AuthorTitleCitationDocument TypeCase StatusSummaryYearRelevancy
Elizabeth C. Tippett ENSLAVED AGENTS: BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS NEGOTIATED BY SLAVES IN THE ANTEBELLUM SOUTH 63 Ariz. L. Rev. 923 (Winter 2021) [Arizona Law Review] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   This Article explores the law of agency as applied to enslaved workers in the Antebellum South between 1798 and 1863. In particular, I examine legal disputes involving the delegation of agency power to enslaved workers. Southern courts generally accepted that an enslaved worker could serve as business agent for his or her slaveholder, which often... 2021  
Kevin Woodson ENTRENCHED RACIAL HIERARCHY: EDUCATIONAL INEQUALITY FROM THE CRADLE TO THE LSAT 105 Minn. L. Rev. Headnotes 481 (Spring, 2021) [Minnesota Law Review Headnotes] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   For my contribution to this special issue of the Minnesota Law Review, I will attempt to situate the problem of black underrepresentation at Americas law schools within the broader context of racial hierarchy in American society. The former has generated an extensive body of legal scholarship and commentary, centering primarily on the racial impact... 2021  
Kevin Woodson ENTRENCHED RACIAL HIERARCHY: EDUCATIONAL INEQUALITY FROM THE CRADLE TO THE LSAT 47 Mitchell Hamline L. Rev. 224 (November, 2021) [Mitchell Hamline Law Review] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   For my contribution to this special issue of the Minnesota Law Review, I will attempt to situate the problem of black underrepresentation at America's law schools within the broader context of racial hierarchy in American society. The former has generated an extensive body of legal scholarship and commentary, centering primarily on the racial... 2021  
Philip White Jr., J.D. Exceptions to Jurisdictional Immunity of Foreign States and Their Property Under Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act of 1976 (28 U.S.C.A. § 1605(a)(2))-Commercial Activity Elsewhere with Direct Effect in United States Not Found Under Standard Adopted in Repu 63 A.L.R. Fed. 2d 249 (Originally published in 2012) (2021) [American Law Reports ALR Federal 2d] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The third clause of the commercial activity exception in the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act of 1976 (28 U.S.C.A. § 1605(a)(2)) provides that a foreign state will not enjoy sovereign immunity in federal or state courts where the action is based upon an act outside the U.S. territory in connection with the foreign state's commercial activity... 2021  
Jessica A. Shoemaker FEE SIMPLE FAILURES: RURAL LANDSCAPES AND RACE 119 Mich. L. Rev. 1695 (June, 2021) [Michigan Law Review] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Property law's roots are rural. America pursued an early agrarian vision that understood real property rights as instrumental to achieving a country of free, engaged citizens who cared for their communities and stewarded their physical place in it. But we have drifted far from this ideal. Today, American agriculture is industrialized, and rural... 2021  
Paul Butler FOREWORD TO THE REPUBLICATION OF AFFIRMATIVE ACTION AND THE CRIMINAL LAW 92 U. Colo. L. Rev. 1443 (Special Issue 2021) [University of Colorado Law Review] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Twenty-four years later, je ne regrette rien. I do not mean that I got everything exactly right, but I miss my youthful exuberance. I wonder, in the words of Birdman, What happened to that boy? Here is one of the passages that, introspect, seems most poignant: I argue that but for the fruits of slavery and entrenched racism, African Americans... 2021  
Eric K. Yamamoto , Susan K. Serrano FOREWORD TO THE REPUBLICATION OF RACIALIZING ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE 92 U. Colo. L. Rev. 1383 (Special Issue 2021) [University of Colorado Law Review] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Systemic racism! The burgeoning 2020 Black Lives Matter protests vaulted this formerly whispered phrase into mainstream public consciousness. Through news headlines, social media, educational classes, opinion essays, word of mouth, and more, America grappled with the enormity of racism as a form of oppression of people and communities, as... 2021  
Allan E. Korpela, LL.B. Fraud, misrepresentation, or deception as estopping reliance on statute of limitations 43 A.L.R.3d 429 (Originally published in 1972) (2021) [American Law Reports ALR3d] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   This annotation collects those cases which discuss generally the availability to the plaintiff of the doctrine of equitable estoppel to deprive the defendant of the defense of the statute of limitations where the primary ground advanced in support of estoppel is that plaintiff was induced by fraudulent conduct, misrepresentation, or deception, on... 2021  
Brianne Donovan FROM THE EXCEPTION TO THE RULE: A REALISTIC ANALYSIS AND APPROACH FOR ADVANCING BOARD DIVERSITY 24 Rich. Pub. Int. L. Rev. 115 (5/14/2021) [Richmond Public Interest Law Review] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   With companies increasingly promoting diversity and inclusion measures, how are they ensuring diversity and inclusion within their own leadership teams? The landscape for gender diversity within corporate boards is bleak and the landscape for racial diversity is worse. Throw in the intersection of race and gender and the picture becomes even... 2021  
Darryl Li GENRES OF UNIVERSALISM: READING RACE INTO INTERNATIONAL LAW, WITH HELP FROM SYLVIA WYNTER 67 UCLA L. Rev. 1686 (April, 2021) [UCLA Law Review] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Taking note of the relatively limited accounts of race in contemporary international legal doctrine, this Article posits a thought experiment: What would international legal theorizing look like not from the place of the metropole or the colony, but rather from the journey of the enslaved, from the barracoon to the hold of the slave ship to the... 2021  
Cristina Marcos GOP struggles to rein in nativism (4/19/2021) [The Hill] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   House GOP leaders are struggling to rein in the increasingly open nativism within their conference and attempting to deflect from the controversy by training their ire against Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.). 2021  
Joerika Stitt GUN VIOLENCE AND DE FACTO SEGREGATION: COULD ENVIRONMENTAL DISCRIMINATION BE FUELING CHICAGO'S SOARING GUN VIOLENCE? 11 Wake Forest J.L. & Pol'y 395 (2021) [Wake Forest Journal of Law and Policy] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Shirley Chambers is a Chicago resident who has experienced the unimaginable: her four children, three sons and one daughter, were all shot and killed in Chicago's Lawndale neighborhood. After her first three children were murdered, Ms. Chambers recalled feeling sadder for her last remaining son more than she felt for herself. She reported, I... 2021  
Troy J.H. Andrade HAWAI'I '78: COLLECTIVE MEMORY AND THE UNTOLD LEGAL HISTORY OF REPARATIVE ACTION FOR KNAKA MAOLI 24 U. Pa. J. L. & Soc. Change 85 (2021) [University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Abstract. Constructed from years of archival and legal research, and in-depth interviews, this Article unearths the story of Native Hawaiians who, tired of failed promises and hollow apologies, in 1978 capitalized on an indigenous cultural and political revival to change the law and secure reparative action. The Native Hawaiian community... 2021  
Todd Anthony Walker HEALING RACISM'S WOUNDS: ON RACIAL RECKONING & OBAMA'S "A PROMISED LAND" 6 Colum. Hum. Rts. L. Rev. Online 34 (11/11/2021) [Columbia Human Rights Law Review Online] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Legal controversies surrounding race and racism have persisted in America from its inception, but not without intervention. Supreme Court decisions in Dred Scott, Plessy and Brown trace the Court's jurisprudential evolution while, legislatively, the passage of the post-civil rights Amendments, and, more recently, The Civil Rights Act of 1964,... 2021  
Ndjuoh MehChu HELP ME TO FIND MY CHILDREN: A THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT CHALLENGE TO FAMILY SEPARATION 17 Stan. J. Civ. Rts. & Civ. Liberties 133 (February, 2021) [Stanford Journal of Civil Rights & Civil Liberties] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The Trump Administration's forced separation of migrant families at the U.S.-Mexico border is an international fault line in the global human rights framework. The scope, severity, and urgency of the issue speak clearly to the need for a diversity of strategies to protect migrant groups. With that in mind, this Article draws attention to a thus-far... 2021  
Jennifer M. Smith , Elliot O. Jackson HISTORICALLY BLACK COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES: A MODEL FOR AMERICAN EDUCATION 14 Fla. A & M U. L. Rev. 103 (Winter, 2021) [Florida A & M University Law Review] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The whole world opened to me when I learned to read. ~ Mary McLeod Bethune Hungry for freedom and knowledge, enslaved Blacks engaged in a massive general strike against slavery by transferring their labor from the Confederate planter to the Northern invader, and this decided the Civil War. In 1865, the North conquered the South, and slavery... 2021  
Abby Oakland HOLDING PEACEKEEPERS ACCOUNTABLE: HAITI AND CHOLERA 62 Va. J. Int'l L. 235 (Fall, 2021) [Virginia Journal of International Law] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Accountability for humanitarian actors is a challenging space in international law. Although the different bodies of law states have developed address various actors in various settings, gaps persist. A particularly challenging group to regulate, humanitarian actors often fall outside existing legal frameworks. Humanitarian actors do not fit... 2021  
Rachel D. Godsil, Sarah E. Waldeck HOME EQUITY: RETHINKING RACE AND FEDERAL HOUSING POLICY 98 Denv. L. Rev. 523 (Spring, 2021) [Denver Law Review] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Neighborhoods shape every element of our lives. Where we live determines economic opportunities; our exposure to police and pollution; and the availability of positive amenities for a healthy life. Home inequity--both financial and racial--is not accidental. Federal government programs have armed white people with agency to construct white spaces... 2021  
Jim Hilbert IMPROVING POLICE OFFICER ACCOUNTABILITY IN MINNESOTA: THREE PROPOSED LEGISLATIVE REFORMS 47 Mitchell Hamline L. Rev. 222 (February, 2021) [Mitchell Hamline Law Review] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   I. Introduction. 223 II. Minnesota's Past and Present: Racism and Police Abuse Followed by Studies and Inaction. 233 A. Minnesota History. 233 1. The Largest Mass Execution in the Country. 233 2. The Northernmost Lynching on Record. 235 B. Decades of Studies and Reports with the Same Conclusions (and the Same Inaction). 236 C. Past Signs of... 2021  
K. A. Drechsler Inadequacy of legal remedy as basis for equitable relief from levy of execution 171 A.L.R. 221 (Originally published in 1947) (2021) [American Law Reports ALR] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The reported case for this annotation is Baker v. Lloyd, 1947 OK 12, 198 Okla. 512, 179 P.2d 913, 171 A.L.R. 217 (1947). 2021  
Monica C. Bell , Katherine Beckett , Forrest Stuart INVESTING IN ALTERNATIVES: THREE LOGICS OF CRIMINAL SYSTEM REPLACEMENT 11 UC Irvine L. Rev. 1291 (August, 2021) [UC Irvine Law Review] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   What logics underlie the call to defund the police, and how do those logics matter in policy debate? In the wake of widespread protests after the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and other victims of police violence during the summer of 2020, the Black Lives Matter movement's call to defund the police captured the national imagination.... 2021  
Natalie Klein Iran and Its Encounters with the International Court of Justice 21 Melb. J. Int'l L. 620 (2021) [Melbourne Journal of International Law] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Iran has been an active middle power that has engaged with the International Court of Justice in cases involving Iran's adversaries at critical points in its history. This engagement has spanned a period of almost 70 years and encompassed Iran's 1953 coup d'état, the 1978 Iranian Revolution, the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War and current issues involving... 2021  
Mikah K. Thompson JUST ANOTHER FAST GIRL: EXPLORING SLAVERY'S CONTINUED IMPACT ON THE LOSS OF BLACK GIRLHOOD 44 Harv. J. L. & Gender 57 (Winter, 2021) [Harvard Journal of Law & Gender] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Introduction. 58 I. The Stereotypic Connection between Blackness and Promiscuity. 59 A. Black Hypersexuality as a Justification for Sexual Violence During Slavery. 60 B. The Persistence of Stereotypes Concerning Black Sexuality in Post-Civil War America. 64 C. Modern-Day Perceptions of Black Sexuality. 66 D. Black Sexuality and the Law of Statutory... 2021  
David V Williams Justiciability and Tikanga: Towards "Soft" Legal Constitutionalism 29 NZULR 649 (December, 2021) [New Zealand Universities Law Review] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   This article notes various responses to the question of when (if at all) courts should provide legal remedies to parties not satisfied with outcomes reached by other branches of government in highly contested political matters. The author's focus is on Treaty of Waitangi redress settlements concluded by political negotiations between iwi and the... 2021  
Kevin E. Davis LEGAL RESPONSES TO BLACK SUBORDINATION, GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES 134 Harv. L. Rev. F. 359 (6/1/2021) [Harvard Law Review Forum] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   [I]n order to win and bring as many people with us along the way, we must move beyond the narrow nationalism that is all too prevalent in Black communities. --Black Lives Matter Around the world, people of African descent (Afro-descendants)--to use one of the broadest possible definitions of Blackness--are overrepresented among the poor and... 2021  
  LETTER FROM THE EDITOR 28 Geo. J. on Poverty L. & Pol'y I (Winter, 2021) [Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy published Volume 28 in a period of tremendous grief, political chaos, and general uncertainty. COVID-19 has highlighted the prevalence of extreme poverty and its intersection with every aspect of life. In the past year the need for a civil right to counsel in housing court and beyond and the... 2021  
Todd Carney LOOKING TO INTERNATIONAL LAW TO SOLVE HUMAN RIGHTS ISSUES IN SPORTS 28 Willamette J. Int'l L. & Disp. Resol. 65 (2021) [Willamette Journal of International Law and Dispute Resolution] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   This paper looks at how international human rights issues have related to sports. The paper first zeros in on the two most prominent examples, the Olympics and the World Cup. The paper first looks at how the IOC and FIFA both function as international governance organizations, and how they structurally fail to deal with international human rights.... 2021  
James S. Liebman , Kayla C. Butler , Ian Buksunski MINE THE GAP: USING RACIAL DISPARITIES TO EXPOSE AND ERADICATE RACISM 30 S. Cal. Rev. L. & Soc. Just. 1 (Winter, 2021) [Southern California Review of Law & Social Justice] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   For decades, lawyers and legal scholars have disagreed over how much resource redistribution to expect from federal courts and Congress in satisfaction of the Fourteenth Amendment's promise of equal protection. Of particular importance to this debate and to the nation given its kaleidoscopic history of inequality, is the question of racial... 2021  
Megan Ming Francis, John Fabian Witt MOVEMENT CAPTURE OR MOVEMENT STRATEGY? A CRITICAL RACE HISTORY EXCHANGE ON THE BEGINNINGS OF BROWN v. BOARD 31 Yale J.L. & Human. 520 (Winter, 2021) [Yale Journal of Law & the Humanities] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   In 2019, Megan Ming Francis published a path-breaking article challenging the conventional wisdom in the field on a core piece of civil rights history: the role of a philanthropic foundation called the American Fund for Public Service, also known as the Garland Fund, in working alongside the NAACP to produce the organization's famous litigation... 2021  
Amna A. Akbar, Sameer M. Ashar, Jocelyn Simonson MOVEMENT LAW 73 Stan. L. Rev. 821 (April, 2021) [Stanford Law Review] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Abstract. In this Article we make the case for movement law, an approach to legal scholarship grounded in solidarity, accountability, and engagement with grassroots organizing and left social movements. In contrast to law and social movements--a field that studies the relationship between lawyers, legal process, and social change--movement law... 2021  
Jennifer M. Chacón MOVING FORWARD 50 Sw. L. Rev. 208 (2021) [Southwestern Law Review] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   We live in a world of permeable borders. Money, goods, information, and the global elite move across borders almost effortlessly. Corporate entities straddle borders, and governmental policies have transnational effect. But not everyone moves easily across borders. In the United States, federal laws permit the expulsion and the permanent exclusion... 2021  
Aris Folley National Black Farmers Association calls for Graham to apologize over 'racist' comments (3/15/2021) [The Hill] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   John Boyd Jr., the president of the National Black Farmers Association, called on Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) to apologize for comments he made recently taking aim at a provision in the $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief bill that seeks to help socially disadvantaged Black farmers and farmers of color. 2021  
Damian A. Gonzalez-Salzberg NON-PECUNIARY DAMAGE UNDER THE AMERICAN CONVENTION ON HUMAN RIGHTS: AN EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS OF 30 YEARS OF CASE LAW 34 Harv. Hum. Rts. J. 81 (Spring, 2021) [Harvard Human Rights Journal] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   An international law on damages for human rights violations is rapidly emerging. Within this developing law, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights has become the main source of reference for the determination of non-pecuniary damage. This Article undertakes an empirical analysis of the first thirty years of this court's case law, assessing the... 2021  
Etienne C. Toussaint OF AMERICAN FRAGILITY: PUBLIC RITUALS, HUMAN RIGHTS, AND THE END OF INVISIBLE MAN 52 Colum. Hum. Rts. L. Rev. 826 (Winter, 2021) [Columbia Human Rights Law Review] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the fragility of American democracy in at least two important ways. First, the coronavirus has ravaged Black communities across the United States, unmasking decades of inequitable laws and public policies that have rendered Black lives socially and economically isolated from adequate health care services,... 2021  
Lario Albarrán OWNING FRIDA KAHLO 35 Emory Int'l L. Rev. 627 (2021) [Emory International Law Review] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   --Hayden Herrera Frida Kahlo is undoubtedly one of the most recognizable names in art history. Her work epitomizes Mexican national and indigenous traditions and is regarded as an uncompromising depiction of the female experience and form. But her fame go 2021  
Christian Sundquist PANDEMIC POLICING 37 Ga. St. U. L. Rev. 1339 (Summer, 2021) [Georgia State University Law Review] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   C1-2CONTENTS Introduction. 1340 I. The Cycle of Pandemic Racism. 1348 A. Economic Crises. 1348 B. Immigration Crises. 1349 C. Crime Crises. 1350 II. Pandemic Policing. 1353 Conclusion. 1359 2021  
Angela C. Carmella PANDEMIC, PROTEST, AND COMMEMORATION: SACRED CIVIC EXPRESSION IN TIMES OF NATIONAL GRIEF 22 Rutgers J. L. & Religion 20 (2021) [Rutgers Journal of Law & Religion] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   At the service of remembrance on the eve of his inauguration, President Biden said, To heal, we must remember. Our public mourning in times like these, filled with staggering numbers of pandemic deaths and shocking numbers of racial killings, indeed involves remembering the many lives lost. We are in the midst of the cultural task of... 2021  
Jocelyn Simonson POLICE REFORM THROUGH A POWER LENS 130 Yale L.J. 778 (February, 2021) [Yale Law Journal] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   abstract. Scholars and reformers have in recent years begun to imagine new and different configurations for how the state can design policing institutions. These conversations have increased in volume and urgency in response to the 2020 national uprising against police violence, when radical demands born within social movements have gained... 2021  
Katie Raitz PUBLIC HEALTH AND RACIAL INEQUALITY: WHY THE OPPORTUNITY ZONE PROGRAM FAILS LOW-INCOME COMMUNITIES AND COSTS LIVES 12 UC Irvine L. Rev. 315 (November, 2021) [UC Irvine Law Review] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The rich man's dog gets more in the way of vaccination, medicine and medical care than do the workers upon whom the rich man's wealth is built. Poor health outcomes are linked to long-standing wealth disparities for people of color in the United States. Wealth inequality has gotten worse over the past decades, despite attempts to improve it. The... 2021  
Karen Engle , Lucas Lixinski QUILOMBO LAND RIGHTS, BRAZILIAN CONSTITUTIONALISM, AND RACIAL CAPITALISM 54 Vand. J. Transnat'l L. 831 (October, 2021) [Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The 1988 Brazilian Constitution, the first in a wave of new democratic and multicultural constitutions in Latin America, contains a transitory provision guaranteeing collective land rights to quilombo communities. These communities are composed of quilombolas, primarily descendants of formerly enslaved Africans, many of whom had escaped slavery. A... 2021  
Stewart Chang , Frank Rudy Cooper , Addie C. Rolnick RACE AND GENDER AND POLICING 21 Nev. L.J. 885 (Spring, 2021) [Nevada Law Journal] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 885 I. Unrest and the Question of Looting. 891 II. The Black Perspective on Looting. 898 III. Policing, Property, and White Patriarchy. 904 A. Christian Cooper: White Caller Crime. 905 B. Jannie Ligons: The Sexual Non-Privilege of Black Women. 910 C. Sandra Bland and Elijah Taylor: Suspicion, Policing, and the... 2021  
Mike Lillis Race debate grips Congress (4/14/2021) [The Hill] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The barbed debate over racial justice is exploding this week on Capitol Hill, as Democrats in both chambers are charging ahead with a host of proposals to empower minorities amid the national clash over police bias, brutality and the future of law enforcement. 2021  
Eleanor Brown, June Carbone RACE, PROPERTY, AND CITIZENSHIP 116 Nw. U. L. Rev. Online 120 (7/24/2021) [Northwestern University Law Review Online] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Abstract--The racial wealth gap is stunning. The net worth of an average White family is nearly ten times greater than that of an African-American family. A 2017 Prosperity Now report finds that for African-Americans, today's economy is an extractive one; if existing trends continue, the median African-American family will have a net worth of zero... 2021  
William Y. Chin RACIAL EQUALITY AND INEQUALITY IN AMERICA AND LESSONS FROM OTHER COUNTRIES 27 Cardozo J. Equal Rts. & Soc. Just. 473 (Spring, 2021) [Cardozo Journal of Equal Rights & Social Justice] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 474 II. Racial Equality Lessons from other Countries. 475 A. Abolish Law Enforcement's use of Neck Restraints. 476 B. Add Day Fines to the Range of Sanctions. 479 C. Promote and Reward Reading by Prisoners. 480 D. Offer a National Apology for Subjugating African Americans. 483 E. Assist Workers of Color by... 2021  
Yuvraj Joshi RACIAL TRANSITION 98 Wash. U. L. Rev. 1181 (2021) [Washington University Law Review] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The United States is a nation in transition, struggling to surmount its racist past. This transitional imperative underpins American race jurisprudence, yet the transitional bases of decisions are rarely acknowledged and sometimes even denied. This Article uncovers two main ways that the Supreme Court has sought racial transition. While Civil... 2021  
Erika George , Jena Martin , Tara Van Ho RECKONING: A DIALOGUE ABOUT RACISM, ANTIRACISTS, AND BUSINESS & HUMAN RIGHTS 30 Wash. Int'l L.J. 171 (March, 2021) [Washington International Law Journal] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Abstract: Video of George Floyd's death sparked global demonstrations and prompted individuals, communities and institutions to grapple with their own roles in embedding and perpetuating racist structures. The raison d'être of Business and Human Rights (BHR) is to tackle structural corporate impediments to the universal realization of human rights.... 2021  
Lee Anne Fennell REMIXING RESOURCES 38 Yale J. on Reg. 589 (Winter, 2021) [Yale Journal on Regulation] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   This Essay argues for an approach to resource access that connects rather than separates questions of efficiency and distribution. It proceeds from the premise that putting together the most valuable combinations of resources-- including human capital--is of central and increasing normative importance. Structuring law to facilitate these... 2021  
B. B. B. Replevin for an undivided share in or undivided quantity of a larger mass 26 A.L.R. 1015 (Originally published in 1923) (2021) [American Law Reports ALR] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The reported case for this annotation is Logan v. Cross, 101 Or. 85, 198 P. 1097, 26 A.L.R. 1009 (1921). 2021  
Cynthia Soohoo REPRODUCTIVE JUSTICE AND TRANSFORMATIVE CONSTITUTIONALISM 42 Cardozo L. Rev. 819 (June, 2021) [Cardozo Law Review] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 820 I. Reproductive Justice. 823 A. Universal Demands, Different Forms of Oppression. 823 B. Tensions between Reproductive Rights and Reproductive Justice. 825 II. History of Reproductive Oppression in the United States. 826 A. Setting the Stage: The Founding. 826 B. Founding to the Civil War: Private... 2021  
Shannon Prince RESPONSE: A GOOD AND VIRTUOUS NATURE MAY RECOIL: ON CONSORTING WITH EVIL TO DO GOOD 34 Geo. J. Legal Ethics 695 (Summer, 2021) [Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics] Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   David Luban asks how ethical people in government should respond when an unethical regime comes to power, noting that Hannah Arendt argued that to stay in such a regime supports it. I take the position that attempting to distinguish between ethical and unethical regimes can be problematic because even regimes deemed moral commonly commit evil.... 2021  
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