Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year | Key Terms in Title or Summary |
David Dante Troutt |
URBAN RENEWAL'S GRANDCHILDREN: REMEDYING THE PERSISTENT EFFECTS OF POST-WAR RACE PLANNING |
52 Fordham Urban Law Journal 91 (October, 2024) |
Urban renewal, a mid-century federal-local redevelopment program that transformed American cities and displaced millions of Black migrants from the South, was a race-conscious government policy responsible for the enduring suppression of Black wealth. Its racial history and character are untold in legal scholarship. This Article argues that the... |
2024 |
|
Terry Allen |
USING SPATIAL AND QUALITATIVE ANALYSIS TO RETHINK SCHOOL POLICING |
112 Georgetown Law Journal 987 (May, 2024) |
When researchers typically think about the problem of policing in schools, we tend to focus on the experiences of Black children in majority-Black and Latino schools. This body of scholarship has shown that Black students disproportionately experience negative police encounters in majority-Black and Latino schools compared to other racial and... |
2024 |
|
Martha M. Ertman |
VIDEOS, POWERPOINTS & OTHER TEACHING MATERIALS AS CATALYSTS FOR PROFESSIONAL IDENTITY FORMATION |
20 University of Saint Thomas Law Journal 922 (Summer, 2024) |
Thanks for that generous welcome. I am so grateful that you are all willing to spend your lunch hour talking about teaching, and of course spend the whole day talking about teaching. It is an extraordinary time of change for techniques and the tasks that lawyers do. And of course that means our jobs have got to change. So thank you: Saint Thomas... |
2024 |
|
Semir Bulle, MD |
WE CANNOT POLICE SYSTEMIC RACISM AND SYSTEMIC POVERTY: WHY POLICING IS NOT A SOLUTION TO OUR PUBLIC HEALTH CRISIS |
2024 Utah Law Review 807 (2024) |
Health outcomes are profoundly influenced by the environmental conditions in which people live. The persistent legacy of structural injustices suffered by Indigenous and Black communities has had a detrimental effect on their current health status. These disparities are deeply troubling. In Canada, an individual's racial background is the primary... |
2024 |
Yes |
Stella Emery Santana |
WE SHALL OVERCOME: THE EVOLUTION OF QUOTAS IN THE LAND OF THE FREE AND THE HOME OF SAMBA |
47 Seattle University Law Review 1243 (Spring, 2024) |
C1-2Contents I. Prelude: The Synopsis of Our Journey. 1243 II. The Universal Anthem--Higher Education as a Global Human Right. 1246 III. Liberty's Quest--The American Educational Odyssey. 1251 A. Mosaic of Dreams--Quest for Equity in the U.S.. 1252 B. Chronicles of Change--America's Affirmative Journey. 1258 IV. Rhythms of Equality--from Samba to... |
2024 |
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Daniel J. Hemel |
WEALTH, SCHMEALTH, WELFARE, AND SCHMELFARE |
59 Wake Forest Law Review 1103 (2024) |
Traditional cost-benefit analysis is sometimes equated with wealth maximization, but the equation is a mischaracterization: traditional cost-benefit analysis's sum of compensating variations test ignores the deadweight loss of redistribution, even though the deadweight loss of redistribution reduces society's total wealth. Thus, the traditional... |
2024 |
Yes |
Aliza Hochman Bloom |
WHACK-A-MOLE REASONABLE SUSPICION |
112 California Law Review 1129 (August, 2024) |
Given we know that young Black men are disproportionately surveilled, stopped, questioned, and searched by police, why do courts permit continued use of ambiguous and racialized descriptions of behavior to support the reasonable suspicion required for a stop or frisk? Because a court's reasonable suspicion calculus often relies exclusively on one... |
2024 |
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Michelle S. Phelps, Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Minnesota, This is an edited version of the keynote address delivered by Professor Phelps at the convening, “Drug Testing and Community Supervision: Interrogating Policy, Prac |
WHAT IS PROBATION, ANYWAY? REFLECTIONS FROM A DECADE OF RESEARCH |
2024 Federal Sentencing Reporter 1908502 (4/1/2024) |
I first started thinking about probation during graduate school. Like many sociologists, I had not paid much attention to community supervision. Instead, I was focused on incarceration, trying to find a dissertation project that would let me track how life behind bars had transformed. But that changed when I completed my general examsthe end of... |
2024 |
|
Bertrall L. Ross II |
WHEN CLASS COMPETED WITH RACE AND LOST: AN ORIGIN STORY OF THE POLITICAL MARGINALIZATION OF THE POOR |
58 University of Richmond Law Review 671 (Symposium 2024) |
On March 1, 2024, the University of Richmond Law Review hosted a symposium entitled Vestiges of the Confederacy: Reckoning with the Legacy of the South. Professor Bertrall L. Ross II delivered the presentation transcribed below, which has been edited for clarity and cohesion. The University of Richmond Law Review was honored to host him and is... |
2024 |
Yes |
Teneille R. Brown |
WHEN DOCTORS BECOME COPS |
97 Southern California Law Review 675 (March, 2024) |
The lines between law enforcement and health care are blurring. Police increasingly lean on doctors to provide them with genetic samples, prescription histories, and toxicology results that they could not obtain on their own. This often occurs without a warrant or the patient's consent. At the same time, legislatures are using physicians as... |
2024 |
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Abigail Fleming, Photini Kamvisseli Suarez |
WHEN JUSTICE DESTROYS CEMENT MONSTERS |
54 University of Memphis Law Review 889 (Summer, 2024) |
Dusty, toxic cement monsters?cement plants?have plagued Black communities in the United States for decades. Spewing air pollutants while contributing to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, cement plants cause detrimental long-term health and environmental effects, making it impossible for Black communities to breathe. In the face of the global... |
2024 |
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Celine Simone |
WHEN PARENTS DECIDE THAT ALL THE WORLD'S A STAGE: EXPANDING PUBLICITY RIGHTS TO PROTECT CHILDREN IN MONETIZED SOCIAL MEDIA CONTENT |
58 Columbia Journal of Law and Social Problems 47 (2024) |
Family content creation is a multibillion-dollar industry. Though most parents at some point share content of their children online, for many influencer parents and their children, putting in the hours to curate the perfect online image means legions of fans and an enviable income from advertising and sponsorship. The children of these families,... |
2024 |
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Hector Pagan |
WHEN PROSECUTORS DEFY THE CONSTITUTION: UNMASKING THE CONSTITUTIONAL AND SOCIAL RAMIFICATIONS OF CATEGORICAL PROSECUTORIAL NULLIFICATION |
57 Suffolk University Law Review 391 (2024) |
The power of suspending the laws, or the execution of the laws, ought never to be exercised but by the legislature, or by authority derived from it, to be exercised in such particular cases only as the legislature shall expressly provide for. The Take Care Clause of the United States Constitution mandates the President shall take care that the... |
2024 |
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Genevieve Siegel-Hawley , Ash Taylor-Beierl , Erica Frankenberg , April Hewko , Andrene Castro |
WHEN PUBLIC MEETS PRIVATE: PRIVATE SCHOOL ENROLLMENT AND SEGREGATION IN VIRGINIA |
30 Washington and Lee Journal of Civil Rights and Social Justice 95 (Spring, 2024) |
Recognizing Virginia's central role in the expansion of segregated southern private schools after the Brown v. Board of Education ruling, we review law and policy related to private school segregation. We also conduct an empirical analysis of Virginia private school enrollment and segregation since the turn of the twenty-first century, finding... |
2024 |
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Corrie Mitchell |
WHEN THE "GREAT EQUALIZER" IS ANYTHING BUT: AMENDING TITLE I TO SECURE EDUCATIONAL EQUITY FOR LOW-INCOME STUDENTS |
16 Drexel Law Review 459 (2024) |
Poverty has long been known to negatively impact student educational outcomes, notably leading to lower math and literacy scores, graduation rates, and cognitive and physical development. While tackling educational deficiencies has primarily fallen under the purview of the states, the federal government could play an important role in addressing... |
2024 |
Yes |
Timothy Gentles |
WHITHER AFFIRMATIVELY FURTHERING FAIR HOUSING IN NEW YORK? THE AFFH MANDATE IN AN ERA OF LAND USE REFORM |
45 Cardozo Law Review 977 (February, 2024) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 978 I. Background. 985 A. The Fair Housing Act and the Duty to Affirmatively Further Fair Housing. 985 1. History of the AFFH Mandate. 985 2. Litigation Under the AFFH Mandate. 989 B. Exclusionary Zoning and Fair Housing. 991 C. Exclusionary Zoning in New York. 995 II. Analysis of the New York AFFH Law. 996 A.... |
2024 |
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Vida B. Johnson |
WHOM DO PROSECUTORS PROTECT? |
104 Boston University Law Review 289 (March, 2024) |
Prosecutors regard themselves as public servants who fight crime and increase community safety on behalf of their constituents. But prosecutors do not only seek to protect those they are supposed to serve. Instead, prosecutors often trade community safety, privacy, and even the constitutional rights of the general public to enlarge police power.... |
2024 |
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Breanna Madison |
WHOSE CHILD ARE YOU? PROTECTING BLACK CHILDREN AND FAMILIES PREDISPOSED TO THE HARMS OF THE FAMILY REGULATION SYSTEM |
67 Howard Law Journal 155 (2023-2024) |
Children have their sorrows as well as men and women; and it would be well to remember this in our dealings with them. [Black] children are children and prove no exceptions to the general rule. -Frederick Douglass Preserving the traditional structure of the nuclear family has long been embraced by the Supreme Court because familial... |
2024 |
|
Nancy B. Grimm |
WHY PRO BONO |
2024 Trial Reporter (Maryland) 6 (Special Issue 2024) |
Race and poverty directly correlate to a person's access to financial services and other needs such as health care, education, and employment. It also directly affects an underserved litigant's chances to receive fair and just legal representation and a successful outcome to their legal matter. As the world evolves and becomes increasingly more... |
2024 |
Yes |
J. Shoshanna Ehrlich |
WHY THE DOBBS COURT GOT IT WRONG: CONNECTING THE DOTS BETWEEN OPPOSITION TO ABORTION AND GENDER ANIMUS |
22 Seattle Journal for Social Justice 461 (Winter, 2024) |
On June 24, 2022, in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization (Dobbs), the Supreme Court erased nearly half a century of precedent in one fell swoop. Infamously declaring that the Constitution makes no reference to abortion, and no such right is implicitly protected by any constitutional provision, including the one on which the defenders of... |
2024 |
|
Siya Hegde, Carlton Martin |
WITH LIBERTY AND JUSTICE FOR ALL: THE CASE FOR DECRIMINALIZING HOMELESSNESS AND MENTAL HEALTH IN AMERICA |
21 Indiana Health Law Review 249 (2024) |
I remember the heartbreak I felt when my best friend deserted me shortly after our wedding . I spiraled into an even deeper depression, leading to my resignation from Apple and eventual homelessness in North Carolina. Events turned even more harrowing when an unfortunate encounter with the police led to my hospitalization and official diagnoses of... |
2024 |
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Mell Chhoy , Mark Gaston Pearce |
WORKER OUTBURSTS, WORKPLACE RULES AND A RESURGENCE OF WORKER VOICE |
31 Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy 355 (Spring, 2024) |
What started as the Summer of Strikes, as unions across different industries flexed their muscles and rode a wave of revived pro-labor sentiment, has turned into a year marked by some of the largest labor disputes in more than two decades. In total, 2023 saw 451 labor strikes, some of which have resulted in historic victories and pay increases.... |
2024 |
|
Jackie Dugard |
XOLOBENI'S STRUGGLE AGAINST PATRIRACIAL-COLONOCAPITALIST MINING IN SOUTH AFRICA: A COUNTERPOINT TO CLIMATE CATASTROPHE? |
41 Wisconsin International Law Journal 551 (Summer, 2024) |
Mining is central to the history of repression in South Africa. Mining made Sandton to be Sandton and the Bantustans of the Eastern Cape to be the desolate places that they still are. Mining in South Africa also made the elites in England rich by exploiting workers in South Africa. You cannot understand why the rural Eastern Cape is poor without... |
2024 |
Yes |
Lucia Kello |
"THE PAST GOT BROKEN OFF": CLASSIFYING "INDIAN" IN THE INDIAN CHILD WELFARE ACT |
36 Journal of Civil Rights & Economic Development 361 (Winter, 2023) |
In her 1993 novel, Pigs in Heaven, Barbara Kingsolver chronicles the story of an American Indian child, Turtle, and her young, white, adoptive mother, Taylor Greer. In what has been criticized as a controversial imagined fact pattern, Kingsolver writes that while stopped in a parking lot in the middle of the night, Taylor is approached by an... |
2023 |
Yes |
Joshua Michtom |
A CALL TO ACTION FOR PARENTS' LAWYERS IN THE FAMILY REGULATION SYSTEM: BEARING WITNESS AS PRAXIS AND PRACTICE IN THE FACE OF STRUCTURAL INJUSTICE |
31 Journal of Law & Policy 90 (2023) |
In this Essay, a public defender specializing in parent defense argues that the family regulation system is fundamentally unfair to parents, and that this unfairness is perpetuated by closed courtrooms and a lack of public understanding. He calls on lawyers who represent parents in these proceedings to make the practice of public storytelling... |
2023 |
|
Rachel Kennedy |
A CHILD'S CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT TO FAMILY INTEGRITY AND COUNSEL IN DEPENDENCY PROCEEDINGS |
72 Emory Law Journal 911 (2023) |
Since the child welfare system's inception, abuse and neglect laws have conflated poverty-related neglect with active parental violence and willful neglect. The ensuing state surveillance has disproportionately harmed poor children and children of color. Pursuant to the state's expansive parens patriae authority, countless families are... |
2023 |
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Monika Batra Kashyap |
A CRITICAL RACE FEMINISM CRITIQUE OF IMMIGRATION LAWS THAT EXCLUDE SEX WORKERS: MOVING FROM THEORY TO PRAXIS |
38 Berkeley Journal of Gender, Law & Justice 52 (2023) |
This Article is the first to apply a critical race feminism (CRF) critique to the current immigration law in the United States, Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) § 212(a)(2)(D)(i), which excludes immigrants for engaging in sex work. This Article will use critical historical methodology to center the role of women of color as the primary targets... |
2023 |
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Lauren Kingsbeck |
A HISTORY OF EXCLUSION: "FOR CAUSE" CHALLENGES AND BLACK JURORS |
19 University of Saint Thomas Law Journal 654 (Spring, 2023) |
In the fall of 2021, many Americans were shocked to learn that the Georgia jury for the trial of three white men accused of murdering Ahmaud Arbery, a young Black man, consisted of eleven white jurors and only one Black juror. Even more shocking was the judge's admission that there appeared to be intentional discrimination in the panel after the... |
2023 |
|
Nadiyah J. Humber |
A HOME FOR DIGITAL EQUITY: ALGORITHMIC REDLINING AND PROPERTY TECHNOLOGY |
111 California Law Review 1421 (October, 2023) |
Property technologies (PropTech) are innovations that automate real estate transactions. Automating rental markets amplifies racial discrimination and segregation in housing. Because screening tools rely on data drawn from discriminatory--and often overtly segregationist--historical practices, they replicate those practices' unequal outcomes in the... |
2023 |
|
Scott Altman |
A RIGHT TO ADOPT AND PARENTAL LICENSING |
65 Arizona Law Review 835 (Winter 2023) |
No court recognizes the right to adopt a child. By contrast, we embrace family formation rights and protect choices about whether to marry, procreate, and rear biological children. These rights are needed because families play a key role in society, and family formation is central to a happy and self-directed life. For similar reasons, we should... |
2023 |
|
Bernadette Atuahene |
A THEORY OF STATEGRAFT |
98 New York University Law Review 1 (April, 2023) |
Neoliberalism and its accompanying austerity measures are shrinking local and national government budgets, even though constituent needs remain pressing. In desperation, public officials sometimes replenish public coffers through illicit extraction from segments of the population poorly positioned to fight back. In Detroit, for example, city... |
2023 |
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Steven A. Ramirez |
A VISION OF THE ANTI-RACIST PUBLIC CORPORATION |
91 University of Cincinnati Law Review 828 (2023) |
In recent years, the law has concentrated further economic and political power within the publicly traded corporation. Even before these legal renovations, expert observers suggested that the legal frameworks governing the public firm permitted management sufficient legal autonomy to overcompensate themselves and to create governance structures... |
2023 |
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Marc Canellas |
ABOLISH AND REIMAGINE: THE PSEUDOSCIENCE AND MYTHOLOGY OF SUBSTANCE USE IN THE FAMILY REGULATION SYSTEM |
30 Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy 169 (Winter, 2023) |
Substance use is one of the favorite justifications for the family regulation system to remove children and prevent reunification with their parents, especially if those parents are women, people in poverty, or people of color. This Article reviews decades of scientific research, hundreds of scientific articles, revealing that almost all the... |
2023 |
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Allegra McLeod |
ABOLITION AND ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE |
69 UCLA Law Review 1536 (September, 2023) |
During the coronavirus pandemic, movements for penal abolition and racial justice achieved dramatic growth and increased visibility. While much public discussion of abolition has centered on the call to divest from criminal law enforcement, contemporary abolitionists also understand public safety in terms of building new life-sustaining... |
2023 |
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Elizabeth Tobin-Tyler |
ABORTION RIGHTS AND THE CHILD WELFARE SYSTEM: HOW DOBBS EXACERBATES EXISTING RACIAL INEQUITIES AND FURTHER TRAUMATIZES BLACK FAMILIES |
51 Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 575 (Fall, 2023) |
Keywords: Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health, Abortion Bans, Child Welfare System, Racial Inequities Abstract: This article explores how abortion bans in states with large Black populations will exacerbate existing racial inequities in those states' child welfare systems. In Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, the Supreme Court returned to... |
2023 |
Yes |
Kira Eidson |
ADDRESSING THE BLACK MORTALITY CRISIS IN THE WAKE OF DOBBS: A REPRODUCTIVE JUSTICE POLICY FRAMEWORK |
24 Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law 929 (Spring, 2023) |
Black people who can become pregnant and give birth were dying from pregnancy-related causes at rates more than double the national average before the Supreme Court decided Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health, and the Dobbs decision is expected to make America's maternal mortality crisis worse. This Note discusses the expected effects of abortion... |
2023 |
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Yael Zakai Cannon, Vida Johnson |
ADVANCING RACIAL JUSTICE THROUGH CIVIL AND CRIMINAL ACADEMIC MEDICAL-LEGAL PARTNERSHIPS |
30 Clinical Law Review 29 (Fall, 2023) |
The medical-legal partnership (MLP) model, which brings attorneys and healthcare partners together to remove legal barriers to health, is a growing approach to addressing unmet civil legal needs. But MLPs are less prevalent in criminal defense settings, where they also have the potential to advance both health and legal justice. In fact, grave... |
2023 |
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John Mukum Mbaku |
AFRICAN COURTS AND INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW |
48 Brooklyn Journal of International Law 445 (2023) |
Introduction. 446 I. Domesticating International Human Rights Instruments. 462 A. Introduction. 462 B. Giving Effect in Domestic Courts to International Treaties. 465 II. The State of the Protection of Human Rights in African Countries. 473 A. Introduction. 473 B. Judicial Independence as a Critical Factor in the Protection of Human Rights. 478... |
2023 |
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Benjamin Levin |
AFTER THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM |
98 Washington Law Review 899 (October, 2023) |
Abstract: Since the 1960s, the criminal justice system has operated as the common label for a vast web of actors and institutions. But as critiques of mass incarceration have entered the mainstream, academics, activists, and advocates increasingly have stopped referring to the criminal justice system. Instead, they have opted for critical... |
2023 |
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Michelle Oberman |
AGAINST SILENCE: WHY DOCTORS ARE OBLIGATED TO PROVIDE ABORTION INFORMATION |
26 Journal of Health Care Law and Policy 265 (2023) |
As a lawyer, I have long been interested in the gap between law and the books and law in practice. In 2008, this curiosity led me to Latin America, where I began studying the impact of the world's most restrictive abortion bans. My first stop was Chile, which at the time banned abortion under all conditions-- there was not even an exception to save... |
2023 |
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Allison M. Whelan* |
AGGRAVATING INEQUALITIES: STATE REGULATION OF ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTION |
46 Harvard Journal of Law & Gender 131 (Winter, 2023) |
Each year in the United States, pervasive inequities in health-care access and health outcomes contribute to tens of thousands of excess deaths among communities of color and other historically marginalized and vulnerable populations. Tragically, even that number may be a conservative estimate. These inequities transpire from structural barriers... |
2023 |
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Hiba Hafiz |
ANTITRUST AND RACE |
100 Washington University Law Review 1471 (2023) |
Antitrust law regulates the consolidation and abuse of economic power. One of its core tasks is to ensure that market success is not rigged in favor of undeserving winners against excluded competitors at consumers' and workers' expense. But for their entire enforcement and doctrinal history, antitrust regulators and courts have built a legal... |
2023 |
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California Task Force |
APPENDIX |
60 San Diego Law Review 613 (August-September, 2023) |
In 1863, Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation, and, in 1865, the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution commanded that [n]either slavery nor involuntary servitude . shall exist within the United States. In supporting the passage of the 13th Amendment, its co-author Senator Lyman Trumbull of Illinois said that it is perhaps... |
2023 |
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Jessica Xu |
AWARDING RACIAL SEGREGATION: THE LOW-INCOME HOUSING TAX CREDIT AS A NEW RACIALLY RESTRICTIVE COVENANT |
70 UCLA Law Review 596 (August, 2023) |
The United States has a history of racial segregation in its facilitation of federal housing programs. One such program, the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC), was intended to respond to the need for affordable housing since its establishment in 1986. Through the LIHTC program, the federal government grants tax credits to investors and... |
2023 |
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Timothy M. Mulvaney |
BENEATH THE PROPERTY TAXES FINANCING EDUCATION |
123 Columbia Law Review 1325 (June, 2023) |
Many states turn in sizable part to local property taxes to finance public education. Political and academic discourse on the extent to which these taxes should serve in this role largely centers on second-order issues, such as the vices and virtues of local control, the availability of mechanisms to redistribute property tax revenues across school... |
2023 |
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Roy L. Brooks |
BLACK BOARDING ACADEMIES AS A PRUDENTIAL REPARATION: FINIS ORIGINE PENDET |
13 Columbia Journal of Race and Law 790 (May, 2023) |
The past is never dead. It's not even past. - William Falkner, Requiem for a Nun 85 (1951) With billions of dollars pledged and trillions of dollars demanded to redress slavery and Jim Crow (Black Reparations) the question of how best to use these funds has moved into the forefront of the ongoing campaign for racial justice in our post-civil... |
2023 |
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Belinda Lee |
BOLSTERING BENEFITS BEHIND BARS: REEVALUATING EARNED INCOME TAX CREDIT AND SOCIAL SECURITY BENEFITS DENIALS TO INMATES |
98 New York University Law Review 331 (April, 2023) |
This Note describes how the tax system treats inmates, an intersection that has been relatively understudied by both tax and criminal justice scholars. The Note provides a detailed account of how inmates earn income through prison labor (what goes in) and the benefits denied to inmates (what comes out, or rather what often does not come out). The... |
2023 |
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Jenna Prochaska |
BREAKING FREE FROM "CRIME-FREE": STATE-LEVEL RESPONSES TO HARMFUL HOUSING ORDINANCES |
27 Lewis & Clark Law Review 259 (2023) |
Municipalities throughout the country enforce broad and harmful crime-free housing and nuisance property ordinances (CFNOs)--local laws that encourage landlords to evict or exclude tenants from housing opportunities based on their contact with the criminal legal system or calls for police help. There is little evidence that CFNOs are effective at... |
2023 |
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Khadijah Wright |
BRIDGE OR BARRIER: THE INTERSECTION OF WEALTH, HOUSING, AND THE DISPARATE IMPACT STANDARD |
17 Florida A & M University Law Review 203 (Spring, 2023) |
C1-2Table of Contents I. Wealth and Race are Significantly Intertwined Historically. 205 A. Historical Barriers to Wealth Used Race as A Basis for Exclusion. 205 B. Wealth Exclusion Affects Both Race and Housing. 209 II. The Fair Housing Act of 1968 intended to Prevent Discrimination Based on Group Characteristics. 212 A. Tropes: A Substitute for... |
2023 |
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Deborah N. Archer, Vincent M. Southerland, Jason D. Williamson |
BRIEF OF AMICUS CURIAE NATIONAL BLACK LAW STUDENTS ASSOCIATION IN SUPPORT OF RESPONDENTS |
4 North Carolina Civil Rights Law Review 87 (Fall, 2023) |
INTEREST OF AMICI CURIAE. 88 SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT. 88 ARGUMENT. 91 I. Race-Conscious Admissions Programs Benefit the Larger Educational Community and Society as a Whole. 91 II. Race-Conscious Admissions Programs Are Not Harmful to the Professional Aspirations or the Personal Well-Being of Black Law Students. 92 III. Race-Conscious Admissions In... |
2023 |
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