| Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year |
| Craig Haney |
THE SCIENCE OF SOLITARY: EXPANDING THE HARMFULNESS NARRATIVE |
115 Northwestern University Law Review 211 (2020) |
Abstract--The harmful effects of solitary confinement have been established in a variety of direct observations and empirical studies that date back to the nineteenth century, conducted in many different countries by researchers with diverse disciplinary backgrounds. This Essay argues that these effects should be situated and understood in the... |
2020 |
| Molly P. Matter |
THE SHAW CLAIM: THE RISE AND FALL OF COLORBLIND JURISPRUDENCE |
18 Seattle Journal for Social Justice 25 (Summer, 2020) |
The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. --Amendment XV, Section 1, United States Constitution Justice is not blind, nor should it aspire to be. Our training as legal professionals demands that we apply the... |
2020 |
| Dr. Obiajulu Nnamuchi |
THE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS (SDGS) AND THE RIGHT TO HEALTH: IS THERE A NEXUS? |
32 Florida Journal of International Law 147 (Winter 2020) |
The indispensability of health to life and human wellbeing is not subject of any serious controversy. Similarly, the link between health and poverty is firmly established in the literature--the simple reason being that poverty is both a cause and consequence of ill health. Recognition of this relationship explains the inclusion of health as a... |
2020 |
| Erin C. Fuse Brown, J.D., M.P.H. |
THE TRILLION DOLLAR REVOLUTION: HOW THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT TRANSFORMED POLITICS, LAW, AND HEALTH CARE IN AMERICA, EZEKIEL J. EMANUEL AND ABBE R. GLUCK, EDS. (PUBLIC AFFAIRS, 2020, PP. 464), ISBN-13: 9781541797772, PAPERBACK |
40 Journal of Legal Medicine 421 (December, 2020) |
In the midst of an historic election, with the Supreme Court considering another existential challenge to the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and with the nation plunged into a public health and economic crisis from the 2020 coronavirus pandemic, the ACA is as important as ever. The ACA matters. It matters to many millions who count on its protections to... |
2020 |
| Luke Cummings |
THE UNEQUAL HEALTH COVERAGE RECEIVED BY RURAL AMERICANS AND HOW MANDATORY TELEHEALTH COVERAGE CAN HELP |
30 Annals of Health Law Advance Directive 157 (Fall, 2020) |
Telehealth can change the future of medicine in rural communities. The term telehealth describes the vast array of services that doctors are now able to provide remotely such as diagnosing, monitoring, and educating patients or physicians. Relatedly, the term telemedicine is a more narrow term describing only the clinical aspects of doctoring.... |
2020 |
| Melissa S. Ader |
THE WORKER JUSTICE PROJECT: A BLUEPRINT FOR A COMPREHENSIVE CRIMINAL EMPLOYMENT LAW PRACTICE |
44 Harbinger 67 (3/23/2020) |
On January 1, 2019, The Legal Aid Society's Criminal Defense Practice launched the Worker Justice Project in order to combat discrimination faced by workers with arrest or conviction records living in New York City. For many clients of the Criminal Defense Practice, the most catastrophic result of an arrest or conviction is its effect on... |
2020 |
| Charles Silver, David A. Hyman |
THERE IS A BETTER WAY: MAKE MEDICAID AND MEDICARE MORE LIKE SOCIAL SECURITY |
18 Georgetown Journal of Law & Public Policy 149 (Winter, 2020) |
The Medicare and Medicaid programs are not serving the needs of their target populations as well as they could. Democrats believe that Medicaid can be improved with more money and stricter federal regulation, and that Medicare can be improved by allowing it to negotiate drug prices. Republicans believe Medicaid can be improved by delegating... |
2020 |
| Victor M. Jones |
TO BRYCE GOWDY, WITH LOVE: PRIORITIZING MEDICAID'S "EPSDT" MANDATE FOR AMERICA'S MOST VULNERABLE YOUTH |
48 Southern University Law Review 127 (Fall, 2020) |
For these are all our children, we will all profit by or pay for what they become. - James Baldwin On the night of December 29, 2019, 17-year-old Bryce Jaden-Lee Zane Gowdy logged on to his Twitter account from his iPhone and wrote, Family matters, can't wait to get to ATL soon. The Deerfield Beach, Florida resident was eight days away from... |
2020 |
| Kathy L. Cerminara |
TODAY'S CRUSADES: A THERAPEUTIC JURISPRUDENTIAL CRITIQUE OF FAITH-BASED CIVIL RIGHTS IN HEALTH CARE |
13 Albany Government Law Review 1 (2019-2020) |
The T has become the ground zero in the culture war over LGBT rights. In the late 1000s, Pope Gregory VII ushered in the Crusades by announcing the project of an armed expedition against the enemies of God. Thousands of men thereafter fought in a series of wars against those of the Islamic faith, an enemy the Catholic Church demonized through... |
2020 |
| Monica Bell, Stephanie Garlock, Alexander Nabavi-Noori |
TOWARD A DEMOSPRUDENCE OF POVERTY |
69 Duke Law Journal 1473 (April, 2020) |
This Article describes the rift between a due-process-focused jurisprudence on legal-financial obligations--the centerpiece of the current fight against criminalization of poverty--and the substantive and structural problems of poverty criminalization. It argues that judges can help address this disconnect while still operating within the scope of... |
2020 |
| Erik J. Girvan, JD, PhD |
TOWARDS A PROBLEM-SOLVING APPROACH TO ADDRESSING RACIAL DISPARITIES IN SCHOOL DISCIPLINE UNDER ANTI-DISCRIMINATION LAW |
50 University of Memphis Law Review 995 (Summer, 2020) |
I. Introduction. 996 II. An Overview of Racial Disparities in Exclusionary School Discipline. 1000 A. Aggregate Disparities. 1000 B. Short- & Long-Term Impacts of Exclusionary Discipline. 1003 C. Inadequacy of Anti-Discrimination Law. 1013 III. The Problem-Solving Approach to Racial Disparities in Discipline Under the IDEA. 1019 A. Problem-Solving... |
2020 |
| Monika Batra Kashyap |
U.S. SETTLER COLONIALISM, WHITE SUPREMACY, AND THE RACIALLY DISPARATE IMPACTS OF COVID-19 |
11 California Law Review Online 517 (November, 2020) |
This Essay contextualizes the racially disproportionate impacts of COVID-19 in the United States within a framework of settler colonialism in order to broaden the understanding of how structural inequality is produced, imposed, and maintained. A settler colonialism framework recognizes that the United States is a present-day settler colonial... |
2020 |
| Esther Ju |
UNCLEAR CONSCIENCE: HOW CATHOLIC HOSPITALS AND DOCTORS ARE CLAIMING CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTIONS TO DENY HEALTHCARE TO TRANSGENDER PATIENTS |
2020 University of Illinois Law Review 1289 (2020) |
For years, federal and state conscience clauses have given healthcare providers and doctors blanket protections for refusing to treat patients for reproductive health by citing religion. With some states beginning to broaden the scope of conscience clauses to make them applicable to transgender patients, religious providers and doctors are now... |
2020 |
| |
VI. PRISONERS' RIGHTS |
49 Georgetown Law Journal Annual Review of Criminal Procedure 1155 (2020) |
Criminal convictions and lawful imprisonment allow for certain limitations on citizens' freedoms and other constitutional rights, but prisoners retain such rights when they are compatible with the objectives of incarceration. Federal courts are reluctant to intervene in internal prison administration and therefore give broad deference to the... |
2020 |
| Jason Matejkowski, Woojae Han, Aaron Conrad, University of Kansas, Soongsil University, University of Kansas |
VOLUNTARINESS OF TREATMENT, MENTAL HEALTH SERVICE UTILIZATION, AND QUALITY OF LIFE AMONG MENTAL HEALTH COURT PARTICIPANTS |
26 Psychology, Public Policy, and Law 185 (May, 2020) |
Although research has indicated that mental health court (MHC) participation is associated with positive criminal justice outcomes, it remains unclear whether and how MHC participation may improve participants' quality of life (QOL). Utilizing MacArthur MHC study data (357 MHC and 348 traditional court participants), we explored the relationships... |
2020 |
| Paul W. Mollica |
WHAT'S ON THE SECRET TITLE VII MENU?: PROVING "MOTIVATING FACTOR" AND "SAME ACTION" UNDER THE 1991 CIVIL RIGHTS ACT |
35 ABA Journal of Labor & Employment Law 53 (2020) |
In the wake of the unanimous 2003 Supreme Court decision in Desert Palace, Inc. v. Costa, which held that direct evidence was not required to prove a discriminatory motivating factor under Title VII, there was widespread anticipation that courts would abandon the familiar McDonnell Douglas proof framework and that all Title VII discrimination... |
2020 |
| Samuel R. Bagenstos |
WHO GETS THE VENTILATOR? DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION IN COVID-19 MEDICAL-RATIONING PROTOCOLS |
130 Yale Law Journal Forum 1 (5/27/2020) |
abstract. The coronavirus pandemic has forced us to reckon with the possibility of having to ration life-saving medical treatments. In response, many health systems have employed protocols that explicitly de-prioritize people for these treatments based on pre-existing disabilities. This Essay argues that such protocols violate the Americans with... |
2020 |
| Leslie Y. Garfield Tenzer |
#Metoo, Statutory Rape Laws, and the Persistence of Gender Stereotypes |
2019 Utah Law Review 117 (2019) |
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, feminists pushed for reform of statutory rape laws. At that time, states' laws limited prosecution for sexual intercourse with a female below a certain age to males. The only victims of statutory rape were female. Feminists advocated that legislatures should rewrite gender-specific sexual assault laws in... |
2019 |
| Theresa Zhen |
(Color)blind Reform: How Ability-to-pay Determinations Are Inadequate to Transform a Racialized System of Penal Debt |
43 New York University Review of Law and Social Change 175 (2019) |
As economic sanctions imposed with a criminal conviction proliferate nationwide, reformers have fought for and won the institutionalization of ability-to-pay determinations. While often viewed as a victory in the effort to end the criminalization of poverty, there is a substantial risk that ability-to-pay determinations may actually exacerbate the... |
2019 |
| Sarah Deer |
(En)gendering Indian Law: Indigenous Feminist Legal Theory in the United States |
31 Yale Journal of Law & Feminism 1 (2019) |
Abstract: American Federal Indian law is often mistakenly assumed to be a gender-neutral discipline. Although Native women suffer disproportionately from numerous maladies, Indian law practitioners rarely engage with questions of gender discrimination or intersectional oppression. Several Canadian scholars have begun to explicate indigenous... |
2019 |
| Susan F. Mandiberg |
A Hybrid Approach to Marijuana Federalism |
23 Lewis & Clark Law Review 823 (2019) |
With the evident indulgence of the United States Department of Justice, states are jumping on the bandwagon of legalizing medicinal and recreational marijuana even though marijuana use is criminalized under the Federal Controlled Substances Act. The possibility that the federal government will at some point decriminalize marijuana use poses a... |
2019 |
| Margarita Kutsin |
A Prescription for Charity Care: How National Medical Debt Ills Can Be Alleviated by Integrating State Financial Assistance Policies into the Nonprofit Tax Exemption |
42 Seattle University Law Review 965 (Winter, 2019) |
Despite having the most expensive healthcare system in the world, the United States has been consistently ranked as having the worst system in terms of equity, efficiency, and healthcare outcomes among industrialized nations. The effects of these systemic issues are grounded in the patient experience as nearly forty-four percent of individuals have... |
2019 |
| Robert Bulanda |
A Step Toward Normalizing End-of-life Care: Implications of the Palliative Care and Hospice Education and Training Act (Pcheta) |
39 Northern Illinois University Law Review 330 (Spring, 2019) |
Despite their rapid development in recent decades, hospice and palliative care continue to face challenges to universal acceptance and access throughout American society, as the American population and medical professions are reluctant to move away from traditional preventative care throughout the death and dying process. The Palliative Care and... |
2019 |
| Sara S. Greene |
A Theory of Poverty: Legal Immobility |
96 Washington University Law Review 753 (2019) |
The puzzle of why the cycle of poverty persists and upward socioeconomic mobility is so difficult has long captivated scholars and the public alike. Yet with all of the attention that has been paid to poverty, the crucial role of the law, particularly state and local law, in perpetuating poverty is largely ignored. This Article offers a new theory... |
2019 |
| Hon. Patrick M. Shannon |
A Tribal Court's Response to the Prescription Drug and Opioid Crisis |
98-AUG Michigan Bar Journal 34 (August, 2019) |
The opioid crisis in the United States has been described by many as both a leading public health issue and a criminal justice issue. At a recent summit I attended, I reported in my presentation that more than 70,000 people died in the United States in 2017 from drug overdoses (a 9.6 percent increase from 2016) and 35 percent of those deaths... |
2019 |
| Jessica Horan-Block, Elizabeth Tuttle Newman |
Accidents Happen: Exposing Fallacies in Child Protection Abuse Cases and Reuniting Families Through Aggressive Litigation |
22 CUNY Law Review 382 (Summer, 2019) |
Introduction. 383 I. Shift to Early and Aggressive Litigation in the Bronx Defenders' Abuse Cases. 385 A. Multiple Fractures in Three-Month-Old Baby: Protracted Litigation Exposes Medical Overreach. 386 B. Challenging Abuse Allegations at Case Outset: Proving an Infant Skull Fracture Is Accidental. 388 II. A Framework of Bronx Child Protection... |
2019 |
| Susan D. Carle |
Acting Differently: How Science on the Social Brain Can Inform Antidiscrimination Law |
73 University of Miami Law Review 655 (Spring, 2019) |
Legal scholars are becoming increasingly interested in how the literature on implicit bias helps explain illegal discrimination. However, these scholars have not yet mined all of the insights that science on the social brain can offer antidiscrimination law. That science, which researchers refer to as social neuroscience, involves a broadly... |
2019 |
| Bertrall L. Ross II |
Administrative Constitutionalism as Popular Constitutionalism |
167 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 1783 (June, 2019) |
In the debate about who controls the meaning of the Constitution, popular constitutionalism appears to be losing. Popular constitutionalist methods for popular input into the evolving meaning of the Constitution account for a diminishing fraction of changes to constitutional meaning over time. Social movements remain rare, Congress is increasingly... |
2019 |
| Terry Eggenberger , George R. Luck , Heather Howard , Dana E. Prescott |
Advanced Directives and Family Practice: Implications and Ethics for "Greying" Family Systems and Interdisciplinary Collaboration |
32 Journal of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers 1 (2019) |
In recent articles in this Journal, the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers has addressed the aging of families and the impact of competency, guardianships, estate planning, and trusts on clients who may be separating or divorcing. A serious topic, which remains unexplored, is the role of family law lawyers assisting clients who may have... |
2019 |
| Meera E. Deo, JD, PhD |
Affirmative Action Assumptions |
52 U.C. Davis Law Review 2407 (June, 2019) |
C1-3Table of Contents L1-2Introduction . L32409 I. Bakke Facts. 2410 A. The Law According to Bakke. 2411 1. Compelling State Interests Explored. 2412 a. Should We Want More Minority Doctors?. 2413 b. Should We Strive to Reduce Societal Discrimination?. 2413 c. Should We Increase Service to Disadvantaged Communities?. 2414 d. Should We Support... |
2019 |
| Bette Jacobs, Mehgan Gallagher, Nicole Heydt |
Aging in Harmony: Creating Culturally Appropriate Systems of Health Care for Aging American Indian/alaska Natives |
22 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 1 (Spring, 2019) |
Aging is inevitable--it happens to all of us--but it is not a homogeneous experience. Aging people are among the most vulnerable populations in the world, and thus deserve our care and compassion. This is particularly true of aging American Indian and Alaska Natives (AI/ANs), who face unique barriers to accessing health care due to geographic... |
2019 |
| Leo Beletsky |
America's Favorite Antidote: Drug-induced Homicide in the Age of the Overdose Crisis |
2019 Utah Law Review 833 (2019) |
Nearing the end of its second decade, the overdose crisis in the United States continues to claim tens of thousands of lives. Despite the rhetorical emphasis on a public health approach, criminal law and its enforcement continue to play a central role among policy responses to this crisis. A legacy of the 1980s War on Drugs, statutory provisions... |
2019 |
| Antwann Michael Simpkins |
Apparitions in the Theory: How the Sciences Cause Race and Gender to Matter in the Twenty-first Century |
9 UC Irvine Law Review 1217 (July, 2019) |
A. Scientific Inquiry. 1221 B. To Use Neuroimaging Techniques. 1227 C. The Science of Law. 1232 |
2019 |
| Jennifer Jones |
Bakke at 40: Remedying Black Health Disparities Through Affirmative Action in Medical School Admissions |
66 UCLA Law Review 522 (March, 2019) |
Forty years after the landmark Supreme Court decision in U.C. Regents v. Bakke, medical schools remain predominantly white institutions. In Bakke, Justice Powell infamously rejected the concept of societal discrimination, which was offered as a justification for the U.C. Davis medical school's race-conscious admissions program, as an amorphous... |
2019 |
| Chao-Tien Chang |
Bank on We the People: Why and How Public Engagement Is Relevant to Biobanking |
25 Michigan Technology Law Review 239 (Spring, 2019) |
Biobanks emerged in the early 2000s, and now facilitate scientific research through the provision of resources for research that requires a large scale of biospecimens and data. Biobank projects have also become intertwined with complicated socio-economic initiatives to boost economic development or to shape community identity. While legislators... |
2019 |
| Jeff Clare |
Because Housing Is What? Fundamental. California's Rhna System as a Tool for Equitable Housing Growth |
46 Ecology Law Quarterly 373 (2019) |
In 2017 and 2018 the California Legislature passed two packages of bills aiming to address the state's massive housing shortage. The bills focus on the state's housing element law and Regional Housing Needs Assessment (RHNA) system. These two mechanisms were created to require cities to plan for their long-term housing growth and to ensure cities... |
2019 |
| Viviana Bonilla Lópezo |
Beyond Medical Legal Partnerships: Addressing Recovery-harming Social Conditions Through Clubhouse-legal Partnerships |
43 New York University Review of Law and Social Change 429 (2019) |
Because people with mental illnesses are particularly vulnerable to income, housing, educational, and familial instability, Medical-Legal Partnerships (MLPs) can be a helpful resource for them and their doctors. However, they can also harm clients and lawyer-client relationships. MLPs affirm the medical model, are entangled in harms perpetuated... |
2019 |
| Michal Saliternik |
Big Data and the Right to Political Participation |
21 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law 713 (February, 2019) |
In recent years, the big data revolution has rapidly expanded from the private to the public sector. Today, government authorities at all levels analyze mass amounts of digital data produced by citizens and use it to inform their policy choices in such diverse areas as healthcare, education, transportation, and urban planning. Proponents of this... |
2019 |
| Anthony V. Alfieri |
Black, Poor, and Gone: Civil Rights Law's Inner-city Crisis |
54 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 629 (Summer, 2019) |
In recent years, academics committed to a new law and sociology of poverty and inequality have sounded a call to revisit the inner city as a site of cultural and socio-legal research. Both advocates in anti-poverty and civil rights organizations, and scholars in law school clinical and university social policy programs, have echoed this call.... |
2019 |
| Lauren Shaw |
Bloody Hell: How Insufficient Access to Menstrual Hygiene Products Creates Inhumane Conditions for Incarcerated Women |
6 Texas A&M Law Review 475 (Winter, 2019) |
For thousands of incarcerated women in the United States, dealing with menstruation is a nightmare. Across the country, many female prisoners lack sufficient access to feminine hygiene products, which negatively affects their health and rehabilitation. Although the international standards for the care of female prisoners have been raised in attempt... |
2019 |
| Alice Kaswan |
California Climate Policies Serving Climate Justice |
33-SPG Natural Resources & Environment 12 (Spring, 2019) |
While many features of California's robust climate change program are increasingly well known, less attention has been focused on California's pervasive integration of climate justice into its statutory and regulatory programs. Legislation, regulations, and implementation plans all attend to the broader environmental and socioeconomic implications... |
2019 |
| Hayley Penan |
California's Nonprofit Hospital Puzzle: Reworking the Jigsaw to Benefit Underserved Communities |
9 UC Irvine Law Review 1131 (July, 2019) |
I. Introduction. 1132 II. History, Rationale, and Standards of Nonprofit Hospitals. 1136 A. History and Rationale Behind Nonprofit Hospitals. 1137 B. Federal Standards for Nonprofit Taxation Status. 1139 C. The California Story (California Standards for Nonprofit Taxation Status). 1143 D. Recent Legislative History in California (The California... |
2019 |
| Kaitlyn A. Laurie |
Capping Uber in New York City: Ramifications for Rideshares, the Road, and Outer-borough Residents |
46 Fordham Urban Law Journal 942 (June, 2019) |
Introduction. 943 I. The New York City Transportation Landscape in 2018. 946 A. New York City's New Local Laws: Background. 946 1. Four Years in the Making. 949 2. Attack on Tech for the Sake of . Attacking Tech?. 951 3. Uber's Response to the City's One-Year Ban. 954 B. Regulating Rideshares Alongside the Taxi Medallion Regime. 955 1. Aren't Ubers... |
2019 |
| Dina Shek |
Centering Race at the Medical-legal Partnership in Hawai'i |
10 University of Miami Race & Social Justice Law Review 109 (Fall, 2019) |
I. Introduction. 110 II. Burying Race in the MLP National Network. 114 A. Who We Serve and Who Serves. 116 1. Who We Serve and Who Serves: According to NCMLP. 117 2. Who We Serve and Who Serves: Racial Realities From LSC and HRSA. 119 B. MLP and Community Building. 122 III. The Value of Centering Race. 124 A. The Peril of the Dissociation Between... |
2019 |
| Hannah Tuschman |
Challenging Trap Laws: a Defense of Standing for Abortion Providers |
34 Berkeley Journal of Gender, Law & Justice 235 (Summer, 2019) |
Introduction. 235 I. Targeted Regulation of Abortion Providers: the History and Impact of Trap Laws. 239 II. Standing Overview. 241 A. Purpose and Requirements. 241 B. Standing for the Challenged Law's Direct Target. 241 III. Preterm-Cleveland, Inc. v. Kasich. 244 A. Non-Economic Injuries. 247 B. Administrative Burdens as Injury. 249 C. Standing... |
2019 |
| Yu-Jie Chen |
China's Challenge to the International Human Rights Regime |
51 New York University Journal of International Law & Politics 1179 (Summer, 2019) |
I. Introduction. 1180 II. China's Changing Attitude and Policy Toward the International Human Rights System. 1183 III. China's Current Strategies in the Human Rights Council. 1191 A. Procedures. 1197 B. Institutions. 1200 C. Norms. 1203 IV. Human Rights with Chinese Characteristics: Identity-Based Politics. 1208 V. How the Global Political Climate... |
2019 |
| Chris Chambers Goodman |
Class in the Classroom: Poverty, Policies, and Practices Impeding Education |
27 American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy and the Law 95 (2019) |
Introduction 95 I. Social Science. 101 II. The Constitutional Right to Public Education. 109 A. Adequate and Equal Education in Theory. 109 B. Education as Citizenship. 114 III. The Current Landscape. 117 A. The ESSA Thus Far. 117 B. Assessing Select State ESSA Plans. 121 C. Recent Education Litigation in Select States. 122 1. New Mexico. 123 2.... |
2019 |
| Chris Chambers Goodman |
Class in the Classroom: Poverty, Policies, and Practices Impeding Education |
27 American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy and the Law 357 (2019) |
Introduction. 357 I. Social Science. 363 II. The Constitutional Right to Public Education. 371 A. Adequate and Equal Education in Theory. 371 B. Education as Citizenship. 376 III. The Current Landscape. 379 A. The ESSA Thus Far. 379 B. Assessing Select State ESSA Plans. 383 C. Recent Education Litigation in Select States. 384 1. New Mexico. 385 2.... |
2019 |
| Sherley E. Cruz |
Coding for Cultural Competency: Expanding Access to Justice with Technology |
86 Tennessee Law Review 347 (Winter, 2019) |
Introduction. 348 I. Technology and the Law. 352 A. The Ethical Duty to Know About Relevant Legal Technology. 352 B. The Growth of Legal Technology. 354 C. Legal Technology That Is Increasing Access to Justice. 357 1. Guided Interviews. 360 2. Mobile Software Applications. 361 3. Remote Legal Services Through Client Portals. 363 4. Chatbots. 364 D.... |
2019 |
| Stephanie K. Glaberson |
Coding over the Cracks: Predictive Analytics and Child Protection |
46 Fordham Urban Law Journal 307 (April, 2019) |
Across the nation, child protective authorities are turning to machines to assist them in their work, developing predictive analytic tools to forecast risk to children and families. While there is clear evidence that current child welfare decision-making processes are flawed and in need of change, the advent of predictive analytics carries with it... |
2019 |