AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearType
Jareb A. Gleckel , Sheryl L. Wulkan ABORTION AND TELEMEDICINE: LOOKING BEYOND COVID-19 AND THE SHADOW DOCKET 54 U.C. Davis Law Review Online 105 (May, 2021) This Article examines the Supreme Court's recent shadow docket opinion in FDA v. American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG)--not just its present effects, but its bigger-picture implications for the future of abortion jurisprudence. In FDA v. ACOG, the Court, without full briefing or argument, stayed a Maryland court's injunction... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Katherine Fang, Rachel Perler ABORTION IN THE TIME OF COVID-19: TELEMEDICINE RESTRICTIONS AND THE UNDUE BURDEN TEST 32 Yale Journal of Law & Feminism 134 (2021) During the COVID-19 pandemic, even while many traditional restrictions on telemedicine have been relaxed, few states have suspended existing regulatory restrictions on the remote provision of medication abortions (teleabortions). Simultaneously, an overlapping subset of states have cited the public health emergency as a reason to curtail... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Kyle J. Kilkenny ACA ON LIFE SUPPORT: THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT, MEDICAID EXPANSION, AND RECKONING WITH SEBELIUS DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC 49 Rutgers Law Record 81 (2021) In an effort to address the cost of healthcare and the number of uninsured people in the United States, Congress passed the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, commonly called the Affordable Care Act, ACA, or Obamacare, in 2010. Signed into law by President Barack Obama, the Act required states to expand Medicaid coverage to various... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Eric Mogilnicki, Graves Lee, Covington & Burling LLP ACTING DIRECTOR UEJIO DELIVERS REMARKS REGARDING RACIAL HOME OWNERSHIP GAP AND SPECIAL PURPOSE CREDIT PROGRAMS 2021-SEP Business Law Today 3 (September, 2021) On September 1, 2021, CFPB Acting Director Dave Uejio spoke before the National Fair Housing Alliance's Virtual Forum on Special Purpose Credit Programs. In his remarks, he discussed the racial home ownership gap, the importance of access to home ownership in eliminating these disparities, and the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic in exacerbating... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Jelani Jefferson Exum ADDRESSING RACIAL INEQUITIES IN THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM THROUGH A RECONSTRUCTION SENTENCING APPROACH 47 Ohio Northern University Law Review 557 (2021) Justice reform is having a moment. Across the nation and in the federal government, legislation has passed to reduce the scale of incarceration and the impact of collateral consequences of a felony conviction. While some of these reforms were the result of fiscal concerns over mass incarceration, others were in response to the criminal justice... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
By Kristofer Ray, PhD ADMINISTRATION OF MEDICARE/MEDICAID PROGRAMS-OIG REPORTS: BLACK, HISPANIC, OLDER MEDICARE BENEFICIARIES HOSPITALIZED WITH COVID-19 EXPERIENCED A WIDE RANGE OF SERIOUS, COMPLEX CONDITIONS Wolters Kluwer Health Law Daily (September 1, 2021) COVID-19 has ravaged Medicare beneficiaries with a wide range of conditions including acute respiratory complications, kidney failure, and sepsis, but it has disproportionately affected dually eligible (people eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid), Black, Hispanic, and older beneficiaries. Analysis by the Office of Inspector General (OIG)... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Robert F. Weber AGAINST DISCOURSE: WHY ELIMINATING RACIAL DISPARITIES REQUIRES RADICAL POLITICS, NOT MORE DISCUSSION 37 Georgia State University Law Review 1177 (Summer, 2021) Racial disparity discourse is one of the main modalities through which we discuss and experience race and racism in the United States today--in discussions with colleagues and friends, in scholarly work, on cable news, on social media, and in lecture halls. Despite its ubiquity, racial disparity discourse is under-theorized: what, exactly, is its... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
By WK Editorial Staff AGENCY NEWS-GROCER CITED $1.1M FOR FAILING TO PROVIDE OR DELAYING COVID-19 SUPPLEMENTAL SICK PAY Wolters Kluwer Employment Law Daily (October 27, 2021) The California Labor Commissioner previously cited El Super $447,836 in July for similar violations affecting 95 workers at three stores. The California Labor Commissioner's Office has again cited Bodega Latina dba El Super grocery stores in Southern California with $1,164,500 for failing to provide or delaying supplemental paid sick leave or other... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Leona D. Jochnowitz , Tonya Kendall ANALYZING WRONGFUL CONVICTIONS BEYOND THE TRADITIONAL CANONICAL LIST OF ERRORS, FOR ENDURING STRUCTURAL AND SOCIOLOGICAL ATTRIBUTES, (JUVENILES, RACISM, ADVERSARY SYSTEM, POLICING POLICIES) 37 Touro Law Review 579 (2021) Researchers identify possible structural causes for wrongful convictions: racism, justice system culture, adversary system, plea bargaining, media, juvenile and mentally impaired accused, and wars on drugs and crime. They indicate that unless the root causes of conviction error are identified, the routine explanations of error (e.g., eyewitness... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Dan Oswald, CEO, Simplify Compliance Another Potential Covid-19 Casualty: Workplace Collaboration 2 No. 1 Midsouth Employment Law Letter 4 (1/1/2021) The year 2020 has been a challenging one for our nation and the world. In addition to the COVID-19 pandemic, the United States has faced heightened racial tensions and a deep political divide culminating in a contested presidential election. Emotions have been running high, and fear seems to rule the day. Through it all, our workplaces...; Search Snippet: ...Law Letter January 2021 Workplace Culture ANOTHER POTENTIAL COVID- 19 CASUALTY: WORKPLACE COLLABORATION Dan Oswald, CEO [FNa1] Simplify... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  Appellants' Reply Brief (May 10, 2021) Pursuant to Eleventh Circuit Rule 26.1, 26.1-2, and 26.1-3, counsel for the plaintiffs-appellants (hereinafter referred to as Plaintiffs unless otherwise specified) certifies that the... 2021 Briefs
Publisher's Editorial Staff Appendix 38-D. EEOC Guidance: What You Should Know About COVID-19 and the ADA, the Rehabilitation Act, and Other EEO Laws Corporate Counsel's Guide to Legal Aspects of Employee Handbooks and Policies 38-D (2021) All EEOC materials related to COVID-19 are collected at www.eeoc.gov/coronavirus. The EEOC enforces workplace anti-discrimination laws, including the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the Rehabilitation Act (which include the requirement for reasonable accommodation and non-discrimination based on disability, and rules about employer... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Robert J. Nobile Appendix A. Coronavirus Information and FAQs Human Resources Guide A (2021) This document and the FAQs are intended to provide you with general information about the 2019 Novel Coronavirus disease, also known as COVID-19, including how it is transmitted and how you can prevent infection. It does not constitute legal advice on this topic. This document is not intended to be exhaustive and we encourage you to supplement your... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Evelyn Paris Applying the Proportionality Principle to COVID-19 Certificates 12 European Journal of Risk Regulation 287 (June, 2021) With the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic entering its second year, public and private actors alike grow eager to achieve some semblance of normality. In this context, the idea of vaccination passports or immunity certificates as a means of resuming social and economic activity has been gaining momentum all around the world. This article aims to provide a... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Alyson Raphael ARBITRATING "JUST CAUSE" FOR EMPLOYEE DISCIPLINE AND DISCHARGE IN THE ERA OF COVID-19 34 Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics 1237 (Fall, 2021) The recent spread of the novel coronavirus (Covid-19) in the United States has led to economic recession, widespread industry shutdowns, and disruption in the lives of millions of American workers. As of December 23, 2020 more than 18 million cases of Covid-19 have been reported in the United States. From mid-March to mid-December of 2020, more... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Lia Epperson ARE WE STILL NOT SAVED? RACE, DEMOCRACY, AND EDUCATIONAL INEQUALITY 100 Oregon Law Review 89 (2021) Introduction: Our History, Our Democracy. 89 I. What Do Schools Look Like Today?. 93 II. Racial Violence, Police in Schools, and the Reckoning of 2020. 96 A. The School-to-Prison Pipeline. 96 B. Summer of Racial Unrest and Reckoning. 99 III. Pandemic Education--COVID-19 as an Inequality Amplifier. 100 A. Who Does COVID Harm?. 101 B. COVID's Effects... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Brett Samuels Asian American leaders eager to talk voting rights with Biden The Hill (August 5, 2021) President Biden will meet with leaders from the Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) community on Thursday, giving a White House audience to a group that ramped up its turnout in 2020 to help lift Biden to victory. 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Scott Wong Asian American leaders push for national museum of their own The Hill (December 29, 2021) The late Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.) first introduced legislation to create an African American museum on the National Mall in 1988. It took nearly three decades before the museum was finally completed and opened its doors to the public. 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Efthimios Parasidis , Micah L. Berman , Patricia J. Zettler ASSESSING COVID-19 EMERGENCY USE AUTHORIZATIONS 76 Food & Drug Law Journal 441 (2021) Emergency Use Authorizations (EUAs) have been integral to the federal government's response to the COVID-19 pandemic. During a public health emergency, the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act permits the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) the authority to issue EUAs to allow the distribution of unapproved medical products, or of... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  AUDIT OF INDIAN HEALTH SERVICE'S COVERAGE OF COVID-19 TESTING - OCTOBER 2021 Health Care Compliance Reporter 5162823 (2021) The Families First Coronavirus Response Act provided $64 million in additional resources for COVID-19 response activities through the Indian Health Service (IHS) and requires coverage, without cost-sharing, for COVID-19 testing for American Indians/Alaska Natives, who receive health services. The Paycheck Protection Program and Health Care... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  AUDIT OF INDIAN HEALTH SERVICE'S COVID-19 VACCINE POLICIES AND PROCEDURES FOR COVID-19 VACCINES DISTRIBUTED TO TRIBAL HEALTH PROGRAMS - APRIL 2021 Healthcare Compl. Rep. 1694872, Health Care Compliance Reporter (2021); (Publication Name: Health Care Compliance Reporter) (4/15/2021) The COVID-19 pandemic has disproportionately affected American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) populations nationwide. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported that the age-adjusted AI/AN population's mortality rate from COVID-19 was 1.8 times higher than that among non-Hispanic whites as of December 2020. The Indian Health... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  AUDIT OF INDIAN HEALTH SERVICE'S COVID-19 VACCINE POLICIES AND PROCEDURES FOR COVID-19 VACCINES DISTRIBUTED TO TRIBAL HEALTH PROGRAMS - MARCH 2021 (ARCHIVED) Healthcare Compl. Rep. 1694883, Health Care Compliance Reporter (2021); (Publication Name: Health Care Compliance Reporter) (4/15/2021) The COVID-19 pandemic has disproportionately affected American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) populations nationwide. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported that the age-adjusted AI/AN population's mortality rate from COVID-19 was 1.8 times higher than that among non-Hispanic whites as of December 2020. The Indian Health... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  AUDIT OF INDIAN HEALTH SERVICE'S COVID-19 VACCINE POLICIES AND PROCEDURES FOR COVID-19 VACCINES DISTRIBUTED TO TRIBAL HEALTH PROGRAMS - OCTOBER 2021 Health Care Compliance Reporter 5162754 (2021) The COVID-19 pandemic has disproportionately affected American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) populations nationwide. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported that the age-adjusted AI/AN population's mortality rate from COVID-19 was 1.8 times higher than that among non-Hispanic whites as of December 2020. The Indian Health... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  AUDIT OF THE DISTRIBUTION OF SUPPLIES FROM INDIAN HEALTH SERVICE'S NATIONAL SUPPLY SERVICE CENTER IN RESPONSE TO COVID-19 - OCTOBER 2021 Health Care Compliance Reporter 5162759 (2021) COVID-19 has created unprecedented challenges for the U.S. hospital system, including Indian Health Service (IHS), Tribal, and Urban Indian Health Program (UIHP) facilities. American Indians and Alaska Natives (AI/AN) are particularly vulnerable to COVID-19 due to the relatively high rates of diabetes, cancer, heart disease, and asthma among these... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Amy Goudge Balancing Legality and Legitimacy in Canada's COVID-19 Response 41 Nat'l J. Const. L. 153, National Journal of Constitutional Law (April, 2021); (Publication Name: National Journal of Constitutional Law) (April, 2021) The COVID-19 pandemic has delivered an impossible balancing act for democracies. As a public health crisis that demands exceptional measures to contain, the pandemic has forced democratic governments to reconcile competing obligations to legality, political legitimacy, and emergency response. In Canada, we have seen provincial governments impose... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Carmel Shachar BALANCING PUBLIC HEALTH AND PRIVACY: LESSONS FROM DIGITAL CONTACT TRACING FOR COVID-19 VACCINATION TRACKING EFFORTS 65 Saint Louis University Law Journal 837 (Summer, 2021) The COVID-19 pandemic has brough the tension between individual privacy and public health initiative to the fore, in part because many of the solutions to the challenges of the pandemic proposed are digital. The first year of the pandemic has revealed that the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act is both too restrictive of... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  BIDEN ADMINISTRATION RESUMES WHITE HOUSE COUNCIL ON NATIVE AMERICAN AFFAIRS No Citation Available (4/16/2021) (4/15/2021)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
Marty Johnson Biden Evokes Floyd in Racial Equity Signings The Hill (1/26/2021) President Biden on Tuesday signed four executive orders aimed at furthering racial equity in the U.S., one of his main campaign platforms.; Search Snippet: ...Biden evokes Floyd in racial equity signings January 26, 2021 President Biden on Tuesday signed... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Marty Johnson Biden Evokes Floyd in Racial Equity Signings The Hill (1/26/2021) (1/26/2021) President Biden on Tuesday signed four executive orders aimed at furthering racial equity in the U.S., one of his main campaign platforms. 2021 Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources
Tal Axelrod Biden Renews Call for New Covid-19 Legislation after Georgia Elections The Hill (1/6/2021) President-elect Joe Biden on Wednesday renewed calls for new coronavirus relief legislation at the start of his administration following the Georgia Senate runoff races Tuesday.; Search Snippet: ...Biden renews call for new COVID- 19 legislation after Georgia elections January 06, 2021 President-elect Joe Biden on Wednesday renewed calls for new coronavirus relief legislation at the start of his administration following the Georgia Senate runoff races Tuesday. The president-elect faces the possibility of having unified... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Tal Axelrod Biden Renews Call for New Covid-19 Legislation after Georgia Elections The Hill(1/6/2021) (1/6/2021) President-elect Joe Biden on Wednesday renewed calls for new coronavirus relief legislation at the start of his administration following the Georgia Senate runoff races Tuesday. 2021 Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources
Morgan Chalfant Biden to tap Erika Moritsugu as new Asian American and Pacific Islander liaison No Citation Available, The Hill (4/14/2021); (Publication Name: The Hill) (4/14/2021) President Biden plans to name Erika Moritsugu to a new senior level Asian American and Pacific Islander liaison position in the White House, three people familiar with the choice confirmed. 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Morgan Chalfant Biden: US still in 'life-and-death race' with coronavirus No Citation Available, The Hill (4/6/2021); (Publication Name: The Hill) (4/6/2021) President Biden on Tuesday called for renewed vigilance as the U.S. battles another rise in coronavirus cases, saying the U.S. is in a life-and-death race with COVID-19 while also making progress toward vaccinating the public. 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Goldburn P. Maynard Jr. BIDEN'S GAMBIT: ADVANCING RACIAL EQUITY WHILE RELYING ON A RACE-NEUTRAL TAX CODE 131 Yale Law Journal Forum 656 (January 9, 2022) The American Rescue Plan Act was both a major infusion of economic aid to low-income and middle-class Americans and an opportunity for the Biden Administration to keep its promise to promote racial equity. This Essay analyzes ARPA's major provisions to determine their potential impact on racial equity. It argues that the Biden... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Representative Eric M. Swalwell , R. Kyle Alagood Biological Threats Are National Security Risks: Why Covid-19 Should Be a Wake-up Call for Policy Makers 77 Washington and Lee Law Review Online217 (2021) (1/5/2021) C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 218 II. Understanding National Security Strategy. 219 III. Developing the National Security Strategy of the United States and National Biodefense Strategy. 222 IV. Executing the Strategy. 225 A. The Cuban Missile Crisis. 225 B. The COVID-19 Pandemic. 228 V. Immediate and Long-Term Effects of COVID-19 on...; Search Snippet: ...5, 2021 Development BIOLOGICAL THREATS ARE NATIONAL SECURITY RISKS: WHY COVID- 19 SHOULD BE A WAKE-UP CALL FOR POLICY MAKERS Representative... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Eric M. Swalwell , R. Kyle Alagood Biological Threats Are National Security Risks: Why Covid-19 Should Be a Wake-up Call for Policy Makers 77 Washington and Lee Law Review Online 217 (1/5/2021) (1/5/2021) C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 218 II. Understanding National Security Strategy. 219 III. Developing the National Security Strategy of the United States and National Biodefense Strategy. 222 IV. Executing the Strategy. 225 A. The Cuban Missile Crisis. 225 B. The COVID-19 Pandemic. 228 V. Immediate and Long-Term Effects of COVID-19 on... 2021 Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources
  Boston Parent Coalition for Academic Excellence Corp. v. School Committee of City of Boston --- F.Supp.3d ----, United States District Court, D. Massachusetts.; (Publication Name: United States District Court, D. Massachusetts.) (4/15/2021) Acting on behalf of fourteen White and Asian American parents and children resident in Boston, the plaintiff corporation sues the Boston School Committee (the School Committee) charging racial discrimination and seeking to enjoin an interim plan governing admission to Boston's three exam schools for the 2021-2022 school... 2021 Cases
  Brief of American Public Health Association, Association of Schools and Programs of Public Health, Academy Of Managed Care Pharmacy, Alliance of Community Health Plans, American College of Osteopathic Emergency Physicians, American College of Preventative (November 30, 2021) As required by Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 26.1, amici curiae American Public Health Association, Association of Schools and Programs of Public Health, Academy of Managed Care... 2021 Briefs
Joshua A. Douglas, Michael A. Zilis BRING THE MASKS AND SANITIZER: THE SURPRISING BIPARTISAN CONSENSUS ABOUT SAFETY MEASURES FOR IN-PERSON VOTING DURING THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC 55 Georgia Law Review 1585 (Summer, 2021) Requiring masks at the polls might implicate a clash between two vital rights: the constitutional right to vote and the right to protect one's health. Yet the debate during the 2020 election over requirements to wear a mask at the polls obscured one key fact: a majority of Americans supported a mask mandate for voting. That is the new insight we... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Kevin R. Johnson BRINGING RACIAL JUSTICE TO IMMIGRATION LAW 116 Northwestern University Law Review Online 1 (May 13, 2021) 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 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
CQ Roll Call staff Broader vaccine eligibility may exacerbate racial inequities No Citation Available, CQ Roll Call Insurance Briefing (4/13/2021); (Publication Name: CQ Roll Call Insurance Briefing) (4/13/2021) States and the federal government are trying to stop the COVID-19 vaccine equity gap from growing as vaccine eligibility opens up to all adults but officials don't have much time. 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Renée M. Landers BUFFERING AGAINST VICISSITUDES: THE ROLE OF SOCIAL INSURANCE IN THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC AND IN MAINTAINING ECONOMIC STABILITY 49 Georgia Journal of International and Comparative Law 505 (Summer, 2021) Thank you for the opportunity to participate in this conference on the important topic of The Future of Global Health Governance. I commend the Dean Rusk International Law Center at the University of Georgia School of Law, and the editors and staff of the Georgia Journal of International & Comparative Law, for convening this symposium to examine... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Mary A. Lynch BUILDING AN ANTI-RACIST PROSECUTORIAL SYSTEM: OBSERVATIONS FROM TEACHING A DOMESTIC VIOLENCE PROSECUTION CLINIC 73 Rutgers University Law Review 1515 (Summer, 2021) Introduction and Background. 1516 II. Local Prosecutors, Intimate Crimes, and Traditionally Marginalized Survivors. 1525 A. Local Prosecutors, Reform, and Anti-Racism. 1525 B. Intimate Crimes and Women of Color. 1533 C. Listening to the Wisdom of Survivors of Color. 1543 III. Observations and Suggestions for Anti-Racism Work and Prosecution of... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Sandhya Raman, CQ Roll Call Cardenas Previews Covid-19 Package to Address Racial Inequities CQ Roll Call Insurance Briefing (2/1/2021) (2/1/2021) Growing up as the youngest of 11 children in an immigrant family, Rep. Tony Cárdenas didn't have access to health care services. 2021 Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources
Emily Kowalik CARE IN THE TIME OF COVID: ADDRESSING THE STATE OF FAMILY AND MEDICAL LEAVE IN LIGHT OF THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC 47 Journal of Legislation 105 (2020-2021) Family caregiving is a responsibility that millions of working Americans bear. Every American is bound to encounter a situation necessitating the use of sick days, time off, or a more significant period of leave at some point during their years in the labor force, whether it be for the birth or adoption of one's child; one's own serious health... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
By Keith Lewis, CQ Roll Call CDC report warns of racial disparities in monoclonal antibody treatments CQ Roll Call Insurance Briefing (January 19, 2022) More than a dozen medical researchers are sounding the alarm about racial disparities they uncovered in the administration of certain treatments for COVID-19, according to a study published in the Centers for Disease Control's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  CDC'S COLLECTION AND USE OF DATA ON DISPARITIES IN COVID-19 CASES AND OUTCOMES - OCTOBER 2021 Health Care Compliance Reporter 5162766 (2021) With emerging information on rates of infection and outcomes for the ongoing coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), numerous reports document a disproportionate burden of infection and deaths among communities of color and economically disadvantaged communities. This study will examine data that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Dawn M. Hunter , Betsy Lawton CENTERING RACIAL EQUITY: DISPARITIES TASK FORCES AS A STRATEGY TO ENSURE AN EQUITABLE PANDEMIC RESPONSE 14 Saint Louis University Journal of Health Law & Policy 251 (2021) COVID-19 has had a stark and severe impact on health, economic stability, housing, and education in communities of color in the United States. As the pandemic has unfolded, the disproportionate number of cases, hospitalizations, and deaths due to COVID-19 among Black, Hispanic and Latinx, and Indigenous people has served as a stark reminder that... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Anita Weinberg, Lilia Valdez CHILD WELFARE, REASONABLE EFFORTS, AND COVID-19 41 Children's Legal Rights Journal 162 (2021) Article 19 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) requires governments to protect children from all forms of violence, including violence in the home. At the same time, Articles 3 and 5 obligate states to respect the rights and duties of parents to care for and make decisions on behalf of their children. Although the... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Christina Cullen, Olivia Alden, Diana Arroyo, Andy Froelich, Meghan Kasner, Conor Kinney, Anique Aburaad, Rebecca Jacobs, Alexandra Spognardi, Alexandra Kuenzli CHILDREN AND RACIAL INJUSTICE IN THE UNITED STATES: A SELECTIVE ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY AND CALL TO ACTION 41 Children's Legal Rights Journal 1 (2021) For many reasons, 2020 became a year of reckoning for racial injustice. While a strong and deserved focus has been paid to criminal justice and police brutality, the systemic racism that underlies those institutions and many others affects more than just adults. Children are impacted by systemic racism in myriad ways that can be tragic, maddening,... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
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