words and actions we |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Charlene Galarneau , Ruqaiijah Yearby |
RACISM, HEALTH EQUITY, AND CRISIS STANDARDS OF CARE IN THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC |
14 Saint Louis University Journal of Health Law & Policy 211 (2021) |
Long-standing and deeply embedded institutional racism, notably anti-Black racism in U.S. health care, has provided a solid footing for the health inequities by race evident in the COVID-19 pandemic. Inequities in susceptibility, exposure, infection, hosp |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Victor C. Romero |
RACISM, INCORPORATED: RAMOS v. LOUISIANA AND JOGGING WHILE BLACK |
30 Southern California Interdisciplinary Law Journal 101 (Fall, 2020/2021) |
There is more to the U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision in Ramos v. Louisiana than its holding requiring unanimous state jury verdicts via the incorporation doctrine. The underlying debate among the Justices in Ramos about the salience of race in the la |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
John Taschner |
RECAPTURING DEMOCRACY: COVID-19 AND THE 2020 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION |
48 Hastings Const. L.Q. 461, Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly (Spring, 2021); (Publication Name: Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly) (Spring, 2021) |
There is a way to reach out [across partisan divide] and not be a sap. There is a way of consistently offering the possibility of cooperation. - Barack Obama America is in the business of selling and maintaining democracy around the world. Through aid, pr |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Jasmine E. Harris |
RECKONING WITH RACE AND DISABILITY |
130 Yale Law Journal Forum 916 (June 30, 2021) |
Our national reckoning with race and inequality must include disability. Race and disability have a complicated but interconnected history. Yet discussions of our most salient sociopolitical issues such as police violence, prison abolition, healthcare, po |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Erika George , Jena Martin , Tara Van Ho |
RECKONING: A DIALOGUE ABOUT RACISM, ANTIRACISTS, AND BUSINESS & HUMAN RIGHTS |
30 Wash. Int'l L.J. 171, Washington International Law Journal (March, 2021); (Publication Name: Washington International Law Journal) (March, 2021) |
Video of George Floyd's death sparked global demonstrations and prompted individuals, communities and institutions to grapple with their own roles in embedding and perpetuating racist structures. The raison d'être of Business and Human Rights (BHR) is to |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Dr. Ying Chen |
REGULATING CYBER RACISM IN THE UNITED STATES: LEGAL AND NON-LEGAL RESPONSES FROM A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE |
38 Wisconsin International Law Journal 477 (Summer, 2021) |
The global outbreak of COVID-19 in 2020 unleashed virulent xenophobia and a tide of racial hatred. There have been increasing reports of racist hostility in the digital environment. Former President Trump's racist remarks on social media platforms allowed |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Philip Lee |
REJECTING HONORARY WHITENESS: ASIAN AMERICANS AND THE ATTACK ON RACE-CONSCIOUS ADMISSIONS |
70 Emory Law Journal 1475 (2021) |
Since the 1960s, Asian Americans have been labeled by the dominant society as the model minority. This status is commonly juxtaposed against so-called problem minorities such as African Americans and Latinx Americans. In theory, the model minority narrati |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Alisha Desai, Kelley Durham, Stephanie C. Burke, Amanda NeMoyer, Kirk Heilbrun , Drexel University |
RELEASING INDIVIDUALS FROM INCARCERATION DURING COVID-19: PANDEMIC-RELATED CHALLENGES AND RECOMMENDATIONS FOR PROMOTING SUCCESSFUL REENTRY |
27 Psychology, Public Policy, and Law 242 (May, 2021) |
The emergence and rapid growth of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has significantly impacted the U.S. criminal justice system as federal and state governments consider allowing the early release of select currently incarcerated individual |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Brook E. Gotberg |
RELUCTANT TO RESTRUCTURE: SMALL BUSINESSES, THE SBRA, AND COVID-19 |
95 American Bankruptcy Law Journal 389 (Fall, 2021) |
The global pandemic sparked by the proliferation of the COVID-19 virus created an economic crisis of an unprecedented nature in the United States, particularly among small businesses. Many of these small businesses were required by law or circumstances to |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Alicia L. Bannon, Douglas Keith |
REMOTE COURT: PRINCIPLES FOR VIRTUAL PROCEEDINGS DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC AND BEYOND |
115 Northwestern University Law Review 1875 (2021) |
Across the country, courts at every level have relied on remote technology to adapt the justice system to a once-a-century global pandemic. This Essay describes and assesses this unprecedented journey into virtual justice, paying particular attention to e |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Seema Mohapatra, JD, MPH |
REPRODUCTIVE INJUSTICE AND COVID-19 |
50 Stetson L. Rev. 389, Stetson Law Review (Spring, 2021); (Publication Name: Stetson Law Review) (Spring, 2021) |
In the midst of a global pandemic and horrifying examples of police injustice in the summer of 2020, the Supreme Court added to the pain by delivering several blows to reproductive justice. Although June Medical v. Russo was a technical victory, the disse |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Anne Kat Alexander |
RESIDENTIAL EVICTION AND PUBLIC HOUSING: COVID-19 AND BEYOND |
18 Indiana Health Law Review 243 (2021) |
This Article provides an account and analysis of the eviction-reducing public health measures taken during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, adding to the urgent and growing body of research that seeks both to capture a description of the curren |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Elizabeth Edwards , David Machledt , Jennifer Lav |
RETAINING MEDICAID COVID-19 CHANGES TO SUPPORT COMMUNITY LIVING |
14 Saint Louis University Journal of Health Law & Policy 391 (2021) |
The impact of COVID-19 on people with disabilities in institutional settings, like nursing facilities, has garnered significant attention. But people receiving comparable services in the community have also been affected significantly. States used several |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Miriam F. Weismann, Cheryl Holder |
RUTHLESS UTILITARIANISM? COVID-19 STATE TRIAGE PROTOCOLS MAY SUBJECT PATIENTS TO RACIAL DISCRIMINATION AND PROVIDERS TO LEGAL LIABILITY |
47 American Journal of Law & Medicine 264 (2021) |
Key Words: coronavirus; discrimination; rationing; facially neutral standards; triage protocols; crisis standards of care As the coronavirus pandemic intensified, many communities in the United States experienced shortages of ventilators, intensive care b |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Mary Ellen McIntire, CQ Roll Call |
Senate Finance Committee to Focus on Covid-19, Drug Prices, Wyden Says |
CQ Roll Call Insurance Briefing (1/14/2021) |
Incoming Finance Committee Chairman Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., said responding to the COVID-19 pandemic will be the panel's first priority this year, but he also expects to consider legislation related to a range of other health issues.; Search Snippet: ...S |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Matt Urban |
SHELTERING IN PLACE: HOW CALIFORNIA CONFRONTED COVID-19'S LOOMING EVICTION CRISIS UNDER THE CONTRACT CLAUSE |
52 University of the Pacific Law Review 305 (2021) |
Code Sections Affected Civil Code §§ 789.4, 798.56, 1942.5, 2924.15, Title 19 (commencing with § 3273.01) to Part 4 of Division 3 (new), §§ 1946.2, 1947.12, 1947.13 (amended); Civil Procedure Code § 116.223, 1161.2.5, Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 11 |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Londyn K. Zografakis |
SHOULD WE ESTABLISH A DUTY OF CARE FOR INDIVIDUALS TO NOT SPREAD COVID-19, AND UNDER WHAT CIRCUMSTANCES SHOULD THIS DUTY ARISE? |
40 Quinnipiac Law Review 63 (2021) |
I. Introduction. 64 II. The Nature of the Covid-19 Pandemic. 67 A. The Progression of COVID-19. 67 B. The Financial Costs of COVID-19. 71 C. Combatting COVID-19 with CDC Precautions, Vaccines, and Medicines. 74 III. History of the Duty to Not Spread Commu |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Olympia Duhart |
SOCIAL DISTANCING AS A PRIVILEGE: ASSESSING THE IMPACT OF STRUCTURAL DISPARITIES ON THE COVID-19 CRISIS IN THE BLACK COMMUNITY |
37 Georgia State University Law Review 1305 (Summer, 2021) |
There is a harsh reality for people living with the COVID-19 restrictions in the same city. Though the virus has been called an equal opportunity threat, the truth is that it has had a deadly, disproportionate impact on Black and Brown people. The COVID-1 |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Richard J. Lazarus , Libby Dimenstein |
STEWART'S PARADOXES OF LIBERTY, INTEGRITY, AND FRATERNITY: SOBERING LESSONS FROM COVID-19 FOR ENVIRONMENTAL LAW |
29 New York University Environmental Law Journal 543 (2021) |
Introduction. 543 I. Economic Collapse Is Disastrous for Environmental Protection. 547 II. Strong, Aggressive National Leadership Is Necessary for Environmental Protection. 553 III. Environmental Justice Is Necessary for Environmental Protection. 561 Conc |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
By Sheila Lynch-Afryl, J.D., M.A. |
STRATEGIC PERSPECTIVES: CLIMATE CRISIS HARMS HUMAN HEALTH-BUT HOW DOES IT INTERSECT WITH COVID-19? |
Wolters Kluwer Health Law Daily (August 20, 2021) |
Climate change has major impacts on health, from heat-related illness to vector-borne diseases, which, like COVID-19, disproportionately plague certain communities. The world is grappling with multiple public health crises simultaneously: the climate cris |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Kevin D. Sawyer |
SUMMER OF BLOOD: VOYAGE THROUGH SAN QUENTIN STATE PRISON'S COVID-19 OUTBREAK |
46 Harbinger 8 (January 14, 2022) |
In this article, Kevin Sawyer documents his pandemic year inside San Quentin State prison, where a transfer of incarcerated people from another facility led to a devastating COVID-19 outbreak. Drawing on personal journal notes and interviews with other in |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
By WK Editorial Staff |
SURVEYS-MAJORITY OF PARENTS SAY COVID-19 CHILD CARE DUTIES HAVE HURT THEIR CAREERS |
Wolters Kluwer Employment Law Daily (August 10, 2021) |
People of color are more likely to say child care duties have been a career obstacle during the pandemic. More than six out of 10 U.S. adults with children under the age of 18 (62 percent) believe their child care and virtual schooling duties during the C |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Andres F. Quintana , Mikayla R. Quintana |
SURVIVING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC OF 2020: A CONSTITUTIONAL AND POLICY REVIEW OF INVOLUNTARY MEDICAL QUARANTINE |
11 Wake Forest Journal of Law and Policy 327 (2021) |
The unremitting Coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) crisis of 2020 continues to engulf our national consciousness. The World Health Organization (WHO), the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and individual states recognize that the wo |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |