AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYear
Kjirsten Lee TRANSGRESSING TRAINERS AND ENHANCED EQUINES: DRUG USE IN RACEHORSES, DIFFICULTY ASSIGNING RESPONSIBILITY AND THE NEED FOR A NATIONAL RACING COMMISSION 11 Journal of Animal & Natural Resource Law 23 (May, 2015) From Saratoga Race Track in New York State to Santa Anita Park in California, and from Canterbury Downs in Minnesota to Gulfstream Park in Florida, horse racing spans the United States and has always been a part of American culture. It is known as the sport of kings, and millions of dollars change hands every year chasing 1,200-pound investment... 2015
Erin M. Kerrison, Ph.D. WHITE CLAIMS TO ILLNESS AND THE RACE-BASED MEDICALIZATION OF ADDICTION FOR DRUG-INVOLVED FORMER PRISONERS 31 Harvard Journal on Racial & Ethnic Justice 105 (Spring 2015) Critical Race Theory scholars have long argued that the War on Drugs is a war waged against low-income, black urban citizens. However, as the spotlight has shifted somewhat from policing street drug use and trafficking among poor, inner-city blacks, to concerns about the chronic pharmaceutical substance abuse of middle- and upper-class white... 2015
Tessie Smith WORSHIPING AT THE ALTAR OF PROGRESS: COGNITIVE ENHANCING DRUGS IN LEGAL EDUCATION 40 University of Dayton Law Review 225 (Fall, 2015) I. Introduction. 226 II. Background. 229 A. Adderall & Ritalin. 229 1. The ADHD Epidemic. 229 2. The Black Market of Cognitive Enhancers. 230 3. Danger Hidden in Plain Sight. 231 B. Abuse of Cognitive Enhancing Drugs in Law Schools. 233 1. Law School Values. 234 2. The Current Legal Market: Heavy Debt and Bleak Job Prospects. 236 3. Cognitive... 2015
Steven A. Vitale "DOPE" DILEMMAS IN A BUDDING FUTURE INDUSTRY: AN EXAMINATION OF THE CURRENT STATUS OF MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION IN THE UNITED STATES 23 University of Miami Business Law Review 131 (Winter 2014) This Comment provides an in-depth analysis of the current status regarding legalization of marijuana in the United States. It begins by tracing a brief history of the legalization movement in this country. The next section addresses the federal-state law conflict issue, coupled with a thorough analysis of two recent and relatively unexamined... 2014
Taylor R. Overman A "DUBIOUS DISTINCTION": NEW JERSEY'S DRUG-FREE SCHOOL ZONES & DISPARATELY IMPACTED MINORITY COMMUNITIES 34 Boston College Journal of Law & Social Justice 397 (Spring, 2014) Richard Nixon fundamentally changed the prison system in America when he launched the War on Drugs in 1969, leading to a series of federal laws imposing harsh mandatory sentences on drug offenders. In an attempt to shield children from drugs, New Jersey followed other states in passing a drug-free school zone statute. The statute... 2014
Paul J. Larkin, Jr. CRACK COCAINE, CONGRESSIONAL INACTION, AND EQUAL PROTECTION 37 Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy 241 (Winter, 2014) I. The History of Federal Drug Policy. 244 II. Crack Cocaine, Race, and Equal Protection Law. 249 A. Legislation and Equal Protection Law. 250 B. Legislative Inaction and Equal Protection Law. 258 1. The Article I Lawmaking Process. 259 2. The Due Process Clause. 263 3. Equal Protection Principles. 271 III. Crack Cocaine, Race, and Federal Drug... 2014
John Vigorito CREATING CONSTITUTIONAL CANNABIS: AN INDIVIDUAL STATE'S TENTH AMENDMENT RIGHT TO LEGALIZE MARIJUANA 46 University of Toledo Law Review 221 (Fall 2014) THE cannabis plant has had a multitude of uses throughout history dating back as far as 8000 B.C., including medicinal uses as early as 4000 B.C. Even the storied past of the United States includes many uses for the plant to go along with tales about our country's founding fathers growing and using cannabis. For example, George Washington wrote a... 2014
John MacDonald, Jeremy Arkes, Nancy Nicosia, Rosalie Liccardo Pacula DECOMPOSING RACIAL DISPARITIES IN PRISON AND DRUG TREATMENT COMMITMENTS FOR CRIMINAL OFFENDERS IN CALIFORNIA 43 Journal of Legal Studies 155 (January, 2014) We assess whether black-white disparities in commitments to prison or diversions to treatment for drug offenders in California can be explained by differences in the characteristics of criminal cases and whether case characteristics are weighed differently by race. We also examine whether the influence of case characteristics changed after... 2014
Jelani Jefferson Exum FORGET SENTENCING EQUALITY: MOVING FROM THE "CRACKED" COCAINE DEBATE TOWARD PARTICULAR PURPOSE SENTENCING 18 Lewis & Clark Law Review 95 (2014) While a racial equality-themed discourse has traditionally fueled the crack-versus-powder cocaine sentencing debate, this Article asserts that seeking equality in sentencing outcomes is the wrong goal. This Article argues that reformers seeking racial equality in sentencing are misguided in using the cocaine sentencing standards as a benchmark of... 2014
David Borden IF HARD DRUGS WERE LEGALIZED, WOULD MORE PEOPLE USE THEM? 12 Cardozo Public Law, Policy and Ethics Journal 569 (Summer 2014) Introduction. 570 I. The Known Disasters of Prohibition. 574 A. State Weakness and Insurgency. 574 B. Street Crime. 575 C. Making Drugs and Addiction More Damaging to Users. 577 D. Excesses of the Current Drug War. 579 II. The Uncertainties of Legalization. 583 A. Not All Drugs Are Equal. 584 B. What Would Happen to Harm?. 585 C. Different Drugs... 2014
Mona Lynch , Marisa Omori LEGAL CHANGE AND SENTENCING NORMS IN THE WAKE OF BOOKER: THE IMPACT OF TIME AND PLACE ON DRUG TRAFFICKING CASES IN FEDERAL COURT 48 Law and Society Review 411 (June, 2014) The federal sentencing guidelines have lost some authoritative force since the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in a series of recent cases that the guidelines are advisory, rather than presumptive, in determining criminal sentences. While these court decisions represent a dramatic legal intervention, sociolegal scholarship suggests that organizational... 2014
Danielle Snyder , St. Thomas University School of Law, Miami Gardens ONE SIZE DOES NOT FIT ALL: A LOOK AT THE DISPROPORTIONATE EFFECTS OF FEDERAL MANDATORY MINIMUM DRUG SENTENCES ON RACIAL MINORITIES AND HOW THEY HAVE CONTRIBUTED TO THE DEGRADATION OF THE UNDERPRIVILEGED AFRICAN-AMERICAN FAMILY 36 Hamline Journal of Public Law and Policy 77 (Fall, 2014) If you stand in a Federal Court, you're watching poor and uneducated people being fed into a machine like meat to make sausage. It's just bang, bang, bang, bang, next! says journalist Charles Bowden in Eugene Jarecki's documentary film entitled, The House I Live In. This metaphorical butchery concept illustrates the harsh and unfair nature of... 2014
David S. Schwartz PRESIDENTIAL POLITICS AS A SAFEGUARD OF FEDERALISM: THE CASE OF MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION 62 Buffalo Law Review 599 (May, 2014) How does the United States constitutional system best preserve federalism? The debate over the so-called political safeguards of federalism asks whether federal courts can and should defer to the political process or instead apply non-deferential judicial review when confronting a claim that federal legislation has exceeded the enumerated powers... 2014
Kyle Cassidy REINING IN THE USE OF PERFORMANCE ENHANCING DRUGS IN HORSERACING: WHY A FEDERAL REGULATION IS NEEDED 24 Seton Hall Journal of Sports and Entertainment Law 121 (2014) Introduction. 122 I. Current Regulation of Performance-enhancing Drugs and how the System Fosters Trainer Misconduct. 124 A. The History of Thoroughbred Horseracing and its Regulatory Scheme. 124 B. Why Horseracing's Current Regulatory Scheme is Problematic. 128 C. Specific Issues that Arise Under the Current Regulatory Scheme. 129 1. The Current... 2014
Ben Jakovljevic TERROR IN TRADING: SHOULD THE UNITED STATES CLASSIFY MEXICAN DRUG TRAFFICKING ORGANIZATIONS AS TERRORIST ORGANIZATIONS? 23 Southern California Interdisciplinary Law Journal 355 (Winter 2014) Drug policy reform in the United States is a controversial topic that has generated much discussion but little substantive change. One strategy proposed that could both generate broad support and retain the U.S. principle of getting tough on drugs is to attack Mexican drug trafficking organizations (MDTOs) by treating them as Foreign Terrorist... 2014
Quincy Booth THE IMPACTS OF MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION AND DECRIMINALIZATION ON HISTORICALLY TARGETED MINORITY GROUPS 16 Lawyers Journal 12 (April 4, 2014) Editor's note: This was the winning essay in the Oliver L. Johnson Scholarship Essay contest that is held annually during the ACBA's Black History Month. The author is a 2L student at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law. In a 2014 interview with David Remnick from The New Yorker, President Barack Obama stated: African-American kids and... 2014
Mirko Bagaric , Samantha Hepburn , Lidia Xynas THE SENSELESS WAR: THE SENTENCING DRUG OFFENSES ARMS RACE 16 Oregon Review of International Law 1 (2014) 2 Introduction. 2 Overview of the Fifty-Year War on Illicit Drugs. 2 Structure of the Article and Definitional Matters. 3 I. Current Approach to Sentencing Drug Offenders. 7 A. The Number of Drug Prisoners in the United States and Its Approach to the Sentencing of Drug Offenders. 7 B. The Number of Drug Prisoners in Australia and the... 2014
Andrew L. Scherf , Hamline University School of Law THE SOCIETAL AND ECONOMIC IMPACTS OF RECENT DRAMATIC SHIFTS IN STATE MARIJUANA LAW: HOW SHOULD MINNESOTA PROCEED IN THE FUTURE? 36 Hamline Journal of Public Law and Policy 119 (Fall, 2014) In writing this article, I set out to analyze the different types of existing marijuana laws in the United States including the federal laws, state marijuana decriminalization laws, medical marijuana laws, and recreational marijuana laws. Marijuana is illegal in all aspects at the federal government level, and is characterized as a Schedule 1... 2014
Blake Courlang THE WAR ON DRUGS IS OVER (IF YOU WANT IT): STATE DRUG COURTS AS AN ALTERNATIVE TO CRIMINAL COURTS FOR LOW-LEVEL, NONVIOLENT DRUG OFFENDERS 16 Cardozo Journal of Conflict Resolution 265 (Fall 2014) On August 12, 2013, United States Attorney General Eric Holder revealed that he recommended a modification of the Department of Justice's charging policies regarding mandatory minimum sentences for certain low-level, nonviolent drug offenders, giving federal prosecutors discretion based on the circumstances of the case and no longer requiring the... 2014
Taylor E. Whitten UNDER THE GUISE OF REFORM: HOW MARIJUANA POSSESSION IS EXPOSING THE FLAWS IN THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM'S GUARANTEE OF A RIGHT TO A JURY TRIAL 99 Iowa Law Review 919 (January, 2014) Recent Supreme Court decisions have restricted a criminal defendant's right to a jury trial. By setting the threshold to trigger a jury trial right at six-months imprisonment, the Supreme Court once feared that the legislature might classify serious crimes as petty, and take away a defendant's right to a jury trial. But what if the... 2014
Kristine Schanbacher BEHIND THE VEIL OF THE WAR ON DRUGS: AN INSTITUTIONAL ATTACK ON THE AFRICAN AMERICAN COMMUNITY 16 Scholar: St. Mary's Law Review on Race and Social Justice 103 (2013) I. Media Portrayal. 106 II. Unchecked Police Discretion. 108 III. Unchecked Prosecutorial Discretion. 113 IV. Harsh Sentencing Policies. 117 A. Sentencing Disparity Between Crack Cocaine and Powder Cocaine. 117 B. School Zone Drug Laws. 119 C. Prior Offense Sentencing Policies. 120 V. Conclusion. 121 2013
Carla-Michelle Adams, Esq. CRIMINALIZATION IN SHADES OF COLOR: PROSECUTING PREGNANT DRUG-ADDICTED WOMEN 20 Cardozo Journal of Law & Gender 89 (Fall 2013) The development of the fetal protection movement and the legal acknowledgement of fetal rights has resulted in states beginning to hold expecting mothers legally accountable for their drug abuse during pregnancy through the imposition of criminal sanctions. It is estimated that each year 375,000 drug dependent infants will be born from... 2013
Brian G. Gilmore , Reginald Dwayne Betts DECONSTRUCTING CARMONA: THE U.S. WAR ON DRUGS AND BLACK MEN AS NON-CITIZENS 47 Valparaiso University Law Review 777 (Spring, 2013) The Negritude movement poet, Aimé Césaire of Martinique, wrote in his book, Discourse on Colonialism, A civilization that proves incapable of solving the problems it creates is a decadent civilization. Césaire, at the time, was critiquing colonial rule of Europe over developing societies all over the world and had declared that Europe was... 2013
Ernest Drucker DRUG LAW, MASS INCARCERATION, AND PUBLIC HEALTH 91 Oregon Law Review 1097 (2013) Introduction. 1098 I. Drug Law and the Growth of U.S. Prisons. 1099 A. Recent Trends in Incarceration. 1102 B. Public Attitudes About Incarceration. 1103 C. Drug Law and Policy Reform. 1106 D. The Privatization of Correctional Services. 1108 E. The Prison Reentry Industry. 1109 II. New and Developing Reasons for Mass Incarceration. 1111 A.... 2013
Deborah Ahrens DRUG PANICS IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY: ECSTASY, PRESCRIPTION DRUGS, AND THE REFRAMING OF THE WAR ON DRUGS 6 Albany Government Law Review 397 (2013) Introduction. 398 I. A Brief History of Drug Panic. 400 II. Drug Panic in the Twenty-First Century. 404 III. Increasingly Muted Responses to New Perceived Panics. 419 IV. The Quiet, Fitful Ebb of the War on Drugs. 430 Conclusion. 436 2013
Mark Osler DRUGS, BOMBS, AND THE EROSION OF RIGHTS 11 Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law 249 (Fall, 2013) David K. Shipler, The Rights of the People: How Our Search for Safety Invades Our Liberties (New York: Vintage Books 2012) In the days and months after the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001, Americans faced a fundamental quandary: were we willing to give away some of our rights, particularly our... 2013
Valerie F. Reyna, Katherine Croom, Lisa Staiano-Coico, Martin L. Lesser, Deborah Lewis, Jeremy Frank, Timothy C. Marchell, Cornell University, City College of New York, Weill Medical College of Cornell University and Feinstein Institute for Medical Resear ENDORSEMENT OF A PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY TO ADHERE TO THE MINIMUM DRINKING AGE LAW PREDICTS CONSUMPTION, RISKY BEHAVIORS, AND ALCOHOL-RELATED HARMS 19 Psychology, Public Policy, and Law 380 (August, 2013) Despite minimum drinking age laws, underage college students engage in high levels of risky drinking and reach peak lifetime levels of alcohol dependence. A group of presidents of universities and colleges has argued that these laws promote disrespect for laws in general and do not prevent drinking or related negative consequences. However, no... 2013
Benjamin Fleury-Steiner , Lionel R. Smith , Tanya N. Whittle , Michael Burtis FROM THE BATTLEFIELD TO THE WAR ON DRUGS: LESSONS FROM THE LIVES OF MARGINALIZED AFRICAN AMERICAN MILITARY VETERANS 6 Albany Government Law Review 464 (2013) Introduction. 465 I. The Myth of the Addicted Army and the Launching of the Modern War on Drugs. 468 A. Nixon as Architect. 468 B. From Reagan's War to the Present. 471 II. The Lives of Marginalized African American Veterans. 473 III. Vietnam Era. 474 A. Carl: Help for Vets' Wasn't on Billboards. . 474 B. Charles: You black, you must have... 2013
Nekima Levy-Pounds GOING UP IN SMOKE: THE IMPACTS OF THE DRUG WAR ON YOUNG BLACK MEN 6 Albany Government Law Review 563 (2013) I. An Overview of the War on Drugs. 567 A. The Shift Away from Judicial Discretion. 569 B. Is it Crack? is it Powder? Is it Different?. 570 II. New Developments in Marijuana Legalization Initiatives. 573 III. Unintended Consequences of Marijuana Legalization. 582 IV. Collateral Effects of Criminal Justice Involvement. 583 Conclusion. 588 For the... 2013
Dan Werb HEROIN PRESCRIPTION, HIV, AND DRUG POLICY: EMERGING REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS 91 Oregon Law Review 1213 (2013) Introduction. 1213 I. Current Drug Enforcement Policies. 1215 II. Responses to Opioid Dependence. 1217 A. Medical Regulation of Opioid Derivatives. 1217 B. Current Clinical Treatments for Opioid Addiction. 1218 C. Heroin Prescription. 1219 1. Administration of Heroin-Assisted Treatment (HAT). 1220 2. Results of HAT. 1221 III. Policy Implications.... 2013
Patrick Eoghan Murray IN NEED OF A FIX: REFORMING CRIMINAL LAW IN LIGHT OF A CONTEMPORARY UNDERSTANDING OF DRUG ADDICTION 60 UCLA Law Review 1006 (April, 2013) This Comment challenges the assumption that actions associated with drug addiction can be easily classified as either voluntary or involuntary. As an alternative to this black-and-white distinction, this Comment advances the concept of a semi-voluntary act category to describe more accurately a drug addict's choice to use drugs. When limited... 2013
Mona Lynch INSTITUTIONALIZING BIAS: THE DEATH PENALTY, FEDERAL DRUG PROSECUTIONS, AND MECHANISMS OF DISPARATE PUNISHMENT 41 American Journal of Criminal Law 91 (Winter 2013) I. Introduction. 91 II. Two Contemporary Systems of Punishment. 93 A. The Federal Sentencing System in the Guidelines Era. 93 B. The Modern American Capital Sentencing System. 97 III. What is (Institutionalized) Racial Bias?. 100 A. Predominant Social Scientific Perspectives on Racism. 100 B. Contemporary Legal Understandings of Racism. 103 C.... 2013
Steven W. Bender JOINT REFORM?: THE INTERPLAY OF STATE, FEDERAL, AND HEMISPHERIC REGULATION OF RECREATIONAL MARIJUANA AND THE FAILED WAR ON DRUGS 6 Albany Government Law Review 359 (2013) Introduction. 360 I. Domestic Regulation of Marijuana. 361 A. The History of U.S. Marijuana Regulation. 361 B. The U.S. War on Drugs. 365 C. Trends of State Decriminalization and Legalization. 368 D. The Interplay of Federal and State Regulation of Marijuana Use. 375 II. Hemispheric Implications of Legalizing Recreational Marijuana Use. 383 III.... 2013
Carol S. Steiker LESSONS FROM TWO FAILURES: SENTENCING FOR COCAINE AND CHILD PORNOGRAPHY UNDER THE FEDERAL SENTENCING GUIDELINES IN THE UNITED STATES 76 Law and Contemporary Problems 27 (2013) The Federal Sentencing Guidelines adopted in the United States in 1987 and rendered advisory by the Supreme Court's decision in 2005 in United States v. Booker have been the subject of a wide variety of criticisms over the past twenty-five years. But no specific aspects of the Guidelines have been more controversial than the treatment of offenders... 2013
Eric Cory Rosenberg MANDATORY DRUG SCREENING FOR WELFARE RECIPIENTS: FISCALLY RESPONSIBLE LIMITATION ON GOVERNMENT HANDOUTS OR CONSTITUTIONAL VIOLATION? 10 Rutgers Journal of Law & Public Policy 205 (Spring, 2013) There is a long history of political maneuvering that surrounds social welfare legislation and government entitlement programs at both the national and state level. One aspect that has received increased attention during the recent economic downturn is mandatory drug screening, which has been a tool for politicians seeking to conserve taxpayer... 2013
Sam Kamin , Eli Wald MARIJUANA LAWYERS: OUTLAWS OR CRUSADERS? 91 Oregon Law Review 869 (2013) Introduction. 870 I. A History of Marijuana in the United States. 872 A. Federal Law. 872 1. The Birth of Marijuana Prohibition. 872 2. DEA Regulation. 874 B. State Regulation. 875 C. Uneasy Federalism--The Impact of State Marijuana Laws. 880 II. Representation of Marijuana Clients: Criminal Concerns. 886 A. Accomplice Liability. 886 B.... 2013
Taylor F. Smith , Matthew A. Maccani , Valerie S. Knopik MATERNAL SMOKING DURING PREGNANCY AND OFFSPRING HEALTH OUTCOMES: THE ROLE OF EPIGENETIC RESEARCH IN INFORMING LEGAL POLICY AND PRACTICE 64 Hastings Law Journal 1619 (August, 2013) Scientific advances in epidemiology and epigenetics emphasize the importance of prenatal and intergenerational environmental influences and epigenetic regulation in altering vulnerability for later health outcomes. These findings may have wide-ranging legal implications; however, to avoid misapplication, a thorough understanding of the scientific... 2013
Alexandra B. Bonneau OFFENSIVE DRUG OFFENSES: APPLYING PROCEDURAL JUSTICE THEORY TO DRUG SENTENCING IN THE UNITED STATES AND UNITED KINGDOM 93 Boston University Law Review 1485 (July, 2013) Introduction. 1485 I. The Foundations of Anglo-American Sentencing. 1488 A. The Theory of Retribution. 1489 B. Current Sentencing Theory in the United States and the United Kingdom. 1491 1. Legislative Embodiment of Sentencing Principles. 1491 2. Implementation of Sentencing Principles. 1494 II. Punishing Drug Offenses. 1498 A. A Brief History of... 2013
Mena Ghaly THE FAIR SENTENCING ACT OF 2010 AND FEDERAL COCAINE SENTENCING POLICY-- HOW CONGRESS CONTINUES TO ALLOW IMPLICIT RACIAL ANIMUS TOWARDS AFRICAN AMERICANS TO PERMEATE FEDERAL COCAINE SENTENCING 14 Rutgers Race & the Law Review 135 (2013) On November 4, 2008, Barack Hussein Obama was elected President of the United States in a landslide victory over his opponent, becoming the first African American President. Commentators and journalists alike heralded President Obama's victory a [t]ransformation of America and the beginning of a post-racial society. The host of a popular news... 2013
Steven B. Duke THE FUTURE OF MARIJUANA IN THE UNITED STATES 91 Oregon Law Review 1301 (2013) Introduction. 1302 I. Marijuana Legislation: Past, Present, and Uncertain Future. 1302 II. Some Reasons for Ending Marijuana Prohibition. 1307 A. Marijuana Is Far Less Harmful than Many Legal, Regulated Drugs. 1307 B. Regulation of the Drug Is Possible Only If Prohibition Is Repealed. 1308 C. Prohibition Breeds Crime and Supports Criminal... 2013
Bruce D. Stout , Bennett A. Barlyn THE HUMAN AND FISCAL TOLL OF AMERICA'S DRUG WAR: ONE STATE'S EXPERIENCE 6 Albany Government Law Review 525 (2013) Introduction. 526 I. 1986-87: New Jersey's Drug War Battle Plan is Drawn. 529 A. The Comprehensive Drug Reform Act of 1987. 529 B. The Statewide Action Plan for Narcotics Enforcement of 1987. 534 II. 1987-1998: New Jersey's Drug War is Unleashed. 536 A. Prison Growth, Collateral Consequences, Racial Disparity and Costs. 536 B. The New Jersey State... 2013
Peter Reuter WHY HAS US DRUG POLICY CHANGED SO LITTLE OVER 30 YEARS? 42 Crime and Justice 75 (2013) Though almost universally criticized as overly punitive, expensive, racially disparate in impact, and ineffective, American drug policy remained largely unchanged from 1980 to 2010. Marijuana is an important exception: policy and law underwent many changes, with the strong likelihood of more, involving increased legal access to the drug, in the... 2013
André Douglas Pond Cummings "ALL EYEZ ON ME": AMERICA'S WAR ON DRUGS AND THE PRISON-INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX 15 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 417 (Spring 2012) In 1971, President Richard Nixon named drug abuse public enemy number one in the United States. Since that time, an explicit War on Drugs has dominated the political imagination of the United States. Since declaring a War on Drugs, domestic incarceration rates have exploded, particularly in the African-American and Latino populations.... 2012
Susan P. Stuart A NEW SHERIFF IN TOWN: ARMISTICE IN THE WAR ON DRUGS AND STUDENTS' CIVIL RIGHTS 13 Florida Coastal Law Review 335 (Spring 2012) For nearly thirty years, the United States government has been at war with its children over their use of drugs in schools. The government's victories in that war have been Pyrrhic and its victims many. Setting aside for purposes of this analysis how the government became set on this course of war, one must acknowledge the weapons and battle... 2012
Gabrielle D. Schneck A WAR ON CIVILIANS: DISASTER CAPITALISM AND THE DRUG WAR IN MEXICO 10 Seattle Journal for Social Justice 927 (Spring, 2012) Within days of his inauguration in December 2006, Mexican President Felipe Calderón declared war on organized crime. In particular, Calderón aimed to confront the powerful cartels that control the drug trade and other illicit industries such as human trafficking. Following a highly contested election, Calderón entered office amid accusations of... 2012
Amy L. (Williams) Kluesner AND THEY'RE OFF: ELIMINATING DRUG USE IN THOROUGHBRED RACING 3 Harvard Journal of Sports & Entertainment Law 297 (Summer, 2012) C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 297 II. Drug Use, Current Regulation, and the Need for Uniformity. 300 A. Inconsistent State Regulation. 302 B. Improving Transparency and Uniform Disclosure. 303 III. Welfare and Safety of the Racehorse Summit. 306 IV. Regulation of Non-Steroidal Anti-inflammatory Drugs. 309 A. Phenylbutazone. 309 B.... 2012
Robert Weisberg APPROACHES TO ASSESSING THE EFFECTS OF MARIJUANA CRIMINAL LAW REPEAL IN CALIFORNIA 43 McGeorge Law Review 1 (2012) In almost passing Proposition 19, California came close to testing some important assumptions and predictions about the legal, political, and social effects of the repeal of a major criminal prohibition. Let me put these assumptions and predictions in a wider context. What would happen to crime and criminal justice if there were no longer criminal... 2012
Michael J. Malinowski DOCTORS, PATIENTS, AND PILLS--A SYSTEM POPPING UNDER TOO MUCH PHYSICIAN DISCRETION? A LAW-POLICY PRESCRIPTION TO MAKE DRUG APPROVAL MORE MEANINGFUL IN THE DELIVERY OF HEALTH CARE 33 Cardozo Law Review 1085 (February, 2012) This Article challenges the scope of physician discretion to engage in off-label use of prescription drugs. The discretion to prescribe dimensions beyond the clinical research that puts new drugs on pharmacy shelves has been shaped by two historic influences: a legacy of physician paternalism, solidarity, autonomy, and self-determination that... 2012
Michael J. Malinowski , Grant G. Gautreaux DRUG DEVELOPMENT--STUCK IN A STATE OF PUBERTY?: REGULATORY REFORM OF HUMAN CLINICAL RESEARCH TO RAISE RESPONSIVENESS TO THE REALITY OF HUMAN VARIABILITY 56 Saint Louis University Law Journal 363 (Winter 2012) Scathing critiques of the Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) performance by the Government Accountability Office and Institutes of Medicine, a plummet in innovative new drug approvals in spite of significant annual investment increases in biopharmaceutical research and development (R&D), and market controversies such as the painkiller Vioxx... 2012
Lance McMillian DRUG MARKETS, FRINGE MARKETS, AND THE LESSONS OF HAMSTERDAM 69 Washington and Lee Law Review 849 (Spring, 2012) The Wire is the greatest television series of all-time. Not only that, it is the most important. One of the most memorable story arcs from The Wire's five seasons is the rise and fall of Hamsterdam--a quasi-legalized drug zone in West Baltimore. Stories are powerful teaching tools because they marry information and context. By seeing how the... 2012
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