AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYear
Ishita Chakrabarty Refoulement as a Corollary of Hate: Private Actors and International Refugee Law 61 Virginia Journal of International Law Online 51 (2020) While researchers in the field of refugee studies have set out to influence the policy decisions of host states, the reverse situation, where a host state's policy decisions have shifted refugee movements, has been little discussed. With the increasing incidence of hate crimes, refugees now find themselves in situations similar to those which they... 2020
Scott W. Stern Rethinking Complicity in the Surveillance of Sex Workers: Policing and Prostitution in America's Model City 31 Yale Journal of Law & Feminism 411 (2020) Abstract: This Note uncovers a history that has been largely ignored, dismissed, and sometimes even intentionally obscured: the history of the policing of sex workers in the twentieth century. When most lawyers think about the surveillance of sex workers, they think of a standard cast of characters: police, prosecutors, pimps, purchasers, and... 2020
Tristin K. Green Rethinking Racial Entitlements: from Epithet to Theory 93 Southern California Law Review 217 (January, 2020) From warnings of the entitlement epidemic brewing in our homes to accusations that Barack Obama replac[ed] our merit-based society with an Entitlement Society, entitlements carry new meaning these days, with particular negative psychological and behavioral connotation. As Mitt Romney once put it, entitlements can only foster passivity and... 2020
Deborah M. Ahrens Retroactive Legality: Marijuana Convictions and Restorative Justice in an Era of Criminal Justice Reform 110 Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 379 (Summer, 2020) The last decade has seen the beginning of a new era in United States criminal justice policy, one characterized by a waning commitment to over-criminalization, mass incarceration, and a punitive War on Drugs as well as a growing regret for the consequences of our prior policies. One of the central questions raised by this shifting paradigm is what... 2020
  Right to a Jury Trial 49 Georgetown Law Journal Annual Review of Criminal Procedure 643 (2020) Under the Sixth Amendment, criminal defendants have a right to trial by an impartial jury drawn from the state and district where the crime allegedly occurred. The right to a jury trial exists only in prosecutions for serious crimes, as distinguished from petty offenses. In determining whether a crime is serious under the Sixth Amendment, courts... 2020
Christine Sgarlata Chung Rising Tides and Rearranging Deckchairs: How Climate Change Is Reshaping Infrastructure Finance and Threatening to Sink Municipal Budgets 32 Georgetown Environmental Law Review 165 (Winter, 2020) The United States relies upon state and local governments to build, operate, maintain, and pay for most non-defense-related public infrastructure. State and local governments, in turn, rely upon the municipal bond market to raise capital for infrastructure projects. Climate change threatens to upend this system. As extreme storms and other climate... 2020
Travis Brandon Sea Level Rise Planning for Socially Vulnerable Communities: a More Equitable Approach to Federal Buyout Programs 97 University of Detroit Mercy Law Review 435 (Spring, 2020) While sea level rise will have devastating impacts up and down the coasts, that impact will be felt most strongly by socially vulnerable individuals and communities who lack the resources necessary to cope with and adapt to changing climate conditions. One study estimates that over the next thirty years, roughly 175 communities nationwide will see... 2020
Lori Nazry Ross See No Evil: a Look at Florida's Legislative Response to Holding Hotels Civilly Liable for "Turning a Blind Eye" to the Sex Trafficking Monster Hiding Behind Closed Doors 22 NYU Journal of Legislation and Public Policy 375 (2019-2020) Introduction. 376 I. An Overview of Human Trafficking and Sex Trafficking. 382 A. What Is Human Trafficking?. 382 B. Facts About Human Trafficking and Sex Trafficking. 383 II. The Intersection Between Sex Trafficking and the Hotel Industry. 385 III. An Overview of Federal Anti-Trafficking Laws. 387 A. The Trafficking Victims Protection Act and Its... 2020
Felice Batlan She Was Surprised and Furious: Expatriation, Suffrage, Immigration, and the Fragility of Women's Citizenship, 1907-1940 15 Stanford Journal of Civil Rights & Civil Liberties 315 (June, 2020) Introduction. 315 I. Coverture, Expatriation, and Women's Citizenship. 317 A. Coverture and Citizenship. 317 B. The Expatriation Act of 1907 and the Loss of Women's Citizenship. 319 C. Myth Making and Women's Expatriation of Citizenship in the U.S. Supreme Court. 321 D. Women's Suffrage, the Cable Act, and the Partial End of Derivative Citizenship.... 2020
Hannah Lustman Sick Uncertainty: How Executive Threats to Epa Programs for the U.s.-mexico Border Threaten Environmental Justice 10 Arizona Journal of Environmental Law & Policy 465 (Summer, 2020) The U.S.-Mexico Border is in the midst of a decades-long environmental health crisis. Unsafe and discriminatory land use practices, pollution, and lacking infrastructure are among the problems causing Border residents to become sick. They suffer from third world health afflictions in the Southwest corner of the first world. Because residents of... 2020
Mark S. Kende Social Media, the First Amendment, and Democratic Dysfunction in the Trump Era 68 Drake Law Review 273 (2020) In the fall of 2019, the congressionally endowed Drake Constitutional Law Center held a symposium on the book, Democracy and Dysfunction, authored by University of Texas law professor Sandy Levinson and Yale law professor Jack Balkin. Several scholars offered commentary on the book. This Article focuses on how the Internet is not what it used to... 2020
Jacob Barrett, University of Arizona, jacobbarrett@email.arizona.edu Social Reform in a Complex World 17 Journal of Ethics & Social Philosophy 103 (April, 2020) We live in an unjust world. Our social and political institutions stand in need of reform. But of all the changes we might make to these institutions, which would genuinely promote justice? And how should we, as theorists, go about trying to figure this out? Perhaps the most straightforward approach is problem solving: diagnosing particular... 2020
Valerie L. Snow State Constitutions and Progressive CrImmigration Reform 23 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change 251 (2020) INTRODUCTION. 251 I. THE DEVELOPMENT OF IMMIGRATION FEDERALISM AND CRIMMIGRATION. 254 II. NEW JUDICIAL FEDERALISM AND STATE CONSTITUTIONS AS A POTENTIAL AVENUE FOR CHANGE. 258 III. ADVANCING PROGRESSIVE CRIMMIGRATION POLICY. 262 IV. OBSTACLES IN THE PATH OF REFORM. 266 V. CONCLUSION. 268 2020
Anthony C. Thompson Stepping up to the Challenge of Leadership on Race 48 Hofstra Law Review 735 (Spring, 2020) First and foremost, I want to thank you for inviting me to deliver this keynote address. I applaud your choice to participate in a conference on difference and leadership because these are critical issues that deserve our best thinking and our collective attention. I have watched with great interest as organizations from global businesses, to law... 2020
Gwendolyn Roberts Majette Striving for the Mountaintop--the Elimination of Health Disparities in a Time of Retrenchment (1968--2018) 12 Georgetown Journal of Law & Modern Critical Race Perspectives 145 (Fall, 2020) Health disparities in the United States are real. People of color are the adverse beneficiaries of these facts--lower life expectancy, higher rates of morbidity and mortality, and poorer health outcomes in general. This Article analyzes the laws and policies that improve and create barriers to improving people of color's health since the death of... 2020
Kristin Booth Glen Supported Decision-making from Theory to Practice: Further Reflections on an Intentional Pilot Project 13 Albany Government Law Review 94 (2019-2020) Supported decision-making (SDM) for persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities (I/DD) has been part of legal scholarly discourse for more than a decade, but has, at least in the United States, entered the real world of practice only recently. Whether as a means to the lofty goal of a human right to legal capacity, as set forth in... 2020
Catherine L. Fisk Sustainable Alt-labor 95 Chicago-Kent Law Review Rev. 7 (2020) Contemporary labor organizing, with all its vibrance, variety, and vigor, seems to be in a virtuous cycle in which organizing success prompts favorable public attention, which in turn contributes to more organizing. More employees struck in 2019 than in any year since 1986. Since 2010, support for unions has climbed from less than half of Americans... 2020
Mariela Olivares The 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act as Antecedent to Contemporary Latina/o/x Migration 37 Chicana/o-Latina/o Law Review 65 (2020) C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 65 I. History of Immigration Law and Policy. 67 II. Immediate Effects of IRCA. 70 III. IRCA Effects on Current Migration Trends and Political Movements. 75 Conclusion. 80 2020
Laila Hlass The Adultification of Immigrant Children 34 Georgetown Immigration Law Journal 199 (Winter, 2020) There is evidence . that the child receives the worst of both worlds [in juvenile court]: that he gets neither the protections accorded to adults nor the solicitous care and regenerative treatment postulated for children. --Justice Fortas C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 200 I. Constructions of Childhood under Immigration Law. 205 A.... 2020
Janine Silga The Ambiguity of the Migration and Development Nexus Policy Discourse: Perpetuating the Colonial Legacy? 24 UCLA Journal of International Law and Foreign Affairs 163 (Spring, 2020) This Article seeks to identify the influence of the colonial legacy on migration policies, paying particular attention to the European context. Its goal is to assess the extent to which the current policy discourse on the migration and development nexus (MDN) stems from a conception of development that is still tightly connected with colonialism.... 2020
Paul Finkelman The Bill of Rights in Historical and International Perspective: How an 18 Century Document Illuminates Liberty in the 21 Century 46 Ohio Northern University Law Review 291 (2020) In 1789, just over two hundred and thirty years ago, James Madison drafted, and his colleagues in the House of Representatives approved, a series of amendments to the new Constitution and sent them to the Senate for consideration. After some negotiations, both the House and the Senate passed twelve of the amendments by the necessary two-thirds... 2020
Chloe Meade The Border Search Exception in the Modern Era: an Exploration of Tensions Between Congress, the Supreme Court, and the Circuits 26 Boston University Journal of Science and Technology Law 189 (Winter, 2020) The Supreme Court has long held that the border is different when it comes to unwarranted searches and seizures. This is due to the government's prevailing interest in preventing the entry of unwanted persons and effects . at the international border. Circuit courts, however, are beginning to reconsider the scope of the border search exception... 2020
Angela P. Harris , Aysha Pamukcu The Civil Rights of Health: a New Approach to Challenging Structural Inequality 67 UCLA Law Review 758 (October, 2020) An emerging literature on the social determinants of health reveals that subordination is a major driver of public health disparities. This body of research makes possible a powerful new alliance between public health and civil rights advocates: an initiative to promote the civil rights of health. Understanding health as a matter of justice, and... 2020
Jonathan Simon The Criminal Is to Go Free: the Legacy of Eugenic Thought in Contemporary Judicial Realism about American Criminal Justice 100 Boston University Law Review 787 (May, 2020) The criminal is to go free because the constable has blundered. --Judge Benjamin Cardozo, People v. Defore Historians of the American penal state agree that eugenics--the global scientific and social movement for government managing of the racial stock of society--was a significant influence on the major wave of penal expansion that took... 2020
Hope M. Babcock The Current Role of the Environment in Reinforcing Acts of Domestic Terrorism: How Fear of a Climate Change Apocalypse May Strengthen Right-wing Hate Groups 38 Virginia Environmental Law Journal 207 (2020) Right-wing extremist organizations, like white supremacists and nativists, are using the environment as a rallying cry to gain supporters of their anti-social agendas. Apocalyptic rhetoric about climate change and the lack of action to combat it has frightened some people into accepting the simplistic, violent worldview of these groups. Although... 2020
Paul Gowder The Dangers to the American Rule of Law Will Outlast the next Election 2020 Cardozo Law Review de novo 126 (2020) According to many constitutional lawyers and political scientists, the presidential administration of Donald Trump (for scholars on the left), or the response to that presidency (for scholars on the right) poses serious dangers to American constitutional democracy and the rule of law. However, this Essay argues that a more careful understanding of... 2020
Aziz Z. Huq The Double Movement of National Origin Discrimination 87 University of Chicago Law Review 2397 (December, 2020) Jose Figueroa's case presented little out of the ordinary for the federal courts. His was a multimillion-dollar drug operation run out of Wisconsin that fell apart when a dealer and a partner flipped and gave testimony for the government. Only in the closing moments of sentencing did Figueroa's case take an unusual turn, one that would in due... 2020
Caroline Bettinger-Lopez, Jamila Flomo, Amanda Suarez The Effects of Anti-Immigrant Laws in the U.s. on Victims of Domestic Violence, Sexual Assault, and Human Trafficking: a Gender-based Human Rights Analysis 23 Harvard Latinx Law Review 17 (Spring, 2020) I. Introduction. 18 II. SB 168 Harms Immigrants and Immigrant Communities. 21 A. Recent Research and Data Reveal High Mistrust of the Police Amongst Immigrants When Local Law Enforcement Engages in Federal Immigration Enforcement. 23 B. Anti-Immigrant Laws Drain Resources and Divert Workstreams of Nonprofit Organizations Serving Victims. 26 C. SB... 2020
Michael Doran The Equal-protection Challenge to Federal Indian Law 6 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law & Public Affairs Aff. 1 (November, 2020) This article addresses a significant challenge to federal Indian law currently emerging in the federal courts. In 2013, the Supreme Court suggested that the Indian Child Welfare Act may be unconstitutional, and litigation on that question is now pending in the Fifth Circuit. The theory underlying the attack is that the statute distinguishes between... 2020
Ammar Phillips, 3L CHARLESTON SCHOOL OF LAW The Fight Towards Equality in a Public School: Whether "Separate but Unequal" Remains a Reality in Today's Public- School System 14 Southern Journal of Policy and Justice Just. 3 (Fall, 2020) Over the past sixty-five years, America attempted to evolve from a segregated public-school system into an integrated one. The purpose of this paper is to discuss the still lasting effects of de jure and de facto segregation on the public-school system. The United States Supreme Court's school segregation decision in Brown v. Board of Education... 2020
Mary Holper The Fourth Amendment Implications of "U.s. Imitation Judges" 104 Minnesota Law Review 1275 (February, 2020) John Oliver, in a recent episode entitled Immigration Courts, shone a spotlight on the numerous problems with how U.S. immigration courts operate. He refuted a general misunderstanding that immigration courts sit in the judicial branch of government, rendering critical adjudicative decisions about deportation, and explained that they actually are... 2020
Marilyn L. Uzdavines The Great American Health Care System and the Dire Need for Change: Stark Law Reform as a Path to a Vital Future of Value-based Care 7 Texas A&M Law Review 573 (Spring, 2020) I. Introduction 574 II. The Health Care Crisis Moves Lawmakers to Increase Fraud and Abuse Enforcement. 578 III. Enforcement of Health Care Fraud and Abuse Laws Save Billions of Dollars in the Medicare and Medicaid Programs. 583 A. The AKS as a Tool to Combat Health Care Fraud. 585 B. The FCA as a Tool to Combat Health Care Fraud. 587 C. The Stark... 2020
Stephen M. Maurer The Healing Constitution: Updating the Framers' Design for a Hyperpolarized Society 29-SPG Kansas Journal of Law & Public Policy 173 (Spring, 2020) I . recognized that I'm going to get nothing done--nothing--unless [my Democratic opponents] . work with me and can work collaboratively. - Mitt Romney To American ears, statements that legislation requires reaching across the aisle sound self-evident. How else could one reach a majority? Conversely, the idea that democratic politics can... 2020
Andres F. Rengifo , Lee Ann Slocum The Identity Prism: How Racial Identification Frames Perceptions of Police Contact, Legitimacy, and Effectiveness 45 Law and Social Inquiry 590 (August, 2020) This article examines the role of racial identity in the configuration of opinions about the police. We argue that racial identity links social context to individual valuations of law enforcement, moderating the association between specific encounters and general views on police legitimacy and effectiveness. These propositions are assessed using... 2020
Daniel Buteyn The Immigration Judiciary's Need for Independence: Breaking Free from the Shackles of the Attorney General and the Powers of the Executive Branch 46 Mitchell Hamline Law Review 958 (July, 2020) I. Introduction. 958 II. Historical Background of Immigration Adjudication. 961 A. The Immigration Act of 1891. 961 B. The Immigration Act of 1893. 962 C. Significant Changes to Immigration Adjudication up to 1983. 963 D. The Creation of a New Agency. 965 III. Judiciary Comparisons. 967 A. Federal and State Judges. 967 B. Comparison of Immigration... 2020
Sheri Lynn Johnson The Influence of Latino Ethnicity on the Imposition of the Death Penalty 16 Annual Review of Law and Social Science 421 (2020) Latino, Hispanic, death penalty, capital punishment, Latinx With respect to African Americans, the history of racial discrimination in the imposition of the death penalty is well-known, and the persistence of racial disparities in the modern era of capital punishment is well-documented. In contrast, the influence of Latino ethnicity on the... 2020
Ingrid Eagly, Steven Shafer The Institutional Hearing Program: a Study of Prison-based Immigration Courts in the United States 54 Law and Society Review 788 (December, 2020) This article presents the findings of the first research study of the Institutional Hearing Program (IHP), a prison-based immigration court system run by the U.S. Department of Justice. Although the IHP has existed for four decades, little is publicly known about the program's origin, development, or significance. Based on original analysis of... 2020
Astghik Hairapetian The Last Resort: Tourism Development on Garífuna Territories in Honduras Through the Lens of Structural-dynamic Intersectionality 67 UCLA Law Review 1224 (November, 2020) This Comment analyzes the gaps in protection the Garífuna have experienced both in the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR) and the U.S. asylum system, taking two cases as case studies. It argues that, in the face of increasing tourism development, the Afroindigenous Garífuna community is positioned at an intersection between the structures... 2020
Carrie F. Cordero, Heidi Li Feldman, Chimène I. Keitner The Law Against Family Separation 51 Columbia Human Rights Law Review 430 (Winter, 2020) This Article offers the first comprehensive assessment of how domestic and international law limits the U.S. government's ability to separate foreign children from the adults accompanying them when they seek to enter the United States. As early as March 6, 2017, then-Secretary of Homeland Security John Kelly told CNN's Wolf Blitzer that he was... 2020
Luke Herrine The Law and Political Economy of a Student Debt Jubilee 68 Buffalo Law Review 281 (April, 2020) The notion of a student debt jubilee has begun its march from the margin of policy debates to the center, yet scholarly debate on the value of canceling student debt is negligible. This article attempts to jump start such debate in part by presenting a novel policy proposal for implementing a jubilee. In addition to reviewing the history of student... 2020
Shalini Bhargava Ray The Law of Rescue 108 California Law Review 619 (June, 2020) Diverse areas of law regulate acts of rescue, often inconsistently. For example, maritime law mandates rescue, immigrant harboring law prohibits it, and tort law generally permits it but does not require it. Modern legal scholarship has focused principally on mandatory and permissive forms of rescue. With humanitarian actors facing prosecution for... 2020
Ingrid V. Eagly The Movement to Decriminalize Border Crossing 61 Boston College Law Review 1967 (June, 2020) Introduction. 1968 I. Immigration Prosecution in the Trump Era. 1974 A. Executive Orders on Immigration Crime. 1977 B. Zero Tolerance for Illegal Entry. 1982 C. Enhanced Punishment for Illegal Reentry. 1986 II. The Movement to Resist Border Criminalization. 1991 A. Ending the Forced Separation of Families. 1991 B. Protecting the Rights of Asylum... 2020
Zainab Ramahi The Muslim Ban Cases: a Lost Opportunity for the Court and a Lesson for the Future 108 California Law Review 557 (April, 2020) On January 27, 2017, newly inaugurated President Donald Trump signed an Executive Order that banned individuals from certain Muslim-majority countries from entry into the United States. The district and circuit courts' subsequent refusals to sanction the Muslim Bans offered hope to those who recognized the bans as part of a legacy of racist and... 2020
Engy Abdelkader, Judy Chu, Elica Vafaie, Khaled Beydoun The Muslim Ban Revisited: Trump V. Hawaii Two Years Later 44 Harbinger 248 (5/27/2020) From November 2019 to April 2020, the ABA Section of Civil Rights and Social Justice's Rights of Immigrants Committee hosted a six-part webinar series exploring international law, and U.S. Constitutional law. What follows is a transcript from the sixth panel of the series, which took place on April 15, 2020. The transcript has been edited for... 2020
Hiroshi Motomura The New Migration Law: Migrants, Refugees, and Citizens in an Anxious Age 105 Cornell Law Review 457 (January, 2020) L1-2Introduction . L3458 I. Immigration, Immigrants, and Civil Rights. 460 A. The Era of Explicit Discrimination. 460 B. America Changes. 463 C. The Rule of Law. 466 D. Borders With Justice, Without Racism. 471 E. The Limits of Civil Rights. 474 II. Migrants and Refugees. 479 A. Refugee Protection. 480 B. Exceptionalism Under Pressure. 483 C.... 2020
Katherine Beckett , Megan Ming Francis The Origins of Mass Incarceration: the Racial Politics of Crime and Punishment in the Post-civil Rights Era 16 Annual Review of Law and Social Science 433 (2020) mass incarceration, carceral state, racial politics, punishment This article examines the origins of US mass incarceration. Although it is clear that changes in policy and practice are the proximate drivers of the prison boom, researchers continue to explore--and disagree about--why crime control policy and practice changed in ways that fueled the... 2020
Chaz Rotenberg The Path less Traveled: Afrocentric Schools and Their Potential for Improving Black Student Achievement While Upholding Brown 47 Fordham Urban Law Journal 1173 (June, 2020) Introduction. 1174 I. A History of the Afrocentric School Movement. 1178 A. The Rise, Fall, and Reemergence of Afrocentric Schools Nationwide. 1178 i. Other Centric Schools. 1181 ii. Education Inequality in the United States. 1182 B. Afrocentric Schools in New York City. 1184 i. Rampant Inequality and Segregation in New York City Schools. 1184... 2020
F.H. Buckley The Place of Empirical Studies 95 Notre Dame Law Review 1491 (March, 2020) There is a moment in my favorite film, Jules et Jim, when Jim explains why he became a journalist: Prof Albert Sorel taught me the little I know. What do you want to be, he asked. A diplomat. Are you rich? No. Can you through legitimate means add a famous name to your own name? No. Then renounce diplomacy. But what'll I become? Curious.... 2020
Daanika Gordon The Police as Place-consolidators: the Organizational Amplification of Urban Inequality 45 Law and Social Inquiry Inquiry 1 (February, 2020) Efforts to understand racial inequality in policing often focus on the micro-level, examining the situational dynamics of police-citizen encounters. This Article explores racial inequality in policing from another angle: it asks how the police organization responds to and further constructs the surrounding urban environment. I examine a police... 2020
Edward J.W. Park The Political Formation of Korean Americans, 1992-2019: from Ethnic Politics to Managing Transnational Lives - an Interview with Professor Edward Park 27 Asian American Law Journal 19 (2020) Editorial Disclaimer: The interview transcript below is based upon, but does not exactly reflect, an interview of the author. All editorial changes have been reviewed and approved by the author. Introduction. 19 Interview Transcript. 22 Personal History. 22 The Demographics of Los Angeles. 23 Korean Americans, African Americans, and Latinos. 24 The... 2020
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