Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year | Key Terms in Title or Summary |
Stephanie K. Glaberson |
THE EPISTEMIC INJUSTICE OF ALGORITHMIC FAMILY POLICING |
14 UC Irvine Law Review 405 (May, 2024) |
The child welfare system is the system through which U.S. state authorities identify and intervene in families seen as posing a risk of abuse or neglect to their children. Impacted families, advocates, and scholars have joined in a growing chorus in recent years, demonstrating how this system--which many now refer to as the family policing... |
2024 |
Yes |
Corey Brady |
THE FEAR OF TOO MUCH JUSTICE: RACE, POVERTY, AND THE PERSISTENCE OF INEQUALITY IN THE CRIMINAL COURTS BY STEPHEN BRIGHT, JAMES KWAK & BRYAN STEVENSON |
98-APR Florida Bar Journal 51 (March/April, 2024) |
The Fear of Too Much Justice is an incisive, thoroughly researched, and ultimately devastating critique of the American criminal justice system. In each chapter, the authors marshal statistics and case studies to show how the system--from arrest to trial to prison and beyond--dispenses anything but blind justice. The book is a damning indictment... |
2024 |
Yes |
Megan VanGilder |
THE GOOD, THE BAD, AND THE GENTRIFIED: HOW THE HISTORICAL MISUSE AND FUTURE POTENTIAL OF ZONING LAWS IMPACT URBAN DEVELOPMENT |
92 University of Cincinnati Law Review 1258 (2024) |
When shiny new apartment complexes and high-end boutiques appear in previously blighted or decaying neighborhoods, many perceive a welcome improvement and celebrate the influx of spending and new facilities to the area. Meanwhile, critics decry these changes as the result of gentrification and chastise those who celebrate luxury apartment buildings... |
2024 |
|
Lisa V. Martin |
THE IMPORTANCE OF CIVIL PATHWAYS TO PROTECTION ORDERS |
113 Georgetown Law Journal 121 (October, 2024) |
Civil protection orders (CPOs) were created in part to offer legal protections from domestic violence for those who do not want police or other criminal justice interventions. For CPOs to fulfill this function, people must be able to access CPOs outside of criminal processes. The study presented by this Article shows that in some rural communities,... |
2024 |
|
Rachel Yost |
THE INDIAN CHILD WELFARE ACT, POLITICAL CLASSIFICATION OF "INDIANS," AND PRESERVATION OF TRIBAL SOVEREIGNTY: CHILDREN, THE MOST PRECIOUS RESOURCE |
48 American Indian Law Review 43 (2023-2024) |
Throughout the United States' history, Congress has consistently regulated Indian affairs as a matter of tribal political sovereignty, not as a matter of race. The Constitution itself enforces the use of political classification for Indians through Congress' power to regulate Commerce, and make Treaties with Indian tribes. Furthermore, the... |
2024 |
Yes |
Hiba Hafiz |
THE LAW OF GEOGRAPHIC LABOR MARKET INEQUALITY |
172 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 1183 (April, 2024) |
How the law contributes to economic inequality is the subject of renewed attention, but the legal dimensions of geographic inequality have received much less scrutiny. At its core, geographic inequality is a function of how the national income gets spatially divided between capital and labor. While labor's share of national income has generally... |
2024 |
|
Ekaterina (Katya) Moiseeva |
THE LOGIC OF NIMBYISM: CLASS, RACE, AND STIGMA IN THE MAKING OF CALIFORNIA'S LEGAL CANNABIS MARKET |
49 Law and Social Inquiry 1107 (May, 2024) |
This article explores how not-in-my-backyard (NIMBY) sentiments affect the implementation of new cannabis laws in California cities. Despite increasing legality and growing social tolerance, the actual status of cannabis remains controversial. Large segments of the population and local authorities remain uncomfortable with the use of cannabis and... |
2024 |
|
Sonja Starr |
THE MAGNET SCHOOL WARS AND THE FUTURE OF COLORBLINDNESS |
76 Stanford Law Review 161 (January, 2024) |
Abstract. The Supreme Court's recent decision striking down the use of race-based classifications in university admissions reflects its growing commitment to the concept of colorblindness, which has implications well beyond education. In anticipation, many schools and other actors are already moving toward alternative, facially race-neutral... |
2024 |
|
Sonora Windermere, Kenneth B. Nunn, J.D. , Supervised |
THE MEDICAL AND LEGAL PLIGHT OF SICKLE CELL PATIENTS A CASE STUDY OF RACIAL DISPARITIES IN HEALTH CARE AND THE POTENTIAL LEGAL REMEDIES |
21 Indiana Health Law Review 83 (2024) |
Introduction Section 1: Why Are SCD Patients Under-treated? 1.1 - Opioids Work, but How 1.2 - Mislabeled Addiction Leads to Mistreated Pseudoaddiction 1.3 - Racially Biased Medical Treatment Is Poor Treatment 1.3.1 - Racialized Research Created a Hard Habit to Quit 1.3.2 - Get Race Out of Medical Decisions 1.3.3 - When Racial Bias Goes from Paper... |
2024 |
Yes |
Olatunde C.A. Johnson |
THE MISSING HALF: REVISITING MONETARY REMEDIES TO REDRESS RACIAL SEGREGATION |
59 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 277 (Spring, 2024) |
This Essay considers whether courts should have awarded monetary remedies in housing desegregation cases. By examining the relief awarded in public housing desegregation cases brought in United States federal courts between 1966 and 1994, this Essay reveals the limitations of the almost exclusive reliance on forward-looking integration relief as a... |
2024 |
|
Stacey Steinberg |
THE MYTH OF CHILDREN'S ONLINE PRIVACY PROTECTION |
77 SMU Law Review 441 (Spring, 2024) |
Digital technology has changed the landscape young people face as they come of age. It has changed how children interact with their parents, schools, community organizations, and the state. Despite many benefits, digital technologies that employ data collection, algorithms, and artificial intelligence pose significant risks for the next generation.... |
2024 |
|
Priscilla A. Ocen |
THE NEW RACIALLY RESTRICTIVE COVENANT: RACE, WELFARE, AND THE POLICING OF BLACK WOMEN IN SUBSIDIZED HOUSING |
29 National Black Law Journal 35 (2024) |
This Article explores the race, gender, and class dynamics that render poor Black women vulnerable to racial surveillance and harassment in predominately white communities. In particular, this Article interrogates the recent phenomenon of police officers and public officials enforcing private citizens' discriminatory complaints, which ultimately... |
2024 |
Yes |
Allison Korn |
THE PERSISTENT DISASTER |
31 Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies 91 (Summer, 2024) |
In late 2020, I had an idea for the upcoming spring semester: I wanted to develop a new project for Food Law and Policy Clinic students that concentrated on disaster response. The disasters I imagined my students and me responding to were ongoing and not acute: The COVID-19 pandemic was well underway, and in the city of Los Angeles wave upon wave... |
2024 |
|
Yael Zakai Cannon |
THE PERSISTENT PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCY |
55 Columbia Human Rights Law Review 726 (Spring, 2024) |
May 11, 2023 was ostensibly a day of celebration. With infections and deaths from COVID-19 down, the federal government announced the end of the official Public Health Emergency three years after its initial declaration. But the conclusion of the Public Health Emergency also signaled the termination of unprecedented health protection... |
2024 |
|
Jasmine E. Harris |
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF CONSERVATORSHIP |
71 UCLA Law Review 1364 (December, 2024) |
Conservatorship, though viewed as a private law device, has always operated as a tool of public governance, social control, and resource extraction through the manipulation of the legal category of disability. This Article places a well-accepted Anglo-American history of conservatorship in probate law in conversation with its historical deployment... |
2024 |
|
Russell M. Gold |
THE PRICE OF CRIMINAL LAW |
56 Arizona State Law Journal 841 (Summer, 2024) |
Should tax dollars pay for more criminal law, better public schools, or a new community center? Different counties will answer the question differently, but facing these tradeoffs is profoundly important to democratic governance. Nonetheless, because the criminal legal system diffuses power and hides and offloads costs, officials and voters do not... |
2024 |
|
Taonga Leslie , Claire Comey |
THE PROMISE OF LIVED EXPERIENCE: ASSESSING RACE AND MERIT AFTER SFFA |
20 Northwestern Journal of Law & Social Policy 58 (Fall, 2024) |
70 years after Brown, students of color remain underrepresented in U.S. colleges and universities and in professions like law, medicine, business, and academia, which, in turn, drives inequitable social and economic outcomes. Recent Supreme Court decisions threaten to further exacerbate this inequity by preventing schools from considering race when... |
2024 |
|
Nomi Maya Stolzenberg |
THE PROTESTANT (DIS)ESTABLISHMENT: ITS OVERLOOKED ROLE IN THE ONGOING BATTLES OVER RELIGIOUS LIBERTY (A PROSPECTUS) |
70 Wayne Law Review 277 (Summer, 2024) |
When I was a kid, we all learned that antidisestablishmentarianism was the longest word in the English language. This fun fact was repeated without any expectation that we would understand what the word meant. Both antidisestablishmentarianism and its implied negative, disestablishmentarianism, were terms devoid of meaning for us, little more than... |
2024 |
|
James G. Dwyer |
THE REAL WRONGS OF ICWA |
69 Villanova Law Review 1 (2024) |
Haaland v. Brackeen rejected federalism-based challenges to the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) but signaled receptivity to future challenges based on individual rights. The adult-focused rights claims presented in Haaland, however, miss the mark of what is truly problematic about ICWA. This Article presents an in-depth, children's-rights based... |
2024 |
Yes |
Kindaka Sanders |
THE RED PILL: CRITICAL RACE THEORY, OSTRICH LAWS, AND THE 14TH AMENDMENT RIGHT TO FREE AND EQUAL THOUGHT AND DIGNITY |
55 Saint Mary's Law Journal 147 (2024) |
I. Introduction. 148 II. Critical Race Theory. 157 III. Ostrich Laws. 164 IV. The Enlightenments. 170 A. The European Enlightenment. 170 B. American Enlightenment. 177 C. Freemasonry and the Founding Fathers. 190 V. The American Matrix. 204 VI. The First Amendment Right to Receive Information. 210 VII. Fourteenth Amendment Right to Free and Equal... |
2024 |
|
Elizabeth Kukura |
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN DEMEDICALIZATION AND CRIMINALIZATION IN REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH |
34 Health Matrix: Journal of Law-Medicine 217 (2024) |
C1-2Contents I. INTRODUCTION. 217 II. UNDERSTANDING THE JACKSON FAMILY'S STORY. 224 A. Through the Lens of Demedicalization. 224 1. Demedicalizing Perinatal Care. 224 2. Demedicalizing Newborn Care. 233 B. Through the Lens of Criminalization. 239 III. DEMEDICALIZATION IN CONTEXT. 243 A. Defining Demedicalization as a Social Phenomenon. 244 B.... |
2024 |
|
Elizabeth Sepper , Lindsay F. Wiley |
THE RELIGIOUS LIBERTY CHALLENGE TO AMERICAN-STYLE SOCIAL INSURANCE |
58 U.C. Davis Law Review 257 (November, 2024) |
This Article argues that escalating religious challenges to the Affordable Care Act (ACA) form a major new vector in the campaign against social insurance in the United States. Where early constitutional challenges urging a libertarian ethos of you're on your own largely failed, religious claimants are succeeding with a traditionalist... |
2024 |
|
Olatunde C.A. Johnson |
THE REMEDIAL RATIONALE AFTER SFFA |
54 Seton Hall Law Review 1279 (2024) |
After the Supreme Court's ruling in Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President & Fellows of Harvard College (SFFA) limiting the ability of higher education institutions to use race as a factor to advance diversity in the student body, at least one prominent commentator suggested that universities should now justify their affirmative action... |
2024 |
|
Alex Raskin |
THE RIGHT TO PRESCHOOL: ONCE A WARTIME NECESSITY, NOW A FUNDAMENTAL STEP TOWARDS EDUCATIONAL EQUITY |
32 Journal of Law & Policy 199 (2024) |
The most vital time for cognitive development is the first five years of a child's life, impacting everything from language skills to social and emotional abilities. This makes access to high-quality universal preschool a necessity, as increasingly more families are without stable childcare in America. Preschool tuition now averages $10,000... |
2024 |
|
Sean A. Hill II |
THE RIGHT TO VIOLENCE |
2024 Utah Law Review 609 (2024) |
Scholars have long contended that the state has a monopoly on the use of violence. This monopoly is considered essential for the state to assure the safety and security of its citizens. Whereas public officers have the broadest authority to deploy violence, in order to make arrests or to inflict punishment, private citizens allegedly have severe... |
2024 |
|
Kevin Brown |
THE RISE AND FALL OF THE CONSIDERATION OF RACE AND ETHNICITY IN THE ADMISSIONS PROCESS: THE LONG-TERM NEGATIVE CONSEQUENCES OF THE FALL |
100 Indiana Law Journal 289 (Fall, 2024) |
Introduction. 292 I. The Long-Term Negative Consequences of the Initial Explanation of Taking Account of Race in the Admissions Process. 300 A. The Harm of Segregation Articulated by the Court in Brown v. Board of Education. 301 B. The Harms of Segregation that Brown Left Out. 305 C. How a Proper Understanding of Affirmative Action Would Have... |
2024 |
|
Margo Jarjoura |
THE RISE AND THE EVENTUAL FALL OF EL SALVADOR'S MANO DURA |
56 University of Miami Inter-American Law Review 110 (Fall, 2024) |
I. INTRODUCTION. 111 II. BACKGROUND ON EL SALVADOR'S GANG CRISIS. 113 A. The History. 113 B. El Salvador's Death Squads. 114 C. El Salvador's Mano Dura Policy. 115 D. PESS Versus the Territorial Control Plan. 117 E. Gang Life. 117 F. The Current State of Emergency. 119 G. Mass Incarceration Disproportionately Targets Poor Salvadorians. 121 III.... |
2024 |
yes |
Katie Louras |
THE RUNAWAY TRAIN OF MANDATED REPORTING |
61 San Diego Law Review 137 (February-March, 2024) |
C1-2Table of Contents Abstract. 138 I. Introduction. 139 II. The State of Child Welfare: Where We Are and How We Got Here. 143 A. The Rapid Rise of Mandatory Reporting Laws. 144 B. What Happens After a Hotline Call?: From Report to Screening, Investigation to Substantiation. 150 C. A Harmful and Inefficient System. 156 D. State Attempts at Reform.... |
2024 |
Yes |
Kimberly West-Faulcon |
THE SFFA v. HARVARD TROJAN HORSE ADMISSIONS LAWSUIT |
47 Seattle University Law Review 1355 (Spring, 2024) |
Affirmative-action-hostile admissions lawsuits are modern Trojan horses. The SFFA v. Harvard/UNC case--Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President & Fellows of Harvard College and Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. University of North Carolina, et. al., decided jointly--is the most effective Trojan horse admissions lawsuit to date.... |
2024 |
|
Samuel Davis |
THE SOVEREIGN SCHOOL DISTRICT: WHAT THE STRUCTURE OF OUR PUBLIC EDUCATION SYSTEM TEACHES CHILDREN ABOUT CITIZENSHIP |
23 Connecticut Public Interest Law Journal 1 (Spring-Summer, 2024) |
I grew up in Port Jefferson, New York, a bucolic village on the North Shore of Long Island. Like me, the vast majority of children who live in the Village of Port Jefferson--population approximately 8,000--attend Port Jefferson Union-Free School District (UFSD). Reflecting Port Jefferson's demographics, Port Jefferson UFSD is well-resourced: the... |
2024 |
|
Natalie M. Chin |
THE STRUCTURAL DESEXUALIZATION OF DISABILITY |
124 Columbia Law Review 1595 (October, 2024) |
Sexuality is integral to the human experience. Yet choices related to sexuality--sex, intimate relationships, marriage, pleasure, and childbearing-- are often controlled for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Discourse on sexuality primarily focuses on acts of sexual violence against this community, emphasizing a... |
2024 |
|
Larry J. Pittman |
THE SUPREME COURT'S ERRONEOUS EQUAL PROTECTION CLAUSE ANALYSIS: SOCIETAL DISCRIMINATION, THE HARVARD COLLEGE DECISION AS THE NEW PLESSY v. FERGUSON-LITE, AND THE THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT |
57 Creighton Law Review 189 (April, 2024) |
I fear that we have come full circle. After the Civil War our Government started several affirmative action programs. This Court in the Civil Rights Cases and Plessy v. Ferguson destroyed the movement toward complete equality. For almost a century no action was taken, and this nonaction was with the tacit approval of the courts. Then we had Brown... |
2024 |
|
Kyle C. Velte |
THE SUPREME COURT'S GASLIGHT DOCKET |
96 Temple Law Review 391 (Spring, 2024) |
The U.S. Supreme Court's new conservative supermajority is gaslighting the American public. This Article takes a systematic look at key cases from the Court's October 2021 Term through the lens of gaslighting. It describes these cases as being part of what it dubs the Court's gaslight docket, a descriptor that provides a useful and potentially... |
2024 |
|
Aziz Z. Huq |
THE TROUBLE WITH CLASSIFICATIONS |
100 Notre Dame Law Review 1 (November, 2024) |
The Supreme Court relies increasingly on anticlassification rules to implement the Constitution's various commands of evenhanded state treatment. These rules direct attention to whether an instance of a forbidden classification is present on the face of a challenged law. They contain two necessary steps. First, a court defines a general category of... |
2024 |
|
Travis Crum |
THE UNABRIDGED FIFTEENTH AMENDMENT |
133 Yale Law Journal 1039 (February, 2024) |
In the legal histories of Reconstruction, the Fifteenth Amendment is usually an afterthought compared to the Fourteenth Amendment. This oversight is perplexing: the Fifteenth Amendment ushered in a brief period of multiracial democracy and laid the constitutional foundation for the Voting Rights Act of 1965. This Article helps to complete the... |
2024 |
|
Lois R. Lupica , Zach Neumann |
THWARTING THE INEVITABILITY OF OVER-INDEBTEDNESS |
40 Emory Bankruptcy Developments Journal 155 (2024) |
C1-3Table of Contents L1-2Introduction . L3157 I. Low-Income Households Face Structural Inequalities: A Case Study. 159 II. It Is About Having Enough Money To Live. 161 A. The Low-Income Rental Housing Market. 162 B. For Low-Income Borrowers, Is Credit a Lifeline or an Anchor?. 170 1. Health Care, Housing, and Debt. 171 2. Transportation, Housing,... |
2024 |
|
S. Lisa Washington |
TIME AND PUNISHMENT |
134 Yale Law Journal 536 (November, 2024) |
Every three minutes, state agents remove a child from their home. Once a family is separated, impacted parents are up against a quickly approaching deadline--permanent legal separation looms at the end. In fact, impacted parents navigate three interrelated temporal dimensions: the race to permanent legal separation through the termination of... |
2024 |
|
John Whitlow |
TOWARD HOUSING JUSTICE: LAW, TENANT POWER, AND THE DECOMMODIFICATION OF URBAN PROPERTY |
27 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change 175 (2024) |
This Article explores the burgeoning movement for housing justice in the United States by focusing on recent examples of tenant organizing and law reform campaigns in New York City and San Francisco. In the case of New York, a coalition of tenants successfully mobilized in 2019 to strengthen the rent laws for the first time in decades. Those... |
2024 |
|
Bryce Drapeaux |
TOWARDS A MORE MEANINGFUL FUTURE: AN INDIAN CHILD WELFARE LAW FOR SOUTH DAKOTA |
69 South Dakota Law Review 119 (2024) |
Historically, the relationships between American Indian tribes and the states have been predominately antagonistic. In 1978, Congress attempted to remediate some of the effects of this antagonism by passing the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) to specifically combat the state-sponsored destruction of Indian families and the wholesale removal of... |
2024 |
Yes |
Alyse Bertenthal |
TOXIC NARRATIVES, TOXIC COMMUNITIES, AND ENFORCEMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL (IN)JUSTICE |
99 Washington Law Review 1053 (December, 2024) |
Abstract: The United States has committed to enforce environmental justice in ways it never has before. A spate of new policies aims to increase resources for environmental agencies' enforcement sections, improve training for environmental enforcement staff, and ensure community engagement in environmental enforcement decision-making. Yet there... |
2024 |
|
Scott Skinner-Thompson |
TRANS ANIMUS |
65 Boston College Law Review 965 (March, 2024) |
Introduction. 966 I. Constitutional Prohibitions on Animus. 972 A. Structural Overbreadth as Animus. 974 B. Structural Underinclusiveness as Animus. 977 C. Pretextual Government Interests as Animus. 979 D. Direct Evidence of Animus. 981 II. The Breadth and Depth of Anti-Trans Animus. 983 A. Anti-Trans Overbreadth, Underinclusiveness & Pretextual... |
2024 |
|
Sunita Patel |
TRANSINSTITUTIONAL POLICING |
137 Harvard Law Review 808 (January, 2024) |
C1-2CONTENTS Introduction. 810 I. The Transinstitutional Approach to Studying Policing. 818 A. The Continuum of Institutional Police. 818 B. Which Institutions?. 823 II. Policing the Public. 824 A. Red Flagging. 826 B. Street Policing. 839 C. Wellness Checks. 851 III. Surveilling the Public. 862 A. Networked Information. 862 B. Bureaucratic... |
2024 |
|
Riley Freedman |
TRANSPORTATION RACISM AND STATE-CREATED DANGER: A CIVIL RIGHTS LITIGATION STRATEGY FOR PEDESTRIANS HARMED BY TRAFFIC VIOLENCE |
99 Washington Law Review 919 (October, 2024) |
Abstract: Pedestrian fatality rates in the United States are markedly high compared to peer nations and are on the rise. The distribution of these deaths shows an alarming racial gap: Black pedestrians are twice as likely to be killed compared to white pedestrians. One significant factor that explains the disparity is the greater presence of wide,... |
2024 |
|
Martha Chamallas |
TRAUMA DAMAGES |
52 Southwestern Law Review 543 (2024) |
The concept of trauma has increasingly been used to describe the experiences of marginalized groups and has a special relevance to systemic injuries and abuses of power that can form the basis of personal injury claims. Although trauma would seem to have everything to do with tort law, not much attention has been paid to trauma and its connection... |
2024 |
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Samantha Buckingham |
TRAUMA-FOCUSED JUSTICE: RECOGNIZING SYSTEMIC TRAUMA |
46 University of Arkansas at Little Rock Law Review 519 (Summer, 2024) |
Both the juvenile justice and criminal justice systems have begun to recognize trauma as well as their own potential to traumatize. Trauma, especially childhood trauma, has far-reaching implications for systems--from policing to incarceration--and those impacted by these systems, including victims, defendants, and communities alike. An appreciation... |
2024 |
|
Emily J. Stolzenberg |
TRIBES, STATES, AND SOVEREIGNS' INTEREST IN CHILDREN |
102 North Carolina Law Review 1093 (May, 2024) |
Haaland v. Brackeen, last year's unsuccessful Supreme Court challenge to the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA), trumpeted a critique made consistently over the statute's forty-five-year history: that ICWA harms Indian children by subordinating their interests to their tribes' interests, unlike State family law, which pursues the best interests of... |
2024 |
Yes |
Devin A. Lowell |
UNCAPTURED: THE CCUS BOOM, ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE, AND CANCER ALLEY |
74 Washington University Journal of Law & Policy 88 (2024) |
This article exposes the environmental justice implications of industrialization-as-climate-mitigation strategies by focusing on their effects on minority communities in south Louisiana. Political and economic forces at the federal and state levels are advocating for increased development of carbon capture utilization and storage systems that will... |
2024 |
|
Chika O. Okafor |
UN-ERASING RACE: INTRODUCING SOCIAL NETWORK DISCRIMINATION TO THE LAW |
102 North Carolina Law Review 1517 (September, 2024) |
Race-based affirmative action in college admissions was a longstanding and hotly debated policy that allowed universities to use race as one factor in admissions decisions. With the landmark 2023 Supreme Court decision in Students for Fair Admissions (SFFA), many believe the era of race-conscious policies in university admissions has effectively... |
2024 |
|
Angela Dixon |
UNSHACKLED: WHY ELIMINATING HEALTH DISPARITIES REQUIRES THAT OUR CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM SET INCARCERATED MOTHERS AND THEIR DEVELOPING CHILDREN FREE |
38 Journal of Law and Health 102 (10/31/2024) |
Abstract: Incarceration of pregnant nonviolent offenders takes not only the pregnant mother captive but also her unborn child. Kept in unnecessary captivity, these innocent children may experience adverse childhood experiences (ACES) or lifelong damage to their physical and mental health. The experiences may be the same for children born already... |
2024 |
|
L. Kate Mitchell |
UPSTREAM LAWYERING: A FRAMEWORK FOR POVERTY LAW |
74 DePaul Law Review 67 (Fall, 2024) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 68 I. Origins of Poverty Law. 70 A. The 1800s: First Poverty Lawyers. 70 B. The 1900s: The NAACP & Foundations for Impact Litigation Strategies. 73 C. The 1960s: The War on Poverty and the Evolution of Poverty Lawyering. 76 1. The War on Poverty. 76 2. The Work of Poverty Lawyers in the 1960s. 77 D. The Backlash.... |
2024 |
Yes |