AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearKey Terms in Title or Summary
Melanie Hagerman "AN ARBITRARY FRACTION": HOW THE FAMILY AND MEDICAL LEAVE ACT FAILS RURAL WORKERS 137 Harvard Law Review Forum 291 (April, 2024) The Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) provides workers twelve weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave to care for their own or a close family member's serious illness or injury. However, the FMLA has stringent eligibility guidelines that make this leave inaccessible to many of America's rural workers. The ability to take leave from one's job without... 2024  
Erin M. Carr , Nabil Yousfi "ANTI-WOKEISM" & AUTHORITARIANISM: A RENEWED CALL FOR CONSTITUTIONAL PROTECTIONS FOR EDUCATION 74 Syracuse Law Review 971 (2024) Introduction. 972 I. The History of the Weaponization of Education. 975 II. Anti-Wokeism as Modern-Day Anti-Literacy Laws. 982 A. The Prohibition and Punishment of Knowledge. 985 B. The Authoritarianism Inherent to Anti-Literacy Legislation. 991 III. Measuring the Early Effects of the Stop W.O.K.E. Act. 996 A. The Contagion Effect. 996 B. Racial... 2024  
Jasmine Oesterling "I CAN'T BREATHE": A COMPARISON OF RACIAL INEQUITY AND POLICE BRUTALITY OBSERVED IN FRANCE AND THE UNITED STATES 17 DePaul Journal for Social Justice 1 (Spring, 2024) This paper explores the unanticipated convergence of human experiences among Black and Brown citizens of France and the United States, despite their historical and legislative differences. Investigating racial inequity and police brutality through a comparative lens, this paper highlights global connections forged by racial and ethnic minorities in... 2024  
Clay W. Crozier "PURPOSEFULNESS" THROUGHOUT THE DOCTRINES: THE IMPORTANCE OF MASTERPIECE CAKESHOP AND ITS CONTRIBUTION TO CONSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS 36 Regent University Law Review 59 (2023-2024) In 1976, the United States Supreme Court instituted a purposefulness requirement to the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause analysis-- meaning that plaintiffs would be forced to show that a law or governmental action was purposefully denied to them based on a suspect classification before they could proceed onto a traditional strict... 2024  
Lihi Yona , Tammy Harel Ben-Shahar "TRASHING" WHITENESS: RACE CONSCIOUSNESS AND THE FAILED PROMISE OF MERIT 56 Arizona State Law Journal 1075 (Summer, 2024) This Article revisits the convention that equality demands race neutrality from one unexpected perspective: the experiences of poor white students from rural Appalachia, often derogatorily referred to as poor white trash (PWT). The recent Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard case, where race-based admissions were struck down by the Supreme... 2024 Yes
Grace McGowan "WE'RE NOT GIVING THIS CHILD BACK TO LESBIANS": AN EXAMINATION OF LGBTQ+ PARENTS' LOSS OF CHILDREN TO THE FAMILY REGULATION SYSTEM 44 Columbia Journal of Gender and Law 546 (Spring, 2024) People often associate LGBTQ+ parents with adoptive and foster parents. In their minds, LGBTQ+ parents are affluent, white, and male, and any interactions LGBTQ+ parents have with the family regulation system are one-sided: they are potential foster and adoptive parents for children who are already in state custody. But assumptions and facts... 2024  
Shefali Milczarek-Desai (HIDDEN) IN PLAIN SIGHT: MIGRANT CHILD LABOR AND THE NEW ECONOMY OF EXPLOITATION 77 Arkansas Law Review 345 (2024) [P]eople often say that [migrant child labor] is something that's hiding in plain sight. But, I mean, it's barely hiding. It is in plain sight.--Hannah Dreier Oppressive child labor in America is both an age-old problem and one that is relatively new. Its old embodiment flourished during the Industrial Revolution of the late nineteenth and early... 2024  
Carol Necole Brown A CIVIL RIGHTS DEFENSE OF GENTRIFICATION 97 Temple Law Review 23 (Fall, 2024) Scholars across disciplines such as sociology, economics, and urban planning are writing about gentrification. The literature and beliefs surrounding gentrification are very diverse, but what often connects the various views is a negative perception that gentrification always disadvantages and displaces low-income minority residents, physically or... 2024  
Caroline Mala Corbin A CRITICAL RACE THEORY ANALYSIS OF CRITICAL RACE THEORY BANS 14 UC Irvine Law Review 57 (January, 2024) A majority of state legislatures have introduced bills prohibiting public schools from teaching certain divisive concepts attributed to critical race theory (CRT), with at least fifteen states successfully enacting them. This Article applies a critical race theory analysis to these critical race theory bans, finding that the bans embody white... 2024  
Alexandria Belton A DANGEROUS DOSE: BACKDOOR DEREGULATION, FIRST AMENDMENT OVERPROTECTION, OFF-LABEL DRUG PROMOTION, AND VULNERABLE POPULATIONS 23 First Amendment Law Review 125 (2024) The regulatory powers of the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) were established to protect public health by preventing manufacturers from making poorly or unsubstantiated claims of effectiveness and safety regarding their products. Federal regulations largely prohibit pharmaceutical manufacturers from promoting their drugs for... 2024 Yes
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  
Jacqueline Kamel A MODEL STATE COMPENSATION LAW FOR THE WRONGFULLY CONVICTED 50 Journal of Legislation 179 (January, 2024) C1-2Contents Introduction. 181 I. Collateral Consequences & The Cost to Society. 183 A. The Causes and the Cures of Collateral Consequences. 185 B. The Consequential Costs. 186 1. Employment. 186 2. Homelessness. 188 3. Health Issues. 190 4. Social Welfare. 192 II. Current Compensation Legislation. 197 A. Nation-Wide. 197 B. Indiana's Law... 2024 Yes
Danielle Keats Citron A MORE PERFECT PRIVACY 104 Boston University Law Review 1073 (May, 2024) Fifty years ago, federal and state lawmakers called for the regulation of a criminal justice databank connecting federal, state, and local agencies. There was bipartisan concern that the system imperiled constitutional commitments and people's crucial life opportunities, including jobs, education, housing, and licenses. Bipartisan congressional... 2024  
Chris Gottlieb A PATH TO ELIMINATING THE CIVIL DEATH PENALTY: UNBUNDLING AND TRANSFERRING PARENTAL RIGHTS 19 Harvard Law & Policy Review 43 (Summer, 2024) There are few uses of government power as extreme as severing parent-child relationships, yet terminating parental rights has become commonplace in the American child welfare system. Amid growing recognition of the harms of terminating parental rights and the racial injustice of current practice, this Article proposes a straightforward route to... 2024 Yes
Charisa Smith A POST-DOBBS FUTURE: BAILING WATER DOWNSTREAM TO CENTER DEMOCRACY'S CHILDREN 54 Seton Hall Law Review 747 (2024) The reversal of Roe v. Wade by Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization not only imperils vital reproductive freedom across the United States but also illuminates the countless ways that childhood precarity will be exacerbated downstream now that forced births are sanctioned by the state. While an individual's reasons for exercising abortion... 2024  
Robert Hovey A ROAD TO RECOVERY: WHY THE EXPANSION OF THE CHILD TAX CREDIT SHOULD BE PERMANENT 57 UIC Law Review 589 (Spring, 2024) I. Introduction. 589 II. Background. 591 A. History of the CTC. 591 B. Tax Credit versus Tax Deduction. 593 C. Utilizing Tax Provisions to Provide Benefits to Families. 594 D. U.S. Poverty During the COVID-19 Pandemic. 595 E. Key Elements of the Expanded CTC. 597 1. Fully Refundable. 597 2. Increased Eligibility. 599 3. Advanced Payment Structure.... 2024 Yes
Stacey A. Tovino ABORTED CONFIDENTIALITY 65 Boston College Law Review 1921 (June, 2024) Introduction. 1923 I. The Former HIPAA Privacy Rule. 1931 A. Crime on Premises Exception. 1935 B. Emergency Care Exception. 1937 C. Decedent Exception. 1939 D. Required by Law Exception. 1941 E. Identification and Location Exception. 1943 F. Crime Victim Exception. 1944 G. Summary. 1945 II. The Final Rule. 1946 A. The Purpose-Based Prohibition.... 2024  
Kevin H. Govern , John I. Winn ACADEMIC CORPORATISM, NLRB v. YESHIVA, AND THE RISE OF THE UNIVERSITY PROFESSIONAL MANAGEMENT CLASS 22 Ave Maria Law Review 1 (Spring, 2024) Derived from political corporatism, academic corporatism is an administrative strategy that is antithetical to the spirit that academics hold dear--including openness, transparency, collegiality, meritocracy, rule-governed procedures, balanced curriculum, a level playing field for probationary faculty and participation by faculty in governance.... 2024  
Dr. Laura C. Hoffman ACCESS DENIED: ACCESSIBILITY AND THE LAW OF TELEHEALTH FOR PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES 34 Health Matrix: Journal of Law-Medicine 83 (2024) We need to make every single thing accessible to every single person with a disability. --Stevie Wonder C1-2Contents I. Introduction. 84 II. Understanding Disability & Why It Matters. 86 a. Defining Disability. 86 b. Disability by the Numbers. 88 III. Existing Healthcare Disparities. 91 a. Current Understanding of Existing Healthcare... 2024  
Natalie Whitt ACCESS TO JUSTICE IN A WARMING WORLD: CRISIS AND OPPORTUNITY IN RURAL AMERICA 62 University of Louisville Law Review 551 (Spring, 2024) In 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson declared an unconditional war on poverty in America, which famously paved the way for many social programs still in existence, including what would later become the Legal Services Corporation (LSC)--the nation's largest provider of civil legal services to low-income folks. To generate the necessary support for... 2024 Yes
Kirsten Matoy Carlson ACCESS TO JUSTICE IN THE SHADOW OF COLONIALISM 59 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 69 (Spring, 2024) C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 70 I. The Imposition and Insufficiency of Anglo-American Justice. 79 A. Settler Colonialism and the Imposition of Justice. 80 B. The Legacy of Settler Colonialism on Justice. 86 1. Impact on Tribal Governments. 87 2. Impact on Individual Natives. 93 II. Natives' Struggle for Access to Justice Under Settler... 2024  
Theresa Glennon ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: RESTORING HUMAN RIGHTS AND DIGNITY 42 Boston University International Law Journal 1 (Spring, 2024) Reviewing Redress: Ireland's Institutions and Transitional Justice (Katherine O'Donnell, Maeve O'Rourke & James M. Smith eds., 2022). C1-2Contents I. Introduction. 1 II. Censure and Subjugation: Confronting Ireland's Mistreatment of Single Women and Children. 3 III. Advancing Redress or Deepening rupture?. 7 IV. Reimagining Ireland: Government by... 2024 Yes
Susan Bibler Coutin, Walter J. Nicholls ADMINIGRATION: CITY-LEVEL GOVERNANCE OF IMMIGRANT COMMUNITY MEMBERS 49 Law and Social Inquiry 1595 (August, 2024) The concept of adminigration provides a much-needed lens in theorizing immigration enforcement, citizenship, and urban geographies. We define adminigration as the governance of immigrant community members through city-level policies and programs, whether or not these explicitly focus on immigrants. Our focus on adminigration involves three... 2024  
Emily Cauble ADMINISTERING FACTS-AND-CIRCUMSTANCES-BASED TAX TESTS 76 Baylor Law Review 249 (Spring, 2024) Oftentimes, the appropriate tax treatment of a transaction or event depends on a holistic analysis of relevant facts and circumstances. Facts-and-circumstances-based tests are challenging to administer because they are challenging to enforce and because they address challenging topics on which to provide useful administrative guidance. When a... 2024  
Bijal Shah ADMINISTRATIVE SUBORDINATION 91 University of Chicago Law Review 1603 (October, 2024) Much of the scholarship on immigration enforcement and environmental justice assumes that agencies negatively impact vulnerable and marginalized people as a result of individualized bias or arbitrariness in administration. This Article argues that, beyond idiosyncrasies or flaws in administrators themselves, the poor impact of administration on... 2024 Yes
Malinda L. Seymore ADOPTION AS SUBSTITUTE FOR ABORTION? 95 University of Colorado Law Review 1089 (2024) In Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, Justice Samuel Alito relied on adoption as part of the justification for holding that abortion is not constitutionally protected. First, he said, [s]tates have increasingly adopted safe haven laws, which generally allow women to drop off babies anonymously. Second, a woman who puts her newborn... 2024  
Kristin Henning ADVANCING RACIAL JUSTICE THROUGH THE RESTATEMENT OF CHILDREN AND THE LAW: THE CHALLENGE, THE INTENT, AND THE OPPORTUNITY 91 University of Chicago Law Review 345 (March, 2024) The Restatement of Children and the Law explores the regulation of children in four categories: Children in Families, Children in Schools, Children in the Justice System, and Children in Society. Each category surveys the laws that facilitate or guard against the intrusion of the state into the lives of young people. Despite the state's... 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  
Vanessa Springer AFFORDABLE HOUSING IN HEALTHY COMMUNITIES: INTEGRATING ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE INTO THE APPLICATION CRITERIA FOR AFFORDABLE HOUSING TAX CREDITS IN NEW MEXICO 54 New Mexico Law Review 623 (Summer, 2024) In Bernalillo County, New Mexico, communities of color and people living below the poverty line are more likely to live in areas with high exposure to pollution and associated health risks. Similar trends are echoed throughout the country. These data trends and experiences form the basis for the environmental justice movement, or the movement for a... 2024 Yes
Etienne C. Toussaint AFROFUTURISM AT WORK: CRITIQUE & PRAXIS 112 Georgetown Law Journal 1491 (June, 2024) During the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, so-called essential workers from minoritized racial and ethnic groups were disproportionately subjected to workplace indignities that resembled, in the words of Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, a modern Black plague. Some observers expressed faith in existing corporate governance regimes, noting that many... 2024  
Guha Krishnamurthi AGAINST THE RECIDIVIST PREMIUM 98 Tulane Law Review 411 (February, 2024) The American penal system is broken. The state of mass incarceration is wreaking havoc on individuals, families, and communities. These effects are unequally levied upon and borne by communities of color and people who are poor. This state of affairs is morally odious and intolerable. One main component of mass incarceration is the deployment of... 2024 Yes
Heather R. Abraham AGENCIES "SHALL COOPERATE": A BLUEPRINT FOR AFFIRMATIVELY FURTHERING FAIR HOUSING 57 UIC Law Review 469 (Spring, 2024) Abstract: Every federal agency perpetuates housing segregation. As if on autopilot, agencies routinely reinforce segregation unless they take intentional steps to counteract it. Building on my prior work on the Fair Housing Act's statutory duty to affirmatively further fair housing (AFFH), this Article examines an agency's obligation to reduce... 2024  
Brandon Weiss AN AFFIRMATIVE APPROACH TO THE SUPREME COURT'S MAJOR QUESTIONS DOCTRINE & CHEVRON SKEPTICISM 72 University of Kansas Law Review 541 (May, 2024) Racially restrictive covenants are a blight on our nation's history--a relic of archaic twentieth century land use practices, not unlike racial zoning, redlining, blockbusting, and a collection of other unsavory tools meant to segregate our society by race. On the occasion of the seventy-fifth anniversary of the decision, the Kansas Law Review held... 2024  
Gregory Day ANTITRUST FOR IMMIGRANTS 109 Cornell Law Review 911 (May, 2024) Immigrants and undocumented people have often encountered discrimination because they compete against native businesses and workers, resulting in protests, boycotts, and even violence intended to exclude immigrants from markets. Key to this story is government's ability to discriminate as well: it is indeed common for state and federal actors to... 2024  
Sara St. Juste ARE HEALTHY FOODS "WHITE PEOPLE FOOD": A LEGAL ANALYSIS OF DISPARITIES IN HEALTHY FOOD ACCESSIBILITY AND AFFORDABILITY AT GROCERY STORES AND RESTAURANTS IN LOW-INCOME NEIGHBORHOODS 14 University of Miami Race & Social Justice Law Review 139 (Spring, 2024) INTRODUCTION. 141 I. The Origin. 143 a. Soul Food. 144 b. White People Food Rationality. 146 II. How Supermarkets and Restaurants Perpetuate a Lack of Healthy Food Options. 147 a. The Role Supermarkets and Grocery Stores Have on Healthy Food Options. 148 1. The Lack of Supermarkets in Low-Income Communities with Predominately Black and Hispanic... 2024  
Matthew J. Rossman ASSESSING THE PERFORMANCE OF PLACE-BASED ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INCENTIVES: WHAT'S THE WORD ON THE STREET? 63 Washburn Law Journal 325 (Spring, 2024) Designing publicly-funded incentives to attract business investment to distressed communities is a strategy that American governments at all levels have pursued for more than half a century. So-called community capitalism puts the forces of enterprise and entrepreneurialism to work in ameliorating poverty, reversing deterioration in low-income... 2024 Yes
Tonya L. Brito , Daniela Campos Ugaz ASYMMETRY OF REPRESENTATION IN POOR PEOPLE'S COURTS 92 Fordham Law Review 1263 (March, 2024) Introduction. 1264 I. The Prevalence of Self-Represented Litigants in Civil Suits. 1265 II. Ethical Concerns of Asymmetrical Representation. 1272 III. Examining Asymmetrical Representation in Child Support Enforcement Cases. 1275 A. How Government Child Support Attorneys See Their Role. 1276 B. How Government Attorneys Communicate Their Roles to... 2024 Yes
Katrina Fischer Kuh AVOIDING PERFORMATIVE CLIMATE JUSTICE 54 Environmental Law Reporter (ELI) 10230 (March, 2024) Today's climate impacts and those on the horizon increasingly infuse mitigation and adaptation efforts with urgency, causing policymakers to contemplate or issue formal declarations of a climate emergency and to streamline review processes to aid rapid development of mitigation and adaptation infrastructure and technology. Yet, this urgency and... 2024  
Alexis Hoag-Fordjour BACK TO THE FUTURE: (RE)CONSTRUCTING INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL 58 U.C. Davis Law Review 111 (November, 2024) This Article explores a new way of determining ineffective assistance of counsel. Under existing law, a defendant must show that (1) counsel's performance was deficient, and (2) such deficiency resulted in prejudice. Although the right to counsel is a foundational guarantee in criminal proceedings, the ineffectiveness standard fails to adequately... 2024  
Joy Milligan BEYOND EQUITY: THE COUNTERFACTUAL ADMINISTRATIVE STATE 22 Georgetown Journal of Law & Public Policy 425 (Summer, 2024) C1-3Table of Contents L1-2Introduction . L3425 I. The Harms of Jim Crow. 427 II. Black Americans and Social Policy. 429 III. The Case of Education. 430 A. The Blair Bills. 431 B. Smith-Towner and Successor Bills. 432 C. The Harrison-Fletcher Bills. 435 IV. Would Racial Democracy Have Brought Different Results?. 436 V. The World As-It-Is. 437 VI.... 2024  
Julia Sturges BORDER (REPRODUCTIVE) CONTROL: UNCONSTITUTIONAL OUTCOMES FOR UNDOCUMENTED PEOPLE SEEKING ABORTION CARE 26 Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law 107 (Fall, 2024) It is no secret that restricted access to reproductive care, especially in the wake of Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health, disproportionately impacts poor, non-white women and pregnant people. Among the most vulnerable are undocumented Latina/o individuals in the United States. Undocumented individuals who are or may become pregnant face a heightened... 2024 Yes
  BREAKING INTERGENERATIONAL CYCLES 5 Maryland Bar Journal 48 (Spring, 2024) JUDGE JOANIE RAYMOND BRUBAKER is passionate about youth and about breaking cycles of generational issues--poverty, trauma, abuse, racism. She took some time to share her career highlights and how MSBA has supported her professional development. I think the accomplishments I have most often achieved and value are ones that aren't awarded. I was a... 2024 Yes
Sara A. Colangelo BRIDGING SILOS: ENVIRONMENTAL AND REPRODUCTIVE JUSTICE IN THE CLIMATE CRISIS 112 California Law Review 1255 (August, 2024) The climate crisis is a perilous yet underexamined example of the intersection of environmental injustice and reproductive injustice. The physical manifestations of the climate crisis affect key elements of reproductive justice: women's rights to have children, to not have children, and to parent children in healthy, sustainable communities. Reams... 2024  
Sarah H. Paoletti , Azadeh Shahshahani BRIDGING THE ACCOUNTABILITY GAP: A CALL TO ACTION FOR MIGRANTS SUBJECTED TO ABUSE IN U.S. CUSTODY 28 UCLA Journal of International Law and Foreign Affairs 71 (Fall, 2024) For years, immigrants held at the Irwin County Detention Center (ICDC) in the U.S. state of Georgia, and the advocates with whom they shared their experiences, raised complaints about the abusive detention conditions they were subjected to at ICDC with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), and with LaSalle Corrections, the ICE-contracted... 2024  
Michael O'Hear CAN THE EXCESSIVE FINES CLAUSE MITIGATE THE LFO CRISIS? AN ASSESSMENT OF THE CASELAW 108 Minnesota Law Review 1171 (February, 2024) The nation's increasing use of fees, fines, forfeiture, and restitution has resulted in chronic debt burdens for millions of poor and working-class Americans. These legal financial obligations (LFOs) likely entrench racial and socioeconomic divides and contribute to the breakdown of trust in the police and courts in disadvantaged communities. One... 2024 Yes
Daniel J. Hemel CAPITAL TAXATION IN THE MIDDLE OF HISTORY 99 New York University Law Review 1554 (November, 2024) This Article frames the problem of capital taxation as a dilemma of the middle of history. At the beginning of history--before any wealth inequality has emerged and before individuals have made any saving choices--the much-cited Atkinson-Stiglitz theorem teaches that the optimal capital tax is zero. At the end of history--after individuals... 2024  
Carol Jacobsen, David G. Winter, Abigail J. Stewart CARCERAL BACKLASH: THE CASE FOR CHANGING THE COURSE OF WOMEN'S HOMICIDE CONVICTIONS 31 UCLA Journal of Gender & Law 133 (Summer, 2024) Carol Jacobsen is a feminist, artist, writer, political organizer, and professor of Film and Photography, Women and Gender Studies, and Law at the University of Michigan. She is founding director of the Michigan Women's Justice & Clemency Project, a grassroots nonprofit working to free women wrongfully sentenced to life and protesting human rights... 2024  
Sarah M. Morris CARRIE-ING ON: ADVANCING JUSTICE FOR DISABLED PARENTS AFTER COLORADO'S CARRIE ANN LUCAS PARENTAL RIGHTS FOR PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES ACT 77 Oklahoma Law Review 195 (Autumn, 2024) In 2018, the Colorado legislature declared: (I) Persons with disabilities continue to face unfair, preconceived, and unnecessary societal biases, as well as antiquated attitudes, regarding their ability to successfully parent their children; (II) Persons with disabilities have faced these biases and preconceived attitudes in family and dependency... 2024  
Tom Stanley-Becker CHALLENGING THE CRIMINALIZATION OF HOMELESSNESS UNDER FAIR HOUSING LAW 42 Minnesota Journal of Law & Inequality 109 (Summer, 2024) This Article advances a novel argument that private plaintiffs and federal agencies should use federal fair housing laws to challenge state and local legislation that criminalizes homelessness. Blue and red jurisdictions alike have adopted such punitive legislation primarily in the last two decades. This Article focuses on camping bans and their... 2024  
Jason A. Cade CHALLENGING THE CRIMINALIZATION OF UNDOCUMENTED DRIVERS THROUGH A HEALTH JUSTICE FRAMEWORK 41 Wisconsin International Law Journal 325 (Spring, 2024) States increasingly use driver's license laws to further policy objectives unrelated to road safety. This symposium contribution employs a health justice lens to focus on one manifestation of this trend--state schemes that prohibit noncitizen residents from accessing driver's licenses and then impose criminal sanctions for driving without... 2024  
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18