| Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year |
| Jessica Wrona , Alan Schwartz , Paige Hardy , Amy Campbell , Andrea A. Pappalardo |
LEGAL ANALYSIS: STOCK INHALER POLICY AND LIABILITY: FACT OR FICTION? |
44 Journal of Legal Medicine 125 (April-June, 2025) |
Asthma is the most common chronic lung disease in children and disproportionately impacts children from marginalized populations. Pediatric asthma health disparities are persistent, and multi-level solutions are needed to achieve health equity. Health policy, when equitably and successfully implemented, has the capacity to address these disparities... |
2025 |
| Alejandro Banuelos , Aaron Clarke |
MOVEMENT AND CRISIS: A SOCIAL HEALTH MANIFESTO |
30 National Black Law Journal 197 (2025) |
This article was originally published in the UCLA Law Review (In Discourse, Special Issue: Law Meets World Vol. 68 (2020)). In this Article, we employ the terms Health (as a white supremacist mode of being) and social health to demystify how race and health are mobilized by the state and its representative bodies to shift accountability away from... |
2025 |
| Franciska Coleman |
MULTIRACIAL, INTERCLASS DEMOCRACY |
55 Seton Hall Law Review 1199 (2025) |
In 2019, after teaching for seven years in Seoul, South Korea, I was preparing to begin my first U.S. teaching job in the Midwest. I had hired a local mover, a White gentleman with a military background who had great online reviews, to move items into my office. After all my books and appliances had been moved in, we chatted as I walked him out of... |
2025 |
| Kristine Huskey, Hillary Wandler, in Collaboration with Jacquelyn Francisco, Lindsey Kirchhoff |
NATIVE AMERICAN VETERANS: ACKNOWLEDGING THEIR SERVICE, RECOGNIZING THEIR NEEDS, AND LEARNING FROM THEIR TRIBAL RESTORATIVE TRADITION |
21 University of Saint Thomas Law Journal 108 (Winter, 2025) |
Native Americans have a long tradition of service in the US military, dating back to the war fought to gain independence. Their service has been characterized by extraordinarily higher numbers proportionate to other minorities as well as a Warrior Tradition, embodied in their experiences, cultures, and religions for generations. This tradition... |
2025 |
| Lauren van Schilfgaarde |
NATIVE REPRODUCTIVE SELF-DETERMINATION |
71 UCLA Law Review 1844 (July, 2025) |
Like the overall well-being of Indigenous peoples, Native reproductive health has been deeply impacted by the direct and collateral consequences of settler colonialism. Today, Natives experience some of the most dire reproductive health disparities. Unlike other health care systems, however, Native health care is sui generis. The federal government... |
2025 |
| Jordyn Ignont |
NO BREATHING ROOM: EQUITY GAPS IN FEDERAL ENVIRONMENTAL COMPLIANCE AND PATHWAYS FOR REFORM |
19 Southern Journal of Policy and Justice 26 (May, 2025) |
C1-2Contents Contents. 26 Introduction. 28 Background. 30 I. Understanding Environmental Racism. 31 II. How Housing Policy Built Environmental Injustice. 32 III. Still Breathing Injustice: The Modern Toll of Historic Segregation. 36 Analysis. 37 I. How Black Communities Become Sacrifice Zones. 37 A. Mott Haven Neighborhood--Bronx, NY. 37 B. West... |
2025 |
| Malik Morris-Sammons |
PLEADING FOR HOUSING JUSTICE: DIFFICULTIES IN ESTABLISHING DISPARATE IMPACT UNDER THE FHA |
58 Columbia Journal of Law and Social Problems 669 (2025) |
Since the Supreme Court decided its landmark fair housing case, Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs v. Inclusive Communities, the federal judiciary has proven a formidable battleground for communities of color seeking to enforce their civil rights under the Fair Housing Act (FHA). The opinion created a robust causal connection... |
2025 |
| Annie Goodman |
POLICING THE PSYCH UNIT |
100 New York University Law Review 1262 (October, 2025) |
Tens of thousands of people are involuntarily confined in a hospital each year in connection with their mental illness or disability. In response to misconduct by people who are civilly committed, hospitals often call the police, setting in motion a chain of events with devastating consequences for the person who is transferred to criminal custody.... |
2025 |
| Britney R. Wilson |
PREDISPOSED: RACE, DISABILITY, AND DEATH INVESTIGATIONS |
72 UCLA Law Review 500 (September, 2025) |
Disability, preexisting conditions, or underlying conditions might seem like uncontroversial factors to cite when determining an individual's cause of death. However, many death investigators have also cited these conditions in deaths caused by state violence or neglect. For example, a 2021 study found that medical examiners cited sickle cell... |
2025 |
| Harold McDougall |
PREPARE, REPAIR, DEFEND: A DIY TOOLKIT FOR REPARATIONS 2.0 |
9 Howard Human & Civil Rights Law Review 151 (2024-2025) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 152 I. Awakening. 153 A. CARICOM On Reparations. 153 B. Cultural DNA. 153 1. Protests and Its Limitations. 155 II. Engaging the University to Support Community-Based Cooperation. 161 III. The Havard Legacy of Slavery Initiative and My Proposal. 162 A. The Need of Reparations by Harvard. 162 IV. The Initiative and... |
2025 |
| Mark Scaggs |
PRIVATE PRISON HEALTHCARE AS PUBLIC ACCOMMODATION: LEVERAGING FEDERAL AND STATE PUBLIC ACCOMMODATIONS LAW IN PRISON DISABILITY LITIGATION |
125 Columbia Law Review 1509 (June, 2025) |
The growth of private companies in the realm of carceral healthcare services has significant implications for plaintiffs seeking to challenge disability discrimination perpetrated during their incarceration. As the face of disability discrimination changes in carceral facilities, so should the legal remedies that hold them to account. This Note... |
2025 |
| Anna Arons |
PROSECUTING FAMILIES |
173 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 1029 (March, 2025) |
Hundreds of thousands of parents are prosecuted in the family regulation system each year. Their cases are investigated by family regulation agencies and prosecuted by lawyers employed by the government--family regulation prosecutors. Like police and prosecutors in the criminal legal system, this family regulation prosecutorial team wields immense... |
2025 |
| Emily Ryo , Ian Peacock , Weston Ley , Christopher Levesque |
RACIAL DISPARITIES IN CRIME-BASED REMOVAL PROCEEDINGS |
109 Minnesota Law Review 1997 (May, 2025) |
Whether and to what extent racial minorities experience harsher treatment or face worse outcomes in court are questions of fundamental importance for any justice system. Questions of racial inequality are especially salient in the context of removal proceedings that are triggered by immigrants' criminal history. Many individuals in crime-based... |
2025 |
| Tolulope F. Odunsi-Nelson |
REDEFINING THE SCOPE OF ANTIDISCRIMINATION LAW: ILLUMINATING COLORISM AS A BASIS FOR DISCRIMINATION CLAIMS BY BLACK ENTERTAINERS |
90 Brooklyn Law Review 1171 (Summer, 2025) |
The 2023 writers' strike, which lasted over 100 days, served as a harsh reminder of the economic precariousness faced by many actors and actresses in Hollywood. The strike not only disrupted television and movie production schedules, it also brought to light the financial vulnerabilities of the performers themselves. The lengthy strike emphasized... |
2025 |
| Nia Johnson |
REFORMED BUT NOT REPAIRED |
29 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 293 (Winter, 2025) |
Traditionally, scholars and policymakers concerned with making improvements to health care systems and structures have focused on insurance reform. The ACA-- the United States' most recent and substantial healthcare reform--was hoped to be an intervention that would help provide equity to all Americans. Indeed, scholars and policymakers viewed... |
2025 |
| Melvin J. Kelley IV |
REVISITING GEOGRAPHY AND SOVEREIGNTY IN THE DIGITAL AGE |
57 Connecticut Law Review 1123 (May, 2025) |
Fair housing advocates have already brought successful lawsuits challenging the use of property technology (PropTech) where it has been found to perpetuate or replicate discriminatory practices in a range of contexts including the use of automated screening tools to evaluate prospective tenants. While substantive interventions in unlawful... |
2025 |
| Ariel E. Dulitzky |
RIGHTING SPORTS LAW: THE CONTRIBUTION OF THE UNITED NATIONS |
32 Jeffrey S. Moorad Sports Law Journal 343 (2025) |
The intersection of sports and human rights is a growing and increasingly complex field, involving key actors like Sporting Governing Bodies (SGBs) such as the International Olympic Committee (IOC), intergovernmental institutions like the United Nations (UN), and regional bodies. Since 2009, the UN has recognized the IOC as a permanent... |
2025 |
| Karah Renfroe |
SHATTERING THE SILENCE: THE PATH TO MATERNAL EQUITY IN TEXAS |
28 Scholar: St. Mary's Law Review on Race and Social Justice 249 (2025) |
Abstract: The Black maternal mortality crisis reflects the persistence of institutionalized racism embedded in the U.S. healthcare system. In Texas, Black women account for just 11% of births yet represent 31% of maternal deaths--a mortality rate more than twice that of their white counterparts. This staggering disparity has persisted, even as... |
2025 |
| Jordan Robinson |
SIN, SICKNESS, OR SELF-DEFENSE? HOW MEDICALIZING WOMEN'S ACTS OF SURVIVAL CONFOUNDS JUSTIFICATION AND EXCUSE, AND UNDERMINES JUSTICE |
58 UIC Law Review 699 (Spring, 2025) |
I. Introduction. 699 II. Background. 707 A. The Legal Treatment of Survivor-Defendants. 707 1. Perfect Self-Defense. 710 2. Imperfect Self-Defense. 713 3. The Castle Doctrine and Stand Your Ground. 714 B. The Discredited Theory of Battered Spouse Syndrome. 717 1. Battered Spouse Syndrome Evidence. 718 C. The Historic Toleration of Male Violence.... |
2025 |
| Rachel Mucha |
STUDENTS FOR FAIR ADMISSIONS AND THE FUTURE OF AFFIRMATIVE ACTION FOR WOMEN IN AMERICAN AGRICULTURE |
113 California Law Review 1797 (October, 2025) |
The federal government has a well-documented history of discrimination against women in American agriculture. And the government now has many compelling reasons--from remedying past discrimination to shoring up food security--to provide targeted support to women farmers. But the Biden Administration's attempts to provide targeted financial support... |
2025 |
| |
SUBSTANTIVE RIGHTS RETAINED BY PRISONERS |
54 Georgetown Law Journal Annual Review of Criminal Procedure 1226 (2025) |
Right of Access to Courts. The Constitution guarantees prisoners the right of meaningful access to the courts. This right of access imposes an affirmative duty on prison officials to help prisoners prepare and file legal papers, either by establishing an adequate law library or by providing adequate assistance from persons trained in the law.... |
2025 |
| Margaret Montoya |
TEACHING IN A TIME OF RETRENCHMENT |
72 UCLA Law Review Discourse 458 (2025) |
Constitutional law is the lodestar for law teaching in the United States and is often referred to as the supreme law of the land. But how are this and related bodies of law to be taught? And what should law students learn when ideological shifts in the Supreme Court lead to radical shifts in Constitutional interpretation? This Essay uses the Dobbs... |
2025 |
| Blanche Bong Cook , Wei Luo |
TEACHING SANDRA BLAND: AN ASSESSMENT IN CRIMINAL PROCEDURE INVESTIGATIONS |
59 UIC Law Review 55 (Fall, 2025) |
The traffic stop of Sandra Bland presents a comprehensive in-class assessment for Criminal Procedure Investigations. A decade ago, Brian Encinia, a Texas Trooper, stopped Bland, a Black woman, for failure to signal. The stop quickly escalated into a seizure, when Bland refused to extinguish her cigarette, while she was in her car. Encinia arrested... |
2025 |
| Camille Tealer-Misage |
TEXAS BLACK MATERNAL MORTALITY CRISIS: A SPOTLIGHT ON THE TEXAS LEGISLATURE'S ALTERNATIVES TO ABORTION PROGRAM |
28 Scholar: St. Mary's Law Review on Race and Social Justice 299 (2025) |
Abstract: Texas leads the nation in maternal mortality and morbidity which intersects with high uninsured rates, abortion bans, and legislative policies promoting medical misinformation. Texas' legislatively codified Alternatives to Abortion Program allocates tens of millions of dollars per year to crisis pregnancy centers and non-profits with the... |
2025 |
| Sydney Crute |
THE CONVERSATION CONTINUES: THE JUDICIARY'S EVOLVING ROLE IN PERPETUATING RACIAL DISPARITIES IN ADDICTION TREATMENT |
93 Fordham Law Review 2183 (May, 2025) |
Language is a powerful means of social control, an idea that resonates deeply with court rhetoric as it relates to race. This Note examines the language courts use when discussing cases related to drug use and addiction. During the crack epidemic, when Black individuals represented the race of the primary drug user and drug dealer, courts relied on... |
2025 |
| Carmen Gosey |
THE DISPARATE IMPACT OF THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC ON PEOPLE OF COLOR AND THE EFFICACY OF RACE-BASED HEALTH POLICIES |
15 UC Irvine Law Review 637 (August, 2025) |
The coronavirus pandemic was, for all intents and purposes, a national emergency that highlighted the lack of quality healthcare for people of color and the overall lack of trust that communities of color, in general, have for medical professionals. In particular, Blacks, Latino/x, and Native Americans experienced higher hospitalization and death... |
2025 |
| Evelyn Marcelina Rangel-Medina |
THE DISPOSABLE "ESSENTIAL" WORKERS OF COVID-19 |
66 Boston College Law Review 69 (January, 2025) |
Introduction. 71 I. Structural Inequalities in Low-Wage Essential Employment. 76 A. Six Structural Factors Underlying Inequality in Employment. 76 B. COVID-19 Exacerbated Structural Inequity for Low-Wage Workers of Color. 82 C. Essential Workers in the Food Chain System During COVID-19. 88 1. Agricultural Essential Workers. 89 2. Meatpacking... |
2025 |
| Theodosia Stavroulaki |
THE HEALING POWER OF ANTITRUST |
119 Northwestern University Law Review 943 (2025) |
Abstract--Millions of Americans live in hospital deserts--communities where people lack geographic access to hospitals and primary care physicians. People living in these deserts often miss doctor appointments, delay necessary care, and stop adhering to their treatment. In this way, hospital deserts exacerbate the health disparities plaguing... |
2025 |
| Elaine M. Chiu |
THE MODEL MINORITY VICTIM |
65 Santa Clara Law Review 451 (2024-2025) |
The rise in xenophobia, hate and violence against AAPI Americans inspired by the COVID-19 pandemic was an opportunity to assess the effectiveness of the criminal legal system as a tool of anti-racism. This Article traces the legal aftermath when Asian New Yorkers reported 276 possible hate crimes to the police in 2021. The analysis takes an... |
2025 |
| Mila Versteeg , Kevin L. Cope , Gaurav Mukherjee |
THE NEW HOMELESSNESS |
113 California Law Review 433 (April, 2025) |
For the over half-million people currently homeless in the United States, the U.S. Constitution has historically provided little help. In 2018, this changed. A series of Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals decisions gave homeless individuals a right to occupy public spaces with some of their belongings. The surprising source of the right was the Eighth... |
2025 |
| Michelle Wilde Anderson , Lina Volin |
THE NEXT CHAPTER IN HEALTH CARE FEDERALISM: EXPANDING MEDICAID FROM THE GROUND UP |
2025 Wisconsin Law Review 1223 (2025) |
In much of the South and a few other conservative states, 1.4 million low-income adults have been excluded from access to Medicaid coverage. Now, in the wake of federal lawmaking in 2025, millions of additional Americans nationwide (including in these states) will lose access to Medicaid benefits and affordable health insurance. With America's... |
2025 |
| Elana Fogel , Kate Evans |
THE ROAD TO SLOW DEPORTATION |
74 Duke Law Journal 1389 (March, 2025) |
Traffic stops are the most common form of police-initiated contact with members of the public. The sheer volume of traffic stops combined with their use as a pretext to surveil Black and Latiné communities has generated substantial scholarship and movements for police reform. Yet this commentary assumes that the subjects of traffic stops are U.S.... |
2025 |
| Jean-Marie Kamatali |
THE STATE OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA: LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE LAST THREE UNIVERSAL PERIODIC REVIEWS |
33 Tulane Journal of International and Comparative Law 515 (Spring, 2025) |
I. Introduction. 516 II. The UN Human Rights Council, the Universal Period Review, and the United States. 517 A. UPR as a Universal Review. 518 B. UPR as a Periodic Review. 519 C. The UPR as a Review. 519 D. HRC, UPR, and the United States. 521 E. Understanding UPR Reports. 523 III. The State of Human Rights in the U.S: Three Review Cycles, Three... |
2025 |
| Jeffrey A. Dodge |
THE UNFULFILLED PROMISE OF OBERGEFELL FOR CHILDREN OF LGBTQ+ PARENTS: ADVANCING NONDISCRIMINATION LAWS FOR FAMILIAL ASSOCIATION |
52 Northern Kentucky Law Review 141 (2025) |
Since the 2015 Obergefell v. Hodges decision, same-sex marriages have increased significantly in the United States. The American Community Survey data collected in 2022 shows that there are around 1.3 million same-sex couple households in the country, up from 565,000 in 2008. Just over half of these couples are legally married, up nearly 400% from... |
2025 |
| Tomar Pierson-Brown |
TRANSITION DESIGN AS HEALTH JUSTICE PRAXIS |
32 Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy 251 (Winter, 2025) |
The movement for health justice advances a vision of equity that centers the communities most impacted by health disparities. Amplifying marginalized voices through community-led problem solving disrupts the power imbalance of structural subordination, recognizes the limited capacity of legal institutions to secure health equity, and acknowledges... |
2025 |
| Nina-Simone Edwards |
UNVEILING THE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT OF LARGE LANGUAGE MODELS ON INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES: A CALL FOR ACTION AND LIABILITY |
38 Tulane Environmental Law Journal 1 (Winter, 2025) |
Large Language Models (LLMs) have rapidly gained popularity for their language generation and comprehension capabilities, promising increased efficiency in various sectors. However, while celebrated for their transformative potential, LLMs exacerbate current climate issues. This Article highlights the detrimental environmental footprint of LLMs,... |
2025 |
| Deborah Tuerkheimer |
UNWANTED PREGNANCY: SEX, CONTRACEPTION, AND THE LIMITS OF CONSENT |
110 Minnesota Law Review 829 (December, 2025) |
Rape exceptions to abortion bans, widely popular among the American electorate, are cleaved from a rule that defines pregnancy as the byproduct of choice. According to the logic of this rule and its remarkably limited exception, a person who is not raped consents to sex and therefore to the pregnancy that results. An empirical analysis of women's... |
2025 |
| Shavonnie R. Carthens |
WEST VIRGINIA v. EPA: CONSIDERATIONS FOR THE FUTURE OF EPA GREENHOUSE GAS REGULATION |
17 Kentucky Journal of Equine, Agriculture, and Natural Resources 1 Law(2024-2025) |
When compared to historical levels, the air quality in the United States has improved. However, exposure to air pollution still rises to the top of environmental health risks experienced by Americans. It is estimated that one hundred thousand to two hundred thousand deaths annually are associated with this exposure, which exceeds the deaths from... |
2025 |
| Jennifer L. Herbst |
WHOSE "BEST INTERESTS"? CONCERNS ABOUT THE USE OF FIDUCIARY FRAMING IN LONG-TERM CARE DECISIONS |
18 Saint Louis University Journal of Health Law & Policy 303 (2025) |
As part of reimagining America's long-term care system, this article will explain how today's system is, in many ways, the logical extension of historical presumptions that are foundational to our understanding of family, medical, and organizational governance as fiduciary in nature. More specifically, much of our current language (operating in... |
2025 |
| Claire Carey |
WISCONSIN'S BIRTH COST RECOVERY: A GENDERED POLICY THAT POLICES FAMILIES AND WEIGHS THE FISCAL INTEREST OF THE GOVERNMENT AHEAD OF THE BEST INTERESTS OF THE CHILD |
40 Wisconsin Journal of Law, Gender & Society 93 (Spring, 2025) |
Introduction. 94 I. A History of Penalizing Poor People of Color: Child and Social Welfare Policy, Racism, Sexism, and Cost Recovery. 97 A. The Evolution of Child Welfare and the Gender Neutral Best Interests of the Child Standard. 97 B. Explicit Family Policing and the Evolution of Social Welfare Policy. 99 C. Implicit Family Policing Through... |
2025 |
| Caitlin Vasington |
23&MENTAL ILLNESS: PSYCHIATRIC GENETIC INFORMATION, GENETIC ESSENTIALISM, AND POTENTIAL IMPACTS ON CHILD CUSTODY |
39 Wisconsin Journal of Law, Gender & Society 91 (Spring, 2024) |
Introduction. 91 I. Genetic essentialism: a cognitive bias and its consequences. 93 A. Genetic essentialism and its links to eugenics. 95 B. The impact of genetic essentialist biases: race and gender. 97 C. The impact of genetic essentialist biases: mental illness and criminality. 98 II. Psychiatric genetic information: limitations and... |
2024 |
| Heather Walter-McCabe |
303 CREATIVE: THE PUBLIC PERILS OF IGNORING PUBLIC HEALTH HARMS IN LGBTQ RIGHTS CASES |
27 Journal of Health Care Law and Policy 188 (2024) |
LGBTQ communities, particularly transgender and nonbinary communities, are experiencing the threat of unprecedented numbers of anti LGBTQ legislation introduced at the state level. Research shows, through a growing body of evidence that stigma and discrimination exacerbated by these laws are creating a situation in which LGBTQ communities--already... |
2024 |
| Maya Manian |
A HEALTH JUSTICE APPROACH TO ABORTION |
34 Health Matrix: Journal of Law-Medicine 261 (2024) |
The Supreme Court's watershed decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, overturning fifty years of precedent protecting abortion rights, has led to chaos in both the legal and public health landscapes. With Roe v. Wade eliminated, reproductive rights and justice advocates urgently need new frameworks to help regain access to... |
2024 |
| Angela Hefti, Hannah van Kolfschooten, Aminta Ossom |
A HEALTH-CENTRIC INTERSECTIONAL APPROACH TO CLIMATE LITIGATION AT THE EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS |
37 Harvard Human Rights Journal 351 (Summer, 2024) |
Climate change affects everyone's health. At the same time, because of specific risk factors, some groups have a greater chance of becoming sick as a result of climate change than others. Evaluating these inequitable impacts through a health-centric intersectional approach--which considers overlapping factors like gender, age, residence, and prior... |
2024 |
| Rhea Bhatia |
A LOOPHOLE IN THE FOURTH AMENDMENT: THE GOVERNMENT'S UNREGULATED PURCHASE OF INTIMATE HEALTH DATA |
98 Washington Law Review Online 67 (2024) |
Abstract: Companies use everyday applications and personal devices to collect deeply personal information about a user's body and health. While this intimate health data includes seemingly innocuous information about fitness activities and basic vitals, it also includes extremely private information about the user's health, such as chronic... |
2024 |
| Jennifer Logan |
A PUBLIC HEALTH LAW RESPONSE TO GENDER-AFFIRMING CARE BANS |
23 Connecticut Public Interest Law Journal 78 (Spring-Summer, 2024) |
Anti-LGBTQ+ legislation is surging across the United States, with over 500 bills introduced across 49 states this year targeting healthcare access, school sports, drag, and bathrooms. This uptick reflects resistance to changing societal norms with respect to gender identity, along with scientific disinformation. Many of these bills ban access to... |
2024 |
| Mary Crossley |
AFFIRMATIVELY FURTHERING HEALTH EQUITY |
89 Brooklyn Law Review 495 (Winter, 2024) |
The COVID-19 pandemic opened the eyes of many Americans to the existence of unjust health disparities. Early pandemic reporting recounted higher rates of infections and deaths among Black people in cities including Milwaukee, New York City, and New Orleans. As the pandemic progressed and vaccines first became available, vaccination rates lagged in... |
2024 |
| Lucy Chin |
ANSWERING THE CALL: HOW RECONFIGURATION OF THE NATION'S MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS CALL LINE CAN FACILITATE REIMAGINATION OF COMMUNITY WELL-BEING AND PUBLIC SAFETY |
108 Minnesota Law Review 2643 (May, 2024) |
When the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline went live in Summer 2022, communities across the country began to confront the question of how this new, expanded behavioral health resource would integrate into the country's preexisting, emergency response systems. The program seemed to promise the solution to an increasingly visible problem--as... |
2024 |
| Carrie Field, Sarah Price, A.C. Locklear |
BARRIERS AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR TRIBAL ACCESS TO PUBLIC HEALTH DATA TO ADVANCE HEALTH EQUITY |
52 Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 39 (Spring, 2024) |
Keywords: Tribal Sovereignty, Public Health Authority, American Indian and Alaskan Native Health, Data Sharing, Electronic Case Reporting Abstract: Public health authorities (PHAs), including Tribal nations, have the right and responsibility to protect and promote the health of their citizens. Although Tribal nations have the same need and legal... |
2024 |
| Ashley Pattain |
BLACK MATERNAL MORTALITY RATE: IMPROVING OUTCOMES FOR BLACK MOTHERS USING LEGISLATION THAT REVERSES THE EFFECTS OF STRUCTURAL RACISM IN MEDICINE |
45 Mitchell Hamline Law Journal of Public Policy and Practice 141 (Spring, 2024) |
I. Introduction. 142 II. Maternal Mortality Rates in the United States. 146 III. History of Midwives And Black Maternal Health. 147 IV. Contributions to the increased black maternal mortality rate. 149 A. Racism In Medicin. 150 B. Racism Present Day and its Impact on the Black Community. 153 C. Separation of the Black Family Due to Policies and... |
2024 |