| Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year | Key Terms in Title or Summary |
| Beth Caldwell |
"CARE AS A SMOKESCREEN" AND THE CRIMINALIZATION OF YOUNG PEOPLE |
53 Southwestern Law Review 207 (2025) |
Wendy A. Bach's book, Prosecuting Poverty, Criminalizing Care, presents an in-depth analysis of a law that turned drug use during pregnancy into a crime, exposing how the language of providing care was used to enact a system of punishment for women who struggled with drug addiction or dependence when they were pregnant. Because much of my research... |
2025 |
Yes |
| Kate Hammond |
"EDUCATIONAL HOMICIDE": BRADFORD AND A CONSTITUTIONALLY INADEQUATE EDUCATION IN BALTIMORE |
18 Drexel Law Review 199 (2025) |
In Maryland, a twenty-minute drive separates students who will receive some of the best public education in the country and students who will receive some of the worst. For decades, students in Baltimore City have endured the conditions of a deteriorating public school system that is deficient in resources and infrastructure, while students in... |
2025 |
|
| David H. Gans |
"I AM FREE BUT WITHOUT A CENT": ECONOMIC JUSTICE AS EQUAL CITIZENSHIP |
93 George Washington Law Review 221 (April, 2025) |
The Fourteenth Amendment is one of the most-studied parts of the Constitution, but one of its central concerns has been long ignored by courts and scholars: economic justice. As this Article demonstrates, the Fourteenth Amendment's goal of redressing slavery's bitter legacy required sweeping new guarantees aimed at protecting the most exploited... |
2025 |
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| Richard B. Belzer |
"MODERNIZING REGULATORY REVIEW": A SHORT-LIVED ABANDONMENT OF MORE THAN FOUR DECADES OF REGULATORY REVIEW AND BENEFIT-COST ANALYSIS |
19 FIU Law Review 1081 (Spring, 2025) |
President Biden's Modernizing Regulatory Review (MRR) initiative fundamentally altered regulatory procedures, practices, and centralized oversight that had been in place since 1981 when they were formalized by President Reagan in Executive Order 12,291. MRR proceeded in three phases. First, a Memorandum issued on President Biden's first day in... |
2025 |
|
| Terry Allen |
"NOT SEPARATE BUT STILL UNEQUAL" |
100 New York University Law Review 971 (October, 2025) |
Much of education law scholarship on school segregation has focused on majority-minority schools. Yet school segregation does not occur only in majority-minority schools, but also in so-called integrated schools: majority-white and Latine schools in which Black children are in the minority. What we know about segregation in these schools focuses on... |
2025 |
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| Naomi Brim |
"POLLUTION DOES NOT [SIC] DISCRIMINATE": LOUISIANA v. EPA, DISPARATE IMPACT, AND THE FIGHT FOR ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE IN A HOSTILE CLIMATE |
110 Minnesota Law Review 485 (November, 2025) |
Human-induced climate change hurts people. Environmental burdens impact a person's ability to live freely, in good health, and with loved ones. And in the United States, people in positions of political authority and decision-making--who are predominantly white and high-income--use the legal system to push environmental harms disproportionately... |
2025 |
|
| Hannah Naylor |
"THERE WERE NO FOUNDING MOTHERS": REIMAGINING CONSTITUTIONAL EQUALITY |
113 California Law Review 2089 (December, 2025) |
Efforts to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) have resurged due to fourth-wave feminism and the #MeToo movement's exposure of widespread sexual harassment and abuse; Women's Marches protesting Donald Trump's 2016 presidential election; and the U.S. Supreme Court's recent gutting of reproductive rights and affirmative action. For the first time... |
2025 |
|
| Josh Gupta-Kagan |
(DE)FUNDING FAMILY SEPARATIONS |
27 NYU Journal of Legislation and Public Policy 605 (2024-2025) |
Federal foster care funding exists in tension with foundational family law principles. The law protects family integrity: the state may only separate parents and children in extreme cases, and, when it does, the state must work to reunify families. Yet the federal funding system directs billions of federal dollars to support CPS agencies and pay... |
2025 |
|
| Sheldon A. Evans |
A LIBERTY-BALANCING APPROACH TO CRIME |
62 American Criminal Law Review 155 (Spring, 2025) |
At its core, the criminal legal system is an ecosystem of institutions that seek to balance liberty interests. The insightful theories and complex practices of crime policy coalesce around questions on how crime impacts the liberties of individuals and communities to be safe, and how this correlates with the deprivation of liberty from offenders... |
2025 |
|
| Psalm Brown |
A NEW "PLAN FOR TRANSFORMATION": IMPROVING LIVING CONDITIONS IN CHICAGO'S PUBLIC HOUSING |
134 Yale Law Journal Forum 597 (2024-2025) |
February 21, 2025 abstract. Despite transformations in Chicago's public housing over the past few decades, many families continue to live in deplorable conditions. The existing landscape of legal rights and services for low-income tenants is unable to address the problem comprehensively. We must consider systemic solutions. To that end, this Essay... |
2025 |
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| Mohsen Manesh |
A NEW CARDINAL PRECEPT IN CORPORATE LAW |
86 Louisiana Law Review 1 (Fall, 2025) |
C1-2Table of Contents Abstract. 2 Introduction. 2 I. Moelis and its Reception. 7 A. Moelis. 8 B. Reception. 13 II. Legislative History of DGCL Section 122(18). 23 A. Drafting. 24 B. McCormick's Letter. 28 C. Re-drafting. 29 D. Laster's Campaign. 33 E. Legislative Debate. 40 1. Senate Judiciary Committee. 41 2. Senate Floor. 46 3. House Judiciary... |
2025 |
|
| Hannah Chang |
A STEP FORWARD OR A STEP BACKWARDS: AN ANALYSIS OF ASSEMBLY BILL 333 AND GANG ENHANCEMENT SENTENCING IN CALIFORNIA |
65 Santa Clara Law Review 731 (2024-2025) |
The prosecution of gang crimes and gang enhancements have historically been a source of racial inequity and disparity within the criminal justice system. In California, this is undoubtedly so, as Hispanic and Black men make up the vast majority of individuals on the CalGang gang database and in California prisons. The state Legislature attempted to... |
2025 |
|
| Marcela Prieto Rudolphy |
ABOLITIONISM NOW |
18 Washington University Jurisprudence Review 29 (2025) |
Although legal academia has recently turned its attention towards abolitionism, there is disagreement as to what abolitionism is and widespread skepticism exists about its plausibility. This Article aims to make two contributions to discussions about penal abolitionism. First, it provides a novel theorization of different kinds of abolitionism.... |
2025 |
|
| Jill C. Engle |
ACCESS, WELFARE, AND LAWSUITS: RESTORING REPRODUCTIVE AND ECONOMIC AUTONOMY POST-DOBBS |
59 University of Richmond Law Review 389 (Winter, 2025) |
Access to abortion and increased poverty for women and children are inversely correlated: as access to abortion decreases, feminine and child poverty increase. Women who try to access abortions are more likely to already be mothers, and more likely to be living below the poverty line. In post-Dobbs America, abortion is illegal or severely... |
2025 |
Yes |
| Sonja Starr |
ADMISSIONS ESSAYS AFTER SFFA |
100 Indiana Law Journal 847 (Spring, 2025) |
The Supreme Court concluded its 2023 decision barring affirmative action in university admissions with a qualification: Although they may not give weight to race qua race, universities may consider individual applicants' discussion of race-related life experience that bears on their strengths and potential. This essay carveout provides a... |
2025 |
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| Catherine Cunningham, Sebiga Lee, Caitlin Clements, Lauren Eber, Taylor-Ryan Nedd |
ADOPTION AND FOSTER CARE |
26 Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law 299 (Annual Review 2025) |
I. Introduction. 300 II. Doctrinal Underpinnings of the Adoption and Foster Care Systems. 300 A. Historical Development and Current State of Adoption Law. 301 B. Beginning and Modern Development of Foster Care Law. 306 III. Rights of Biological Parents. 312 A. Biology Plus Approach and the Rights of Biological Fathers. 312 B. Impact of Safe Haven... |
2025 |
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| Dan Sweeney |
ADVANCING RACE-CONSCIOUS REMEDIES BY ADDRESSING PAST GOVERNMENT DISCRIMINATION IN HOMEOWNERSHIP |
53 Fordham Urban Law Journal 515 (December, 2025) |
The United States is a country with a deep history of discrimination and a myriad of present-day effects resulting from that past discrimination. Although legislative action aimed at remedying past discrimination is rare, it remains both necessary and permissible within the Court's Equal Protection jurisprudence under extraordinary circumstances.... |
2025 |
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| Etienne C. Toussaint |
AFROFUTURISM IN PROTEST: DISSENT AND REVOLUTION |
125 Columbia Law Review 1375 (June, 2025) |
In an era of reckoning and resistance, this Symposium Piece journeys through the rich terrain of Black protest and Afrofuturist imagination, uncovering a radical legal tradition rooted in historical defiance and visionary possibility. By analyzing Black resistance--from insurrections against slavery to today's racial justice movements--through an... |
2025 |
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| Helen Zhang |
AFTER SFFA: AFFIRMATIVELY FURTHERING FAIR HOUSING AS A REMEDY TO FEDERAL HOUSING DISCRIMINATION |
100 New York University Law Review 1754 (November, 2025) |
Nearly sixty years after the passage of the Fair Housing Act (FHA), racial segregation, housing discrimination, and consequent disparities in health and opportunity stubbornly persist. Yet the Department of Housing and Urban Development has made limited use of the FHA's most powerful provision: its mandate to affirmatively further fair housing. In... |
2025 |
|
| Stephanie Richard |
AGAINST CRIMINALIZING WAGE THEFT: LESSONS FROM THE ANTITRAFFICKING MOVEMENT |
46 Cardozo Law Review 1317 (April, 2025) |
Criminalizing wage theft is a popular idea. This Article argues that--based on practitioners' experience with human trafficking--workers' rights groups, legislators, and prosecutors should reconsider embracing the criminalization of wage theft as an effective response to preventing this form of abuse. Twenty years of experience with trafficking... |
2025 |
|
| Emile Loza de Siles |
AMAZING GRACE: THE INSPIRING LIFE AND LASTING IMPACT OF GRACIELA OLIVĂREZ, THE NATION'S FIRST LATINA LAW PROFESSOR AND MORE |
28 Harvard Latin American Law Review 1 (Spring, 2025) |
The world needs heroes. People of color and women in the legal academy need heroes. We need those who pioneer and point the way into untraveled terrain. We need those who inspire, lift up, and exemplify what life in service to justice and knowledge means and, especially, what it truly means to work for justice to those long denied it due to poverty... |
2025 |
Yes |
| Paul Gowder |
AMELIORATIVE CONSTITUTIONALISM |
173 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 2037 (June, 2025) |
The basic problem of American constitutional theory is that (a) the U.S. Constitution, morally speaking, lacks full democratic legitimacy due to the continuing effects of its unjust and undemocratic history, yet (b) we have no realistic chance in the foreseeable future of replacing it with something free from those legacies of exclusion and... |
2025 |
|
| Lisa Lucile Owens |
AN ARGUMENT FOR HOUSING REPARATIONS |
77 Maine Law Review 243 (June, 2025) |
Abstract Introduction I. The Sacred Intentions of Reparations A. Envisioning Repair B. The Need for Reparatory Housing Policy C. The Promise of Housing Reparations II. Constitutional Barriers to Housing Reparations A. A Compelling Government Interest B. Narrow Tailoring III. The Modest Success of Municipal Housing Reparations Initiatives A.... |
2025 |
|
| Emma Adams |
AN EXAMINATION OF RACE IN REPRODUCTIVE OPPRESSION: WHY INTERSECTIONAL ABORTION STIGMA DISRUPTION IS NECESSARY TO ACHIEVE REPRODUCTIVE JUSTICE IN 2024 AND BEYOND |
36 UC Law SF Journal on Gender and Justice 3 (January, 2025) |
This article examines the perpetuation of white supremacy in reproductive oppression throughout American history. The history of the reproductive rights movement, when applying a racialized lens, often looks contradictory in protections and restrictions implemented by the American government, at both the federal and state level. For example,... |
2025 |
|
| Alyssa G. Harrison |
AN EXPERT IS JUST SOME GUY FROM OUT OF TOWN: ANALYZING THE NEOLIBERAL EVOLUTION OF EXPERT WITNESS TESTIMONY IN CRIMINAL LAW |
59 University of Richmond Law Review 739 (Spring, 2025) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 741 I. A Brief Introduction to Neoliberalism. 744 II. The History of and Requirements for Expert Witness Testimony. 746 A. Definitions and Requirements of Expert Witness Testimony. 746 1. The Adversarial Nature of Expert Witness Testimony. 747 2. Expert Witnesses Are Profit-Maximizing Individuals and Market... |
2025 |
|
| Kelly Struthers Montford , Darren Chang , Selingul Yalcin |
ANTI-CARCERAL APPROACHES TO ADDRESSING HARMS AGAINST ANIMALS: CONSIDERATIONS ON MULTISPECIES RESTORATIVE AND TRANSFORMATIVE JUSTICE |
50 Law and Social Inquiry 284 (February, 2025) |
(Received 12 May 2023; revised 26 February 2024; accepted 19 September 2024; first published online 18 November 2024) The animal protection movement has developed an increasingly close working relationship with the criminal punishment system through lobbying and campaigning for harsher punishments for animal abuse, while at the same time showing an... |
2025 |
|
| Christopher M. Roberts , Michelle M. Ong |
ANTICOLONIAL RIGHTS ADVOCACY |
8 Cardozo International & Comparative Law Review 1 (Winter, 2025) |
It is often asserted that human rights discourse and practice principally originated following the Second World War, or as late as the 1970s, and that human rights claims are inherently Western and liberal. None of these assertions are true. In fact, both rights-based critiques and rights claims were frequently articulated prior to the Second World... |
2025 |
|
| Synda Mark |
ANTIRACIST ANTITRUST: ANTITRUST ENFORCEMENT AS A CIVIL RIGHT |
31 William and Mary Journal of Race, Gender, and Social Justice 393 (Spring, 2025) |
Tryna' make a dollar out of fifteen cents is more than a genius hip-hop lyric, it is also a metaphor for a real-life economic problem. It is extremely difficult for Black communities to build wealth in America. While many factors contribute to the lack of economic growth, one overlooked area is the ineffective enforcement of the antitrust laws.... |
2025 |
|
| Jasmine B. Gonzales Rose, Asees Bhasin, Spencer Piston |
ANTIRACIST EXPERT EVIDENCE |
134 Yale Law Journal 2362 (May, 2025) |
ABSTRACT. Since 2020, when mass protests against racism swept across the United States, scholars, lawyers, and the general public have become increasingly aware that racism permeates society and the criminal legal system, from overt racial animus to the nuanced effects of structural racism. Demonstrating the influence of racism is therefore vital... |
2025 |
|
| Bertrall L. Ross II |
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND DEMOCRACY'S INFORMATION PROBLEM |
86 University of Pittsburgh Law Review 871 (Summer, 2025) |
Democracy in America faces a fundamental contradiction that threatens its future. Elected officials do not respond to the wants and needs of most Americans, yet they are being reelected at historically high rates. That contradiction has fueled rising dissatisfaction with democracy and support for its more autocratic alternatives. To date, legal... |
2025 |
|
| Stephanie Holmes Didwania |
ASSET FORFEITURE AND INEQUALITY |
77 Stanford Law Review 159 (January, 2025) |
Abstract. Under the law of asset forfeiture, a person loses ownership of money and property that were used in or constitute the proceeds of a crime. Asset forfeiture is a significant financial consequence for people who have (in some cases, tenuous) contact with the criminal system. Asset forfeiture also is a crucial way that federal, state, and... |
2025 |
|
| Lisa C. Ikemoto |
BANNING ABORTION, CORRUPTING CARE: IMPACTS ON PROVIDERS |
53 Southwestern Law Review 226 (2025) |
In Prosecuting Poverty, Criminalizing Care, Professor Wendy Bach details the direct harms of politicizing fetal personhood. Not surprisingly, Bach's analysis of the effects of Tennessee's fetal assault law evokes comparisons to the criminalization of reproductive health care--abortion, in particular. Both the fetal assault law and criminalization... |
2025 |
Yes |
| Julia Mizutani |
BARRED FROM THE PROFESSION, MISCHARACTERIZED AS UNFIT BY LAW |
98 Saint John's Law Review 1159 (2025) |
There is growing recognition that the bar examination can have racial and social effects when determining who can be an admitted and barred attorney in the United States. This Essay explores the history and current racialized issues with the other portion of bar admission--the character and fitness process. The simultaneously rigid and fluid... |
2025 |
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| Allison F. Pincus |
BENIGN CODE WORDS, INVIDIOUS RESULTS: A MODERN HOUSING DISCRIMINATION PRACTICE |
27 NYU Journal of Legislation and Public Policy 1013 (2024-2025) |
The code words realtors and homeowners use to advertise homes perpetuate discrimination and lead to inequitable access to housing in violation of the Fair Housing Act (FHA). Realtors' and homeowners' use of neutral-on-its-face language to describe real estate does not explicitly discriminate based on race, but in fact this practice yields disparate... |
2025 |
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| Melvin J. Kelley IV |
BEYOND THE PERPETRATOR PERSPECTIVE ON GOLDEN GHETTOS: DEFENDING FAIR HOUSING REVISIONISM WITH CRITICAL EYES |
77 Stanford Law Review 925 (April, 2025) |
Abstract. Most fair housing advocates maintain that integration is a core aim of the federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 (FHA). They contend that to achieve that integration, affordable housing must be sited in predominantly white, affluent areas. These advocates often cite legislative sponsors such as Senator Edmund Muskie, who declared that the aim... |
2025 |
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| Jill C. Engle |
BIRTH ON MOTHER EARTH: MITIGATING THE MATERNAL HEALTH CRISIS |
32 Virginia Journal of Social Policy and the Law 53 (Spring, 2025) |
Introduction. 54 I. The Maternal Health Crisis & Collateral Problems for Women of Color. 58 A. Poor Maternal Health Outcomes. 58 B. Suppression of Birth Practices of Indigenous and People of Color. 66 C. Climate Change Exacerbates the Maternal Health Crisis. 71 II. Strategies That Improve Maternal Health Outcomes. 75 A. Midwives and Other... |
2025 |
Yes |
| Angela E. Addae |
BOOZE, BARS, AND BIAS: ANTI-BLACKNESS IN LIQUOR LICENSING ENFORCEMENT |
81 Washington and Lee Law Review 1855 (2025) |
This Article explores the disharmonious and disturbing influence of race in the enforcement of liquor licenses. Across the length and breadth of this nation, attentive Black revelers bear witness to an all-too-familiar trend signified by the disproportionately frequent closures of Black entertainment businesses. This Article argues that the... |
2025 |
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| Michelle Paxton |
BRIDGING THE RURAL JUSTICE GAP: A SCALABLE SOLUTION ROOTED IN CLINICAL LEGAL EDUCATION |
21 Northwestern Journal of Law & Social Policy 39 (Fall, 2025) |
The rural justice gap significantly impacts child welfare legal representation, exacerbating the challenges families face when navigating juvenile courts in rural America. Attorneys in these communities frequently encounter geographic isolation, limited access to specialized training, professional burnout, and inadequate resources, all of which... |
2025 |
Yes |
| Jeremy Blasi , Zoe Tucker |
BRINGING UNION POWER HOME: UNIONS AND THE FIGHT FOR HOUSING JUSTICE |
52 Fordham Urban Law Journal 991 (April, 2025) |
Introduction. 992 I. Labor Unions' Stake in the Struggle for Affordable Housing. 995 A. Workers are Tenants. 995 B. Employers Are Landlords. 999 II. Unions' Historical Role in Fighting for Affordable Housing. 1001 A. Union-Sponsored Housing Cooperatives in New York. 1002 B. Unions' Contribution to the Battle for Public Housing. 1005 III. What Can... |
2025 |
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| Harris Freeman |
BRUCE K. MILLER (1945-2024): A TRIBUTE |
47 Western New England Law Review 1 (2025) |
Bruce Miller served on the Western New England University Law School faculty from 1980 until his retirement in 2020. Throughout his tenure Bruce fully committed himself to advancing the Law School's pedagogy, scholarship and social justice mission. His outsized contributions to the Law School's intellectual life, extra-curricular culture, and to... |
2025 |
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| Sebastian Miller |
CHAINS DON'T FLOAT: THE INCOMPATIBILITY OF CARCERAL LOGIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE |
49 Harvard Environmental Law Review 345 (2025) |
When societies in distress are faced with nuanced and pernicious social ills, they often respond by falling into a default posture of criminalization and incarceration. In answer to the drug epidemic, escalating homelessness, and acute mental health crises, governments--and the United States especially--seek solutions in the tried-and-true tools... |
2025 |
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| Aaron Pinkett |
CHALLENGING RACE-BASED HEALTH CARE DISCRIMINATION: A NEW PRIVATE RIGHT OF ACTION |
119 Northwestern University Law Review 1667 (2025) |
Abstract--The Hippocratic Oath calls on doctors to do no harm. Yet we know from extensive public health research that clinicians repeatedly cause harm to Black patients by dismissing their medical concerns, misdiagnosing them, and undertreating their pain. These practices of differential treatment for Black patients have led to steadily... |
2025 |
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| Jenny Logan |
CHALLENGING THE CRIMINALIZATION OF HOMELESSNESS WITH THE 8TH AMENDMENT: JOHNSON, MARTIN, AND THE FUTURE OF POVERTY GOVERNANCE |
53 Southwestern Law Review 489 (2025) |
In two recent cases, Martin v. Boise and Johnson v. Grants Pass, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed that depriving homeless individuals from the innocent, life-sustaining activity of sleeping violates the prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment enshrined in the Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. In this paper, I discuss the... |
2025 |
Yes |
| Hana E. Brown , Department of Sociology, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC, USA, Email: brownhe@wfu.edu |
CHALLENGING THE INDIAN CHILD WELFARE ACT: COLORBLIND RACISM, WHITENESS AS PROPERTY, AND THE LEGAL ARCHITECTURE OF SETTLER COLONIALISM |
59 Law and Society Review 356 (June, 2025) |
(Received 19 October 2023; revised 14 June 2024; accepted 4 July 2024) Bringing critical race theory and settler colonial theory to bear on legal mobilization scholarship, this article examines the ongoing campaign to strike down the 1978 Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA). ICWA sought to end the forced removal of American Indian children from their... |
2025 |
Yes |
| Andrew Hammond |
CLIMATE STRAINS AND THE SAFETY NET |
111 Iowa Law Review 155 (November, 2025) |
ABSTRACT: As the climate crisis deepens, environmental pressures like extreme heat and worsening air quality are steadily degrading daily life in the United States. Distinct from climate shocks like hurricanes or wildfires, these climate strains impact all Americans, but do so unequally, depending on several factors, including people's geographic... |
2025 |
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| Jennifer Safstrom |
CLINICAL USE OF INCLUSIVE LANGUAGE |
31 Clinical Law Review 321 (Spring, 2025) |
Lawyers' primary professional tool is language. Lawyers should strive to use accurate, clear, and compelling word choices in their communications. Attorneys have the responsibility to use words that demonstrate respect for our clients and others. In addition, clinical instructors seek to further pedagogical and representation goals while also... |
2025 |
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| Erika J.R. Elona |
COERCION AND CONTROL: THE NEED TO PROTECT NATIVE HAWAIIAN WOMEN AND GIRLS FROM SEX TRAFFICKING |
26 Asian-Pacific Law and Policy Journal 133 (Spring, 2025) |
Native Hawaiian women and girls have suffered and continue to suffer disproportionately from the sex trafficking industry in Hawai'i due to systemic inequities caused by colonialism. Despite accounting for only 27.1% of Hawai'i's population, one study on sex trafficking victims in Hawai'i revealed that, out of 363 participants interviewed, nearly... |
2025 |
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| Daniel S. Harawa |
COMPLICATING RACIAL JUSTICE NARRATIVES: THE PEREMPTORY ELIMINATION DEBATE |
105 Boston University Law Review 1731 (October, 2025) |
Studies consistently show that prosecutors disproportionately use peremptory challenges to strike people of color from juries. Several states have endeavored to address this well-documented problem by fortifying the Batson framework. Arizona, however, recently took the radical step of eliminating peremptory challenges altogether. This... |
2025 |
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| Courtney W Hess , Julia K Campbell , Holly Hackman , Laura Hayden , Jonathan Howland |
CONCUSSION MANAGEMENT POLICY IMPLEMENTATION IN HIGH SCHOOLS: EXAMINING POLICY THROUGH A DISPROPORTIONALITY LENS |
53 Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 281 (Summer, 2025) |
Background and Objectives: Evidence-based concussion practices have been codified into legislation, yet implementation has been narrowly evaluated. We examined implementation of concussion practices in Massachusetts high schools and adopted a disproportionality lens to assess the relationship between school sociodemographic and policy... |
2025 |
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| Edward W. De Barbieri |
CONTESTED PLACES: A REVIEW OF MIKE HIXENBAUGH'S THEY CAME FOR THE SCHOOLS AND REVEREND DR. WILLIAM J. BARBER II'S WHITE POVERTY |
34 Journal of Affordable Housing & Community Development Law 25 (2025) |
They Came for the Schools: One Town's Fight Over Race and Identity, and the New War for America's Classrooms Mike Hixenbaugh Mariner Books (2024) 288 pages; $32.50 (hardcover); $18.99 (paper); $12.99 (ebook); $23.99 (audiobook) White Poverty: How Exposing Myths About Race and Class Can Reconstruct American Democracy Reverend Dr. William J. Barber... |
2025 |
Yes |