Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year | Type |
J. Edward Moreno |
Congressional Black Caucus calls on CDC to report racial data |
The Hill (4/8/2020) |
The Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) is calling on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to report racial data in updates on the coronavirus outbreak after figures reported by certain states and counties showed black Americans are disproportionately affected by the pandemic. |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Brett Samuels |
Conway defends Trump's COVID-19 language after saying it was 'offensive' |
The Hill (6/24/2020) |
White House counselor Kellyanne Conway on Wednesday defended President Trump's repeated use of the term kung flu" to describe the coronavirus despite previously telling reporters the term was "highly offensive."" |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
|
CORONAVIRUS IS NO EXCUSE FOR HATE |
(4/7/2020) |
|
2020 |
Administrative Decisions & Guidance |
Max Greenwood and Julia Manchester |
Coronavirus steals Trump economic edge |
The Hill (4/18/2020) |
President Trump has the money, the bully pulpit and a firm grip on his party as he leans into his reelection race, but he no longer has what was long seen as the greatest strength of his presidency: a strong economy. |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Lindsay F. Wiley , Stephen I. Vladeck |
CORONAVIRUS, CIVIL LIBERTIES, AND THE COURTS: THE CASE AGAINST "SUSPENDING" JUDICIAL REVIEW |
133 Harvard Law Review Forum 179 (7/1/2020) |
For obvious reasons, local and state orders designed to help flatten the curve of novel coronavirus infections (and conserve health care capacity to treat coronavirus disease ) have provoked a series of constitutional objections- and a growing number of lawsuits attempting to have those orders modified or overturned. Like the coronavirus crisis; HARVARD LAW REVIEW FORUM Harvard Law Review Forum July, 2020 CORONAVIRUS, CIVIL LIBERTIES, AND THE COURTS: THE CASE AGAINST SUSPENDING JUDICIAL; |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
|
COULD A WPA-TYPE JOBS PROGRAM COUNTERACT CORONAVIRUS-CAUSED JOB LOSSES AND EXPEDITE AFFORDABLE HOUSING? |
2020-7 Construction Briefings 1 (7/1/2020) (7/1/2020) |
As of this writing (at the end of May 2020), the coronavirus pandemic is continuing to work its way across the United States. It appears highly probable that a second wave will follow later this year. Thus, the hardship and dislocation that accompanied the initial onslaught is likely to repeat itself this autumn, only now unfolding just in time to; |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Sandhya Raman, CQ Roll Call |
COVID-19 amplifies racial disparities in maternal health |
CQ Roll Call Insurance Briefing (5/14/2020) |
Days before her death, Amber Isaac tweeted about her negative experiences receiving pregnancy care at her local hospital in the Bronx. |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Christian Fuller |
Covid-19 and College Athletics: Examining the Effects of Coronavirus on African American Student Athletes and the Future of Collegiate Sports |
30 Annals Annals of Health Law Advance Directive 169 (Fall, 2020) (2020) |
The COVID-19 pandemic has caused one of the greatest disruptions in the twenty-first century. One industry in particular that has had a major setback is the college sports industry. Many colleges and universities have contemplated canceling their sports seasons entirely, thus leaving many African American athletes without proper protection from... |
2020 |
Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources |
Valena Beety, Brandon L. Garrett |
COVID-19 AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE |
11/16/2020 U. Chi. L. Rev. Online 1, University of Chicago Law Review Online (11/16/2020) |
The COVID-19 pandemic has pushed the boundaries of our criminal legal system, testing the entrenchment of patterns in incarceration, policing, and surveillance. During a time in which new concerns arose about racial injustice and mass incarceration, prompting searching scrutiny, this pandemic created opportunities to rethink old ways of handling... |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Katherine Florey |
COVID-19 AND DOMESTIC TRAVEL RESTRICTIONS |
96 Notre Dame Law Review Reflection 1 (2020) (9/9/2020) |
The strict controls that many jurisdictions, including most U.S. states, established to contain the COVID-19 pandemic have proven difficult to sustain over time, and most places are moving to lift them. Internationally, many plans to ease lockdowns have retained some form of travel restrictions, including the green zone plans adopted by France... |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Leanne Fuith , Susan Trombley |
COVID-19 AND THE CAREGIVING CRISIS |
77-OCT Bench and Bar of Minnesota 27 ()October, 2020 (10/29/2020) |
The covid-19 pandemic has disrupted every aspect of life. Since March 2020, Minnesota families have navigated a new normal that no longer includes access to regular care for their children or other vulnerable family members. At the end of July, Gov. Tim Walz announced a return-to-school framework for the 2020-2021 school year that includes hybrid... |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Robert Gatter , Seema Mohapatra |
COVID-19 AND THE CONUNDRUM OF MASK REQUIREMENTS |
77 Washington and Lee Law Review Online 17 (5/28/2020) (5/28/2020) |
As states begin to loosen their COVID-19 restrictions, public debate is underway about what public health measures are appropriate. Many states have some form of mask-wearing orders to prevent the spread of COVID-19 infection. Public health guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization has; |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
KD Ewing , Lord Hendy QC |
Covid-19 and the Failure of Labour Law: Part 1 |
49 Industrial Law Journal 497 (December, 2020) (2020) |
Acceptance Date October 26, 2020; Advanced Access publication on December 8, 2020. In this article, we consider how Covid-19 revealed the extent to which, in Britain, the core functions of labour law have been compromised by successive governments stretching back to the 1980s and how workers collectively have been failed as a result by a discipline... |
2020 |
Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources |
Guofu Liu |
COVID-19 AND THE HUMAN RIGHTS OF NATIONALS ABROAD |
114 AJIL Unbound 317, AJIL Unbound (2020) |
The COVID-19 pandemic is having serious and disproportionate effects on nationals abroad and their families globally. Many states have adopted positive measures including temporarily suspending forced returns as well providing visa and work permit extensions, temporary residence, or other forms of regular status to ensure that migrants are... |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
|
COVID-19 Employee FAQs |
-2020 |
Answers to frequently asked questions from employees about issues related to the 2019 novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19). The FAQs address worker notification laws, paid sick leave and family and medical leave benefits, health and safety protections in the workplace, workers' compensation benefits, unemployment insurance, wage and hour laws, ; |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Michael Lotito, et. Al. |
COVID-19 employment lawsuits |
38 No. 19 Westlaw Journal Aviation 10, Westlaw Journal Aviation (12/3/2020) |
Littler Mendelson attorneys Michael Lotito, James Paretti, Ramanpreet Dheri and Tessa Gelbman discuss the various liability claims employers have faced during the coronavirus pandemic, including wage and hour, retaliation, wrongful termination and workplace safety. Although defending against employment lawsuits has always been a part of doing... |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
|
Covid-19 Essays |
56 Idaho Law Review 565 (2020) (2020) |
On April 27,2019, Professor Stephen Miller, faculty advisor for the Idaho Law Review, sent out a call for essays on coronavirus related topics. He noted: The novel coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic has disrupted life in ways unimaginable just a few months ago . The Review seeks submissions from law students, faculty and staff at the College of Law,... |
2020 |
Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources |
Daniel P. Monarch , Daniel J. Boehm |
COVID-19 GIVES RISE TO THE BIRTH OF THE REMOTE VOLUNTARY SETTLEMENT CONFERENCE PROGRAM |
62-AUG Orange County Lawyer 36 (8/1/2020) |
On March 23, 2020, the Honorable Judge Kirk H. Nakamura, Presiding Judge of the Orange County Superior Court, initiated a series of Administrative Orders that continued or trailed almost 10, 000 Family Law matters (Administrative Order 20/08). Pursuant to these Orders, all pending non-emergency Family Law matters set between March 23, 2020 and June; |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Darius Lee |
Covid-19 in Singapore: 'Responsive Communitarianism' and the Legislative Approach to the "Most Serious Crisis" since Independence |
2020 Singapore Journal of Legal Studies 2020 (September, 2020) (9/1/2020) |
The Singapore government has called the COVID-19 pandemic the most serious crisis that Singapore has faced since Independence. However, Singapore did not issue a Proclamation of Emergency. Instead, it adopted a legislative model of emergency powers, addressing COVID-19 through ordinary legislation, including and especially the new COVID-19... |
2020 |
Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources |
Morgan Chalfant |
COVID-19 makes Trump's work with black Americans that much harder |
The Hill (5/23/2020) |
President Trump, who stepped up his effort to target black voters earlier this year by focusing on criminal justice reform and the record-low unemployment rate, has been forced to shift in recent weeks as the novel coronavirus has disproportionately affected communities of color. |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Susan Swann |
COVID-19 quick take: White House revives Native American affairs council |
WESTLAW Health Daily Briefing (4/29/2020) |
The White House and U.S. Interior Secretary David Bernhardt on April 28 jointly announced (2020 WL 2030035) the reestablishment of the Obama-era White House Council on Native American Affairs, to continue interagency coordination of tribal governments' response to COVID-19. |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Kele Stewart , et. Al. |
Covid-19 Reflections on Resilience and Reform in the Child Welfare System |
48 Fordham Urban Law Journal 95 (December, 2020) (2020) |
Introduction. 96 I. The Child Welfare System and Two Pandemics. 98 A. A Beleaguered System in Need of Reform. 99 B. Alarms of Calamity Due to the COVID-19 Pandemic. 101 C. A Spotlight on Longstanding Racial Inequality. 104 II. Impact of COVID-19 on Florida's Child Welfare System. 108 A. Pre-COVID-19 Florida CPS Agency Practices and Data Trends. 109... |
2020 |
Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources |
Elizabeth Williams, J.D. |
COVID-19 Related Litigation: Challenges to Election and Voting Practices During COVID-19 Pandemic |
54 A.L.R. Fed. 3d Art. 3 (Originally published in 2020), American Law Reports ALR Federal 3d (12/3/2020) |
Early in the presidential election year of 2020, COVID-19, an infectious and sometimes deadly disease caused by a novel coronavirus, appeared throughout the United States and the rest of the world. Many state and local governments imposed restrictions on activities that made the spread of the disease more likely, such as large gatherings of people.... |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Elizabeth Williams, J.D. |
Covid-19 Related Litigation: Challenges to Election and Voting Practices During Covid-19 Pandemic |
54 American Law Reports ALR Federal 3d 2 (12/1/2020) |
Early in the presidential election year of 2020, COVID-19, an infectious and sometimes deadly disease caused by a novel coronavirus, appeared throughout the United States and the rest of the world. Many state and local governments imposed restrictions on activities that made the spread of the disease more likely, such as large gatherings of people.... |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Secondary Sources |
Elizabeth Williams, J.D. |
Covid-19 Related Litigation: Challenges to Election and Voting Practices During Covid-19 Pandemic |
54 American Law Reports ALR Federal 3d 2020) (2021) (2020) |
Early in the presidential election year of 2020, COVID-19, an infectious and sometimes deadly disease caused by a novel coronavirus, appeared throughout the United States and the rest of the world. Many state and local governments imposed restrictions on activities that made the spread of the disease more likely, such as large gatherings of people.... |
2020 |
Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources |
Linda A. Sharp, J.D. |
COVID-19 Related Litigation: Constitutionality of Stay-at-Home, Shelter-in-Place, and Lockdown Orders |
55 A.L.R. Fed. 3d Art. 3 (Originally published in 2020), American Law Reports ALR Federal 3d (12/3/2020) |
The COVID-19 pandemic continues to wreak havoc as it affects all aspects of life. In response to the pandemic and in efforts to mitigate the spread of the virus, state, local, and county governments initiated a number of restrictions on residents, churches, and businesses including quarantine, stay-at-home, travel bans, shelter-in-place, lockdowns, ... |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Linda A. Sharp, J.D. |
Covid-19 Related Litigation: Constitutionality of Stay-at-home, Shelter-in-place, and Lockdown Orders |
55 American Law Reports ALR Federal 3d 3 (12/1/2020) |
The COVID-19 pandemic continues to wreak havoc as it affects all aspects of life. In response to the pandemic and in efforts to mitigate the spread of the virus, state, local, and county governments initiated a number of restrictions on residents, churches, and businesses including quarantine, stay-at-home, travel bans, shelter-in-place, lockdowns,... |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Secondary Sources |
Linda A. Sharp, J.D. |
Covid-19 Related Litigation: Constitutionality of Stay-at-home, Shelter-in-place, and Lockdown Orders |
55 American Law Reports ALR Federal 3d 2020) (2021) (2020) |
The COVID-19 pandemic continues to wreak havoc as it affects all aspects of life. In response to the pandemic and in efforts to mitigate the spread of the virus, state, local, and county governments initiated a number of restrictions on residents, churches, and businesses including quarantine, stay-at-home, travel bans, shelter-in-place, lockdowns,... |
2020 |
Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources |
Fern L. Kletter, J.D. |
COVID-19 Related Litigation: Effect of Pandemic on Release from Federal Custody |
54 A.L.R. Fed. 3d Art. 1 (Originally published in 2020), American Law Reports ALR Federal 3d (12/3/2020) |
The novel coronavirus has spread rampantly throughout the United States, touching off widespread infections of COVID-19. Incarcerated and detained persons live within congregate environments, heightening the potential for COVID-19 to spread once introduced. This has prompted many federal detainees and inmates to petition for release from custodial... |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Fern L. Kletter, J.D. |
Covid-19 Related Litigation: Effect of Pandemic on Release from Federal Custody |
54 American Law Reports ALR Federal 1 (12/1/2020) |
The novel coronavirus has spread rampantly throughout the United States, touching off widespread infections of COVID-19. Incarcerated and detained persons live within congregate environments, heightening the potential for COVID-19 to spread once introduced. This has prompted many federal detainees and inmates to petition for release from custodial... |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Secondary Sources |
Fern L. Kletter, J.D. |
Covid-19 Related Litigation: Effect of Pandemic on Release from Federal Custody |
54 American Law Reports ALR Federal 3d 2020) (2021) (2020) |
The novel coronavirus has spread rampantly throughout the United States, touching off widespread infections of COVID-19. Incarcerated and detained persons live within congregate environments, heightening the potential for COVID-19 to spread once introduced. This has prompted many federal detainees and inmates to petition for release from custodial... |
2020 |
Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources |
Jay M. Zitter, J.D. |
COVID-19 Related Litigation: Effect of Pandemic on Release from State and Local Custody |
54 A.L.R.7th Art. 3 (Originally published in 2020), American Law Reports ALR7th (12/3/2020) |
Merely because someone is incarcerated, whether before or after trial, conviction, or sentencing, does not mean that prison authorities have the right to expose them to deadly dangers. But this is exactly what many prisoners claim is happening when they are forced to remain in jail despite the grave and overwhelming dangers of the COVID-19... |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Jay M. Zitter, J.D. |
Covid-19 Related Litigation: Effect of Pandemic on Release from State and Local Custody |
54 American Law Reports ALR7th 2 (12/1/2020) |
Merely because someone is incarcerated, whether before or after trial, conviction, or sentencing, does not mean that prison authorities have the right to expose them to deadly dangers. But this is exactly what many prisoners claim is happening when they are forced to remain in jail despite the grave and overwhelming dangers of the COVID-19... |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Secondary Sources |
Jay M. Zitter, J.D. |
Covid-19 Related Litigation: Effect of Pandemic on Release from State and Local Custody |
54 American Law Reports ALR7th 2020) (2021) (2020) |
Merely because someone is incarcerated, whether before or after trial, conviction, or sentencing, does not mean that prison authorities have the right to expose them to deadly dangers. But this is exactly what many prisoners claim is happening when they are forced to remain in jail despite the grave and overwhelming dangers of the COVID-19... |
2020 |
Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources |
|
COVID-19 update: Congress passes $2 trillion stimulus package; states take on evictions, homelessness |
2020 WL 1481979 (3/27/2020) |
As applications for unemployment benefits set a new weekly record, federal and state governments are working to mitigate the effects of the coronavirus pandemic. |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Sandhya Raman, et. Al. |
COVID-19 vaccine development raises questions of cost, distribution |
CQ Roll Call Insurance Briefing (4/24/2020) |
As scientists race to find a COVID-19 vaccine, policymakers and regulators face challenging questions of how to balance efficacy demands with a tight timeline, as well as how to pay for one the best way to distribute it. |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Max Greenwood |
COVID-19, text messages roil North Carolina Senate race |
The Hill (10/5/2020) |
The Senate race in North Carolina has entered a volatile new phase, as both Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) and Democrat Cal Cunningham confront crises that threaten to upend a contest that could determine control of the Senate in November. |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Samuel D. Hodge, Jr. , Jack E. Hubbard |
Covid-19: the Ethical and Legal Implications of Medical Rationing |
56 Gonzaga Law Review 159 (2020/2021) (9/22/2020) |
Life is not measured by the breaths we take but by the moments that take our breath away. -George Carlin Introduction. 161 I. Medical Discussion. 163 A. What Is a Virus?. 163 B. Immune Defense System. 165 C. What Is a Coronavirus?. 166 D. What Is SARS-CoV-2?. 168 E. What Are the Symptoms of COVID-19?. 170 F. Why Is COVID-19 Fatal?. 171 G.... |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Secondary Sources |
Rebecca Mayo, J.D. |
COVID-19–GAO REPORTS: TIMELY, CONCERTED ACTIONS NEEDED TO RESPOND TO COVID-19 PANDEMIC |
Wolters Kluwer Health Law Daily (9/22/2020) |
According to a GAO report, timely and concerted federal leadership will be required to respond to the ongoing COVID-19 public health crisis as the country heads into flu and hurricane season. The United States continues to experience serious economic repercussions and turmoil due to the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. According to the... |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Secondary Sources |
Crystal Grant |
Covid-19's Impact on Students with Disabilities in Under-resourced School Districts |
48 Fordham Urban Law Journal 127 (December, 2020) (2020) |
Introduction. 127 I. Students with Disabilities During COVID-19. 130 II. The Impact of COVID-19 on Students of Color. 133 III. Applicable Laws During the Pandemic. 136 A. Special Education Services During March-June 2020. 137 B. Special Education Services at the Start of the 2020-2021 School Year. 138 Conclusion. 139 |
2020 |
Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources |
Dubin Research |
COVID-19'S NEXT VICTIM? THE RIGHTS OF THE ACCUSED |
44-MAY Champion 22 (7/15/2020) |
On May 24, 2020, Benjamin Netanyahu walked into a courtroom in Jerusalem to face charges of corruption. The occasion was momentous by any measure-Mr. Netanyahu became the first sitting Israeli prime minister to stand trial. But despite these historic charges, the media appeared equally fixated on what Mr. Netanyahu was wearing. Why? He walked into; MAY Champion 22 2020 WL 4036744 CHAMPION Champion May, 2020 COVID- 19'S NEXT VICTIM? THE RIGHTS OF THE ACCUSED Dubin Research Consulting; and Ethnic Minorities Though data related to the impact of COVID- 19 on the health of racial and ethnic minority groups is still emerging, the CDC has; data suggest a disproportionate burden of illness and death among racial and ethnic minority groups. [FN145] An April 17, 2020 Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR), which included race and ethnicity data from 580 patients hospitalized with lab-confirmed COVID- 19, found that black patients represented a larger percentage of hospitalized; |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
|
CRIMINAL COURT REOPENING AND PUBLIC HEALTH IN THE COVID-19 ERA |
44-MAY Champion 46 (7/15/2020) |
NACDL recognizes that the unprecedented public health risks caused by the COVID-19 pandemic present enormous challenges for court operations, especially in criminal matters where liberty, and in some venues life, are at stake. There is an inherent conflict between core constitutional rights and public safety. A highly infectious and potentially; May, 2020 CRIMINAL COURT REOPENING AND PUBLIC HEALTH IN THE COVID- 19 ERA NACDL Statement of Principles Copyright © 2020 by National Association; seeking release for incarcerated individuals who face increased risk of COVID- 19 infection by virtue of age, race, pre-existing medical conditions, conditions of confinement, or other factors; limitation or accommodation implemented to continue court operations during the COVID- 19 pandemic must not exacerbate the historic failures of the criminal; to trial (through coercive plea bargaining), structural discrimination based on race and socio-economic status, excessive use of pretrial detention, and; |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Jessie Hellmann |
Cuomo calls for bonuses for coronavirus front line workers |
The Hill (4/20/2020) |
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) on Monday called on the federal government to pay bonuses to front line workers who dont have the luxury of staying home. |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Chiquisha R. Robinson |
Defense Attorneys Are the Best Line of Defense Against the Covid-19 Pandemic for Incarcerated People |
35-FALL Criminal Justice 32 (Fall, 2020) (12/1/2020) |
When the COVID-19 pandemic hit, our world changed in drastic and difficult ways. Businesses were shuttered, major world events were canceled, and habits of daily life were altered in order to flatten the curve. But inside America's jails and prisons, where the deadly virus has spread like wildfire, more than 2.3 million incarcerated people remain... |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Secondary Sources |
Karlyn Kurichety |
DELIBERATE ENDANGERMENT: DETENTION OF NONCITIZENS DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC |
68 UCLA L. Rev. Discourse 118 (2020) (Abstract on Racism.org) (9/9/2020) |
In the midst of worldwide efforts to mitigate the COVID-19 pandemic, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) continues to detain noncitizens in dangerous conditions that create a high risk of infection. This Article explores the dire situation facing detained noncitizens as a result of the government's decision to imprison tens of thousands of... |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Amie Parnes |
Democratic fears rise again as coronavirus pushes Biden to sidelines |
The Hill (3/27/2020) |
Democrats are growing increasingly anxious that Joe Biden is losing ground to President Trump as the nation deals with an unprecedented national crisis in the coronavirus pandemic. |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
|
Democrats blast CDC report on minorities and COVID-19 |
(5/27/2020) |
The leaders of the House minority caucuses Wednesday slammed the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) over the breadth of information provided in a report submitted to Congress on the effects of COVID-19 on minority communities. |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Alexander Bolton |
Democrats fear coronavirus impact on November turnout |
The Hill (4/3/2020) |
Congressional Democrats are stepping up efforts to guard against a potential drop in voter turnout in November driven by the coronavirus crisis. |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Benjamin J. Hulac, CQ Roll Call |
Democrats link climate, jobs, race in election-year resolution |
CQ Roll Call Washington Energy Briefing (9/10/2020) |
Democrats unveiled a bicameral resolution on climate change, racial justice and economic recovery on Thursday, the latest election-year push from the party to frame global warming as an opportunity to create jobs and tackle long-festering racial strife in the U.S. |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Marty Johnson |
Democrats unveil plan declaring racism a public health issue |
The Hill (9/3/2020) |
A trio of Democratic lawmakers introduced legislation Thursday that would label racism as a nationwide public health crisis. |
2020 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |