| Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year | Key Terms |
| Trevor Funseth |
INDIAN CASINOS UNDER THE BIG SKY: WHY TRIBES IN OTHER STATES HAVE BEEN MORE SUCCESSFUL WITH GAMING AND THE PATH FORWARD FOR MONTANA'S TRIBES |
86 Montana Law Review 423 (Summer, 2025) |
The most successful method of economic development for many Indian tribes in the United States has been gaming. Tribes across the country have risen out of poverty through their casino operations and have been able to use the profits to diversify their investments and improve tribal infrastructure, education, and social programs. The seven Indian... |
2025 |
|
| Jacob Schuman |
INDIAN COUNTRY SUPERVISION |
100 New York University Law Review 1148 (October, 2025) |
In 2023, the Department of Justice published its first-ever report on demographic disparities in revocations of community supervision, a critical yet under-studied part of the federal criminal justice system. The report revealed extreme and systematic disparities affecting American Indian defendants. Compared to other groups, American Indians were... |
2025 |
|
| Sidney Paulina Williams |
INDIAN WATER RIGHTS SETTLEMENTS AND THE ANIMAS-LA PLATA PROJECT: A SELF-FULFILLING PROPHECY OF DEPENDENCY |
86 Montana Law Review 471 (Summer, 2025) |
I. Introduction. 472 II. The Ute Indians: A History of Disturbances. 473 A. Mutable Relations and Policies of Encroachment. 474 B. Reservation Boundaries: Isolation, Incorporation, and Termination. 477 C. Tribal Integration: Conditional Terms of Dependency. 479 D. Tribal Capacity and Resource Management. 481 III. The Language of the Law:... |
2025 |
|
| Carla D. Pratt |
INDIANNESS AS PROPERTY |
105 Boston University Law Review 311 (February, 2025) |
This Article expands upon the seminal work by Cheryl Harris entitled Whiteness as Property by exploring the intersection of race and property through Indianness. Indianness has been constructed as a form of property conferring rights and privileges to its holders which this Article examines through the inertial relationship between race and legal... |
2025 |
|
| Aila Hoss |
INDIGENEITY, DATA GENOCIDE, AND PUBLIC HEALTH |
110 Iowa Law Review 1139 (March, 2025) |
ABSTRACT: Public health datasets will often tell us nothing about Indigenous people. This type of data suppression has been described as data genocide and data terrorism, because it demonstrates the effort to erase Indigenous people. Even when data is available, Tribes and their partners are regularly denied access to public health data from other... |
2025 |
|
| Niv Ovadia, Elisa Rivas |
INDIGENOUS CHILDREN AND ENVIRONMENTAL RACISM |
40-FALL Natural Resources & Environment 28 (Fall, 2025) |
Across the United States, Indigenous children face a hidden but devastating threat: environmental racism. Often defined as the disproportionate exposure of marginalized communities to pollution and environmental hazards, environmental racism results from policies that neglect or actively harm these populations. From undrinkable water to toxic land,... |
2025 |
|
| Bill Piatt, Karagan Carson, Meghan Monahan, Makayla Perez |
INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES SUFFER MULTI-GENERATIONAL TRAUMA ("SUSTO") FROM THE TRAFFICKING AND SLAVERY OF NATIVE WOMEN AND CHILDREN |
27 Scholar: St. Mary's Law Review on Race and Social Justice 1 (2025) |
L1-2Introduction . R32. I. Native Trafficking and Slavery Preceded European Arrivals. 2 II. European Enslavement and the Participation of Natives. 8 III. Contemporary Examination of the Trauma Suffered by Child Victims. 13 A. Types of Trauma, Effects, and Repeat Victimization. 15 B. Prevalence of Child Trafficking in the United States and Globally.... |
2025 |
|
| Kristen A. Carpenter |
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES IN INTERNATIONAL (TREATY) DIPLOMACY |
71 UCLA Law Review 1622 (July, 2025) |
International diplomacy has traditionally been considered the exclusive prerogative of states, who engage with each other on matters of peace, conflict, and trade with an eye to national interests and global wellbeing. This is one of a series of works considering Indigenous Diplomacy--a practice in which Indigenous Peoples engage with states, as... |
2025 |
|
| Diane Francis, Wenona T. Singel, Wayne Garnons-Williams |
INDIGENOUS RECONCILIATION AND DEVELOPMENT |
49 Canada-United States Law Journal 80 (2025) |
Mr. STEPHEN PETRAS: Alright, everyone. We're about to start our afternoon program with our first panel of the afternoon, which is Indigenous Reconciliation and Development. I'm going to introduce our moderator, Diane Francis, she'll introduce her panelists, and we'll begin the panel discussion. We're very happy to have Diane Francis with us. She's... |
2025 |
|
| Angela R. Riley |
INDIGENOUS RIGHTS TO CULTURE: WHAT'S NEXT? |
77 Stanford Law Review Online 161 (June, 2025) |
For more than two centuries, the United States has maintained--in law and in practice--a colonial system designed to destroy Indigenous peoples' culture. My work has explored this phenomenon from a property lens, explaining how attacks on Indigenous cultures traverse and encompass all categories of property, including real, tangible, and... |
2025 |
|
| Sultana Afrin Nipa |
INDIGENOUS THEORIES OF INTERNATIONAL LAW: REIMAGINING THE LEGAL FRAMEWORKS THROUGH A DECOLONIAL LENS |
119 American Society of International Law Proceedings 238 (April 16-April 18, 2025) |
International law serves as a significant instrument for Indigenous peoples to assert their rights, culture, and political objectives, particularly considering conflicting interests and limited influence within nation-states. An Indigenous theory of international law underscores the importance of Indigenous peoples' active participation in shaping... |
2025 |
|
| Freya Doughty-Wagner |
INTERNATIONAL LAW AND THE CHILD, 100 YEARS LATER: A DICHOTOMOUS HISTORY OF CHILDREN'S RIGHTS, PROTECTIONS, AND FREEDOMS |
26 Oregon Review of International Law 73 (2025) |
Abstract. 74 Introduction. 75 I. The Nineteenth Century--Protection and Nurturance. 76 II. Rights: Positive, Negative, Theoretical?. 83 III. The Internationalist Lite Era--Global Humanitarianism Through a U.S. Lens (1919-1959). 88 A. The Child Welfare Committee. 88 B. Declaration on the Rights of the Child 1924. 90 C. UNICEF. 93 D. Universal... |
2025 |
|
| Jonathan B. Wiener , Charles (Chase) Hamilton |
INTERPLANETARY RISK REGULATION |
26 Chicago Journal of International Law 41 (Summer, 2025) |
Space exploration promises new opportunities but also new risks. After centuries of national settlements and international conflicts on Earth, and the Cold War era of two great power states racing to the Moon, today we see a rapidly proliferating arena of actors, both governmental and non-governmental, undertaking bold new ventures off-Earth while... |
2025 |
|
| Evan Gamble |
INTO THE JURISDICTIONVERSE: HOW TANGLED JURISDICTIONAL LINES AROUND INDIAN COUNTRY THWART ATTEMPTS TO END THE CRISIS OF MISSING AND MURDERED INDIGENOUS WOMEN |
49 American Indian Law Review 57 (2025) |
In the Tribal Law and Order Act of 2010, Congress found that sexual violence against American Indian and Alaska Native women has reached epidemic proportions. Fourteen years later, the epidemic still rages on. The stated purpose of the Tribal Law and Order Act was to clarify who is responsible for crimes committed in Indian country.... |
2025 |
|
| Steven Ferrey |
INTO THE LEGAL "TWILIGHT ZONE": STATE TENTH AMENDMENT JURISDICTION DISPLACING CLIMATE SUPREMACY |
28 Lewis & Clark Law Review 715 (2025) |
The Supremacy Clause of the Constitution notwithstanding, western states have utilized their reserved Tenth Amendment Constitutional authority, upheld by federal circuit courts, arbitrarily to block their adjacent states' sustainable infrastructure to address climate change. The Biden Administration set in motion a rapid electrification of the... |
2025 |
|
| Gaetan Cliquennois , Sonja Snacken , Jonathan Simon |
INTRODUCTION |
50 Law and Social Inquiry 941 (November, 2025) |
(Received 25 July 2025; revised 25 July 2025; accepted 25 July 2025) This symposium firmly covers the impacts of human rights law on penal, prison, (police) custodial, immigration, and psychiatric policies in diverse jurisdictions, including Russia, Australia, Japan, Israel, the United States, and Europe, that have been understudied and neglected... |
2025 |
|
| Leslie A. Hagen, Assistant Director, Office of Legal Education |
INTRODUCTION |
73 Department of Justice Journal of Federal Law and Practice 1 (August, 2025) |
While American Indians and Alaska Natives are citizens of the United States, they also maintain distinct citizenships, cultural values, traditions, beliefs, and identities. Understand, also, that these values, traditions, and beliefs provide for a different mode of thought and communication that may be unfamiliar to non-Indians. Indian Tribes have... |
2025 |
|
| Mario L. Barnes , Osagie K. Obasogie |
INTRODUCTION TO THE SPECIAL ISSUE ON EMPIRICAL METHODS AND CRITICAL RACE THEORY |
59 Law and Society Review 231 (June, 2025) |
(Received 31 March 2025; accepted 31 March 2025) Keywords: empirical; methods; critical; race; theory Critical Race Theory (CRT) can be understood as an attempt to examine how race and racism are central rather than peripheral to law and legal thinking. Rather than viewing the long and ongoing story of race in American law as a series of... |
2025 |
|
| Yucong Wang |
INVESTMENT v. CULTURAL DIVERSITY: RECONCILING THE PROTECTION OF FOREIGN INVESTMENTS WITH HERITAGE PRESERVATION AND INDIGENOUS RIGHTS |
57 George Washington International Law Review 333 (2025) |
Arbitrators of an emerging class of international investment disputes face the bedeviling problem of determining whether it is permissible for host states to regulate to protect cultural diversity--including heritage sites and Indigenous rights--in circumstances where the measures cause unintentional devaluation of foreign investments. Their task... |
2025 |
|
| Chief Justice Gregory D. Smith |
IS SAYING "I'M SORRY" ENOUGH? A PRIMER ON HOW ATTORNEYS & JUDGES CAN ACT JUSTLY IN TRIBAL DISPUTES |
30 Texas Journal on Civil Liberties & Civil Rights 196 (Spring, 2025) |
Introduction. 196 I. Honor Over Politics. 198 II. Culture, Not Caricature. 201 III. Listen, Don't Lecture. 205 IV. Use the Right Tools. 209 Conclusion. 212 |
2025 |
|
| Jacob Gregory |
IS THE END FINALLY NEAR FOR THE INFAMOUS INSULAR CASES? |
17 John Marshall Law Journal 255 (2024-2025) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction: In a Post-Dobbs World, Should The Insular Cases Finally Be Overturned?. 257 I. The Insular Cases In Context: A Historical Account and Overview of the Aftermath. 260 A. The Court, in Balzac, held that residents of unincorporated territories have no Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial. 261 B. Due to the... |
2025 |
|
| Sígrid Vendrell-Polanco |
ISLANDS OF INEQUALITY: THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT'S REACH AFTER VAELLO MADERO |
102 Denver Law Review 939 (Summer, 2025) |
The Supreme Court's 2022 decision in United States v. Vaello Madero has reignited discussions about the application of the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause to residents of U.S. territories. This Article examines how the ruling, which upheld the exclusion of Puerto Rico residents from the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program,... |
2025 |
|
| Anthony M. Ciolli |
IVORY TOWER COLONIALISM |
34 Boston University Public Interest Law Journal 41 (Winter, 2025) |
Introduction. 42 I. The Real-World Damage to the Territories Caused by Academia. 42 II. Borderlands Constitutionalism: Denying All Constitutional Rights to All U.S. Territories. 46 III. Borderlands Constitutionalism: Marginalizing the Indigenous People of the Territories. 50 Conclusion. 56 |
2025 |
|
| Gerry Simpson, London School of Economics |
JUDGEMENT AT TOKYO: WORLD WAR II ON TRIAL AND THE MAKING OF MODERN ASIA. BY GARY BASS. NEW YORK, NY: ALFRED A. KNOPF, 2024. PP. 793. INDEX |
119 American Journal of International Law 605 (July, 2025) |
We all look forward to the day when law rather than force will be the arbiter of international relations (President Truman, 1945) (p. 114). I finished writing this review just a few days after Volodymyr Zelensky's chaotic visit to the Oval Office in late February 2025. Of course, for many reasons, this media event exercised a car crash... |
2025 |
|
| Sandra Guerra Thompson , Samantha Medlin |
JUSTICE GINSBURG'S CRIMINAL JUSTICE LEGACY: FAIR TRIBUNALS, FAIR PUNISHMENT |
115 Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 317 (Spring, 2025) |
Scholars have written much about Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's legacy in many areas of law, but her criminal justice legacy has yet to be fully articulated, likely because she penned few important opinions in this field. This article argues that Justice Ginsburg had an enormous impact across a large area of criminal justice cases... |
2025 |
|
| Chava Spivak-Birndorf , Matt Timko |
KEEPING UP WITH NEW LEGAL TITLES |
117 Law Library Journal 435 (2025) |
¶1 The arc of a law librarian's career lends itself to mastering necessary leadership skills along a continuum. In the early days of a law library career, a new law librarian is inundated with information about the norms of the workplace and the knowledge required to perform individual roles, which often includes professional performance, teaching,... |
2025 |
|
| Chava Spivak-Birndorf , Matt Timko |
KEEPING UP WITH NEW LEGAL TITLES |
117 Law Library Journal 435 (2025) |
¶1 The arc of a law librarian's career lends itself to mastering necessary leadership skills along a continuum. In the early days of a law library career, a new law librarian is inundated with information about the norms of the workplace and the knowledge required to perform individual roles, which often includes professional performance, teaching,... |
2025 |
|
| Sarah J. Adams |
LAND LAW LOCALISM AND THE CLIMATE RESILIENCE PARADOX |
36 Stanford Law and Policy Review 47 (July, 2025) |
This article and its companion, Federal Flood Policy & Maladaptation: A Story of Collective Forgetting, 34 S. Cal. J. Interdisciplinary L. (in print 2025), confront foundational assumptions about land use governance and community resilience, focusing on potential legal reforms that center justice, support community engagement and activism, and... |
2025 |
|
| Kevin K. Washburn |
LANDBACK AS FEDERAL POLICY |
71 UCLA Law Review 1904 (July, 2025) |
Demands for the return of land to tribal nations have become much louder and more compelling in recent years. While landback has been part of federal policy for nearly a century, lawmakers and presidents from both parties have embraced landback initiatives more firmly in the last half century. But the quantity of lands returned is almost... |
2025 |
|
| Graham Dutfield |
LANDSCAPE AND LAW: TERRITORIALITY AND RIGHTS IN KNOWLEDGE |
66 Harvard International Law Journal 155 (Summer, 2025) |
Much of the debate on the protection of Indigenous peoples' knowledge is highly reductive, focusing on intellectual property rights. This means that much is left out of the conversation that might ensure that legal and policy responses to the lack of protection are realistic, feasible, and in line with Indigenous peoples' own perspectives. One of... |
2025 |
|
| Scott M. Brown , Daniel J. Hall |
LANGUAGE, LAW, AND WEALTH DESTRUCTION IN PUERTO RICO |
58 Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law 1145 (November, 2025) |
This Article examines how Puerto Rico's monolingual Spanish legal regime, rooted in colonial-era civil law and reinforced by nationalist language policies, creates structural barriers that weaken economic integration with the United States. The island's symbolic legal autonomy has produced five entrenched institutional monopolies--in inheritance... |
2025 |
|
| Shaunak M. Puri |
LAW OF PROTEST |
125 Columbia Law Review 1017 (June, 2025) |
To protest against injustice is the foundation of all our American democracy. -- Justice Thurgood Marshall. Protests have long been part of the social and political fabric of the United States. From the colonial era to the present day, protest movements have helped shape the nation's trajectory. Protest is not just an act of dissent but an... |
2025 |
|
| Kyra Easton |
LEGAL OBSTACLES TO SEATING A CHEROKEE DELEGATE IN CONGRESS |
65 South Texas Law Review 23 (Fall, 2025) |
I. Introduction. 23 II. The Treaty of New Echota. 25 A. History. 25 B. Treaty Rights of Other Tribes. 26 III. Legal Challenges. 28 A. Abrogation. 28 B. Execution. 31 C. Equal Protection. 34 1. Non-Tribal Voters. 34 2. Non-Cherokee Tribe Members. 40 3. Justiciability. 43 4. Liability. 45 IV. Effects. 46 A. The Ratcheting Problem. 46 B. Impact on... |
2025 |
|
| Morgan O. Schaack |
LEVERAGING THE FEDERAL TRUST RESPONSIBILITY TO SAFEGUARD NET NEUTRALITY ON TRIBAL LANDS |
92 University of Chicago Law Review 1489 (September, 2025) |
The internet plays a crucial role in modern life, but equal access to it is not guaranteed. This inequality is only starker since the recent overruling of the Chevron doctrine that afforded agencies deference in their interpretation of statutes and the second Trump administration's hostility toward net neutrality--a policy that prevents internet... |
2025 |
|
| Katharine Cooney , Katherine Mims Crocker |
LOCAL GOVERNMENT STANDING AS STATE STANDING |
2025 Wisconsin Law Review 1255 (2025) |
It is increasingly common, and controversial, for local governments to bring lawsuits as plaintiffs in federal court. Many questions about this practice raise matters that sound in policy. But some, including the issue of standing to sue, also raise issues of constitutional law. How local governments fit into standing rules should reflect how they... |
2025 |
|
| John J. Vecchione |
LOOKING AHEAD: OCTOBER TERM 2025 |
2025 Cato Supreme Court Review 233 (2024-2025) |
It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future, a Yankee skipper informed us. And more apt for this journal, the greatest lawyer of the ancient world relates Vetus autem illud Catonis admodum scitum est, qui mirari se aiebat quod non rideret haruspex haruspicem cum vidisset. And if we to are follow the elder Cato's admonition, all... |
2025 |
|
| Jennifer M. Chacón |
LOVING'S BORDERS |
113 California Law Review 1075 (June, 2025) |
In a term filled with high-profile cases, Department of State v. Muñoz did not receive high-profile treatment. But the case was a critically important successor to Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization. In Muñoz, the Court continued efforts, launched in Dobbs, to shrink the protective force of the Due Process Clause. Even more significantly,... |
2025 |
|
| Pratheepan Gulasekaram |
LOYALTY DISARMAMENT AND THE UNDOCUMENTED |
125 Columbia Law Review Forum 29 (########) |
Since the Supreme Court's District of Columbia v. Heller decision in 2008, lower federal courts have wrestled with Second Amendment claims raised by categories of people excluded from gun possession. Among those cases, several have been brought by noncitizens challenging their prosecutions under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(5), the federal criminal ban on... |
2025 |
|
| Ruth L. Okediji |
MAKING ROOM AT THE TABLE: THEORETICAL FOUNDATIONS AND PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS OF THE WIPO TREATY ON INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, GENETIC RESOURCES AND ASSOCIATED TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE |
66 Harvard International Law Journal 1 (Summer, 2025) |
Our work here at the IGC was not ideal, but it is iconic. It was not perfect, but it is pragmatic. It is not all we should have done, but we did all that we could do. -- Ruth L. Okediji, 2024 This Article examines the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) Treaty on Intellectual Property, Genetic Resources and Associated Traditional... |
2025 |
|
| David C. Scott |
MAKING SPACE FOR SACRED LANDS: FROM THE HARSH GLARE OF LYNG TO APACHE STRONGHOLD |
21 Stanford Journal of Civil Rights & Civil Liberties 194 (August, 2025) |
Federal courts have routinely held--under the Free Exercise Clause and Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA)--that government actors operating on government-owned land may desecrate, destroy, modify, or restrict access to landmarks that are sacred to Native American tribes, even if doing so would virtually destroy the tribes' ability to... |
2025 |
|
| Elizabeth Anne Henderson |
MAN ON MARS: HOW CAN INTERNATIONAL SPACE LAW LIMIT THE ENVIRONMENTAL CONSEQUENCES OF THE COMING RUSH FOR RESOURCES IN SPACE? |
46 Michigan Journal of International Law 463 (2025) |
The body of international law governing space has stood at a standstill for decades. The five central treaties regulating this area of law are not only vague, but they have also become a hindrance to the global community's ability to address the rapidly intensifying second space race. The treaties do not adequately state who space belongs to, who... |
2025 |
|
| Lauren Eber, Lauren Krauskopf, Taylor Ryan-Nedd, Madison Orlofski, Jenny Linares, Anna Brule |
MARRIAGE AND DIVORCE |
26 Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law 755 (Annual Review 2025) |
I. Introduction. 755 II. Same-Sex Marriage. 756 A. Background. 756 B. The Obergefell Holding. 757 C. Implementation and Enforcement Challenges Since Obergefell. 759 III. State Regulation of Mrriage. 761 A. Jurisdiction and Recognition. 761 B. Rights Resulting from Formation. 764 C. Plural Marriage. 771 D. Covenant Marriage. 772 E. Status of Civil... |
2025 |
|
| Katrin Kuhlmann |
MICRO INTERNATIONAL LAW |
61 Stanford Journal of International Law 1 (Winter, 2025) |
International law has long been viewed as the domain of countries and capitals, not fields or factories, but this overly top-down perspective misses a critical and under-studied dimension. Underneath the macro level of international agreements and standardized legal approaches and norms, international law is much more nuanced, with multiple sources... |
2025 |
|
| Jeena Patel |
MOVING FORWARD FROM BRACKEEN AND SOLUTIONS FOR THE GREATER EFFICACY OF THE INDIAN CHILD WELFARE ACT |
110 Cornell Law Review 1339 (December, 2025) |
Introduction. 1340 I. The Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 (ICWA) and its Progeny. 1341 II. Historical Context of ICWA. 1345 III. ICWA Decision and its Implications. 1347 IV. Current Enforcement of ICWA and its Efficacy. 1349 A. Biases Against Indian Families Remain Pervasive. 1351 V. Solutions for Greater Efficacy of ICWA in Preventing the Removal... |
2025 |
|
| William D. Weightman |
MUNICIPALITIES AND THE BANKING FRANCHISE |
77 Stanford Law Review 1629 (June, 2025) |
Abstract. The 2008 financial crisis spurred calls to create a financial system that is more responsive to social needs. Subsequently, scholarly and legislative efforts to develop a more democratic and accountable financial system have focused on public options: postal banking, bank accounts with the Federal Reserve, and a national investment... |
2025 |
|
| Matthew L.M. Fletcher |
NANABOOZHOO DIED FOR YOUR SINS |
123 Michigan Law Review 1273 (April, 2025) |
Custer Died for Your Sins: An Indian Manifesto. By Vine Deloria, Jr. New York: The Macmillan Company. 1969. Pp. 279. $5.95. For Floyd Westerman, whom we met that one time in Albuquerque and whose album hung from the wall at Victor Kishigo's old place. Two decades after Vine Deloria Jr.'s death, Nanaboozhoo read Custer Died for Your Sins: An Indian... |
2025 |
|
| Kristine Huskey, Hillary Wandler, in Collaboration with Jacquelyn Francisco, Lindsey Kirchhoff |
NATIVE AMERICAN VETERANS: ACKNOWLEDGING THEIR SERVICE, RECOGNIZING THEIR NEEDS, AND LEARNING FROM THEIR TRIBAL RESTORATIVE TRADITION |
21 University of Saint Thomas Law Journal 108 (Winter, 2025) |
Native Americans have a long tradition of service in the US military, dating back to the war fought to gain independence. Their service has been characterized by extraordinarily higher numbers proportionate to other minorities as well as a Warrior Tradition, embodied in their experiences, cultures, and religions for generations. This tradition... |
2025 |
|
| Lauren van Schilfgaarde |
NATIVE REPRODUCTIVE SELF-DETERMINATION |
71 UCLA Law Review 1844 (July, 2025) |
Like the overall well-being of Indigenous peoples, Native reproductive health has been deeply impacted by the direct and collateral consequences of settler colonialism. Today, Natives experience some of the most dire reproductive health disparities. Unlike other health care systems, however, Native health care is sui generis. The federal government... |
2025 |
|
| Macarena Montes Franceschini , Kristen Stilt |
NATURALIZED RIGHTS OF ANIMALS, ANIMALIZED RIGHTS OF NATURE |
44 Stanford Environmental Law Journal 1 (2025) |
I. Introduction. 3 II. An Introduction to Rights of Nature, Animal Rights, and Industrial Animal Agriculture. 10 A. The Rights of Nature: A Widespread Global Movement. 10 B. Animal Rights. 17 C. Industrial Animal Agriculture. 21 III. Rights of Nature and Animal Rights--Comparative Strengths and Weaknesses. 26 A. Pace of Growth and General... |
2025 |
|
| Steffi Colao |
NO RIGHT TO EXCLUDE: THE EUROPEAN UNION'S REPARATIVE MIGRATION OBLIGATIONS |
41 American University International Law Review 37 (2025) |
In this article, I unify the diverse but related ways that scholars, activists, and people on the move have demanded migration as a form of reparations. I first compare (mostly U.S.-based) theoretical arguments for migration as a form of reparations for colonization, military occupation, and climate harm. I then turn to international legal... |
2025 |
|