| Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year | Key Terms |
| Mark David Hall, Andrea Picciotti-Bayer |
TEN COMMANDMENTS IN THE PUBLIC SQUARE AND PUBLIC SCHOOLS |
34 William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal 175 (October, 2025) |
Introduction. 175 I. Originalism, History, Tradition, and Establishment Clause. 180 A. The Lemon Detour. 185 II. Original Understanding of the Establishment Clause. 188 III. A Long History and Tradition of Permitting Religious Displays on Public Property. 202 A. Crosses. 202 B. Religious Inscriptions on Public Buildings. 205 C. Memorials with... |
2025 |
|
| Diego H. Alcalá Laboy |
THE "FOUNDER'S GAZE": HOW THE FOURTH AMENDMENT IS A SURVEILLANCE TECHNOLOGY THAT ENABLES AI TO SCALE CONTROL OVER THE SUBALTERN |
30 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 215 (Fall, 2025) |
Much has been written about the rise of artificial intelligence and machine learning applications and how the current Fourth Amendment law has been unable to mitigate the privacy harm that these tools produce. This article explores how the development and usage of AI and machine learning models is dependent on the originalism principles of Fourth... |
2025 |
|
| Carys J. Craig |
THE AI-COPYRIGHT TRAP |
100 Chicago-Kent Law Review 107 (2025) |
As AI tools proliferate, policy makers are increasingly being called upon to protect creators and the cultural industries from the extractive, exploitative, and even existential threats posed by generative AI. In the haste to act, however, they risk running headlong into the Copyright Trap: the mistaken conviction that copyright law is the best... |
2025 |
|
| Noah Smith-Drelich |
THE ANTI-DISCRIMINATORY RIGHT TO TRAVEL |
100 Indiana Law Journal 1063 (Spring, 2025) |
Travel rights and travel restrictions shape nearly every part of society, moderating where and how we go about our daily lives. Yet a central aspect of travel has gone largely unnoticed in the legal literature. Oppressive governments have routinely restricted free movement as a principal means of effectuating discrimination. And travel rights, as a... |
2025 |
|
| Jamie C. Cooper |
THE ASSIMMIGRATION MATRIX: DISMANTLING FAMILIES AND ASSIMILATING THE CHILDREN LEFT BEHIND |
56 Seton Hall Law Review 425 (2025) |
As mass deportation of Black and brown noncitizen parents materializes, the threat of family separation is being realized for millions of families in the United States. In the process, these families will face a harmful confluence of systems, which I refer to as the assimmigration matrix. When laws governing family, child welfare, and... |
2025 |
|
| Yuri G. Mantilla |
THE AYMARA AND QUECHUA NATIONS AS SUBJECTS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW |
119 American Society of International Law Proceedings 232 (April 16-April 18, 2025) |
To demonstrate the importance of alternative legal approaches in reforming and analyzing the Inter-American normative order, it is important to highlight Aymara and Quechua philosophical ideas as the foundation for the recognition of the international legal personality of Indigenous nations and their interests. This is also necessary to understand... |
2025 |
|
| Jacob Hamburger |
THE CONSEQUENCES OF ENDING BIRTHRIGHT CITIZENSHIP |
103 Washington University Law Review 209 (2025) |
On the first day of his second term in office, President Donald Trump issued an executive order purporting to deny citizenship to children born in the United States to undocumented parents. After numerous federal district courts enjoined implementation of the order, the Supreme Court's decision in Trump v. CASA, Inc. paved the way for it to go into... |
2025 |
|
| Juan F. Perea |
THE CONSTITUTIONAL LESSONS OF RESEGREGATION |
64 Washburn Law Journal 199 (Winter, 2025) |
Commemorations of the Brown v. Board of Education decision give us an opportunity to reflect on the decision and its current meaning. Brown was initially a cause for celebration for many, though also a cause for mass revolt in the southern United States. It heralded the possible end of apartheid in the United States, and the possible beginning of a... |
2025 |
|
| Jacob M. Karlin |
THE DEFAULT RULE AND DUE PROCESS: DIVERGING INTERPRETATIONS OF "THE CHARGING DOCUMENT" REQUIREMENT IN EXTRADITION TREATIES |
98 Southern California Law Review 1005 (April, 2025) |
C1-2TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION. 1006 I. BACKGROUND. 1010 A. Executing Bilateral Extradition Treaties. 1010 B. The Extradition Process in the United States: Foreign Requests. 1013 C. Extradition Treaty Interpretation in the United States. 1015 D. Due Process in the Extradition Process. 1019 II. INTERPRETING THE CHARGING DOCUMENT. 1026 A.... |
2025 |
|
| Deidre Y. Aanstad , Attorney Advisor & Program Coordinator, Missing or Murdered Indigenous Persons Regional Outreach Program Legal Programs, Executive Office for United States Attorneys |
THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE'S ROLE IN ADDRESSING THE INCIDENCE OF MISSING OR MURDERED INDIGENOUS PERSONS |
73 Department of Justice Journal of Federal Law and Practice 45 (August, 2025) |
Addressing violent crime and enhancing public safety in Indian country is a priority for the Department of Justice (Department). The Department uses a multi-faceted approach to address public safety in Indian country: conduct federal investigations and prosecutions; work with federal, Tribal, state, and local law-enforcement partners; provide... |
2025 |
|
| Dr. Taino J. Palermo |
THE EROSION OF TRUST: ARIZONA v. NAVAJO, CLIMATE CHANGE, AND THE POTENTIAL ABROGATION OF TRIBAL WATER RIGHTS |
30 Roger Williams University Law Review 47 (Winter, 2025) |
The Supreme Court's ruling in Arizona v. Navajo Nation represents a pivotal moment in the ongoing struggle for tribal water rights in the United States. This decision not only impacts the Navajo Nation, but also sets a significant judicial precedent with far-reaching implications for the future of treaty-protected water rights. The Court's ruling... |
2025 |
|
| Elliot A. Mermel |
THE EVOLUTION OF STANDING AND THE NEED FOR FOUNDATIONAL REALISM: A HISTORICAL INQUIRY FROM HAYBURN TO HARVARD |
103 Washington University Law Review 507 (2025) |
This Note traces the Supreme Court's evolving approach to standing--from the early, unresolved procedural issues raised in Hayburn's Case to today's pivotal decisions, such as Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard--and argues that the modern three-pronged standing test (injury in fact, traceability, and redressability) lacks firm... |
2025 |
|
| Fred O. Smith, Jr., Peter O'Neill |
THE FORGOTTEN FACE OF "OUR FEDERALISM" |
135 Yale Law Journal 17 (October, 2025) |
Younger v. Harris is canonical in the field of federal courts and exerts significant influence on federal civil-rights litigation. The decision's exposition of Our Federalism produced the Younger abstention doctrine, limiting federal courts' authority to address constitutional violations in state criminal prosecutions. Today, lower courts have... |
2025 |
|
| Noah Smith-Drelich |
THE FORGOTTEN FUNDAMENTAL RIGHT TO FREE MOVEMENT |
119 Northwestern University Law Review 811 (2025) |
Abstract--There is a powerful fundamental right hiding in plain sight: the fundamental right to free movement. This right goes beyond the consistently acknowledged--though infrequently applied--fundamental right to interstate travel. The true scope of the Constitution's protection of movement through substantive due process safeguards local,... |
2025 |
|
| Nadine Padilla |
THE HISTORIC SUPERFUND LISTING OF THE LUKACHUKAI MOUNTAINS MINING DISTRICT |
39-WTR Natural Resources & Environment 32 (Winter, 2025) |
President Biden's 2021 Bipartisan Infrastructure Law included, among its many provisions, a historic investment of $3.5 billion to be allocated toward cleanups under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA), also known as Superfund. This investment will help in addressing the problem of legacy pollution... |
2025 |
|
| Kaiponanea T. Matsumura |
THE ILLUSION OF STABILITY IN FAMILY LAW |
78 Vanderbilt Law Review 1133 (May, 2025) |
Stability is universally accepted as a central value in family law. Within the context of adult relationships, stability determines which relationships the law will recognize and support. Within the context of parent-child relationships, stability determines who will be recognized as a parent, whose parental rights will be terminated by the state,... |
2025 |
|
| Alvin Padilla-Babilonia |
THE IMPOSITION OF CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS |
123 Michigan Law Review 1289 (May, 2025) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 1291 I. The Extension of Constitutional Rights: Territories, States, and Overseas Colonies. 1296 A. Louisiana, Slavery, and the Extension of Constitutional Rights. 1297 B. Slavery, Dred Scott v. Sandford, and the Fourteenth Amendment. 1300 C. Constitutional Rights, Democracy, and Pluralism. 1304 D. The Bill of... |
2025 |
|
| Jenée Durán |
THE INDIAN CHILD WELFARE ACT |
88 Texas Bar Journal 817 (November, 2025) |
The Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) was enacted in 1978 to protect the best interests of Indian children and to promote the stability and security of Indian tribes and families by the establishment of minimum Federal standards for the removal of Indian children from their families. ICWA was enacted in response to the high rate of forcible... |
2025 |
|
| Jay Shank |
THE INDIAN CHILD WELFARE ACT, EXCLUSIVE JURISDICTION, AND THE IMPLICIT MEMBERSHIP REQUIREMENT IN 25 U.S.C. § 1911(A) |
73 University of Kansas Law Review 691 (February, 2025) |
In 1978, after hearing testimony on the continual destruction wrought upon Indian families and tribes at the hands of state courts, Congress passed the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA). Congress recognized the unequal, disparate treatment Indian children were receiving in their child custody proceedings, and attempted to stop the rampant... |
2025 |
|
| Antony Anghie |
THE INJUSTICES OF REPARATIONS |
119 American Journal of International Law 423 (July, 2025) |
C1-3Table of Contents I. Introduction. 423 II. The Jurisprudence of Reparations: Trusteeship and the Issue of Retroactivity. 426 A. Trusteeship in International Law. 429 B. The Contemporary Relevance of Trusteeship. 432 C. Retroactivity and Nuremburg. 433 III. Western and Colonial Reparations. 434 A. Reverse Colonial Reparations: Historical... |
2025 |
|
| Dillon Kim , Boston University School of Law, Boston, MA, USA, Email: dilmarti@bu.edu |
THE INSULAR CASES REVISITED: GUAM, FEDERAL MEDICAID FUNDING, AND CONSTITUTIONAL SUBORDINATION |
51 American Journal of Law & Medicine 376 (2025) |
The Insular Cases, a relic of imperial-era judicial reasoning, have long dictated the political and constitutional status of U.S. territories. In United States v. Vaello-Madeo, Justice Neil Gorsuch's concurring opinion signaled a critical moment for reevaluating these precedents. This Note examines the enduring consequences of the Insular Cases,... |
2025 |
|
| Gabriele Wadlig |
THE INTERNATIONAL LAW OF LAND (GRABBING): HUMAN RIGHTS AND DEVELOPMENT IN THE CONTEXT OF RACIAL CAPITALISM |
25 Chicago Journal of International Law 479 (Winter, 2025) |
This article investigates the concept of tenure security within international law, emphasizing the global legal architectures that influence and shape land tenure governance at the intersections of international human rights law and development. By tracing the evolution of tenure security from colonial practices to modern development paradigms, the... |
2025 |
|
| Kennedy Wilson-LaMar |
THE INTERSECTION OF CULTURAL RIGHTS AND THE REPATRIATION OF AFRICAN ART: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF INTERNATIONAL AND NORTH AMERICAN LEGAL AND ETHICAL FRAMEWORKS |
58 International Lawyer 469 (2025) |
The debate surrounding the repatriation of African and Indigenous art held in global museums is a complex and multifaceted issue, demanding the examination of historical, legal, and ethical dimensions. Emmanuel Macron's 2018 statement in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, encapsulates the core of this debate--I cannot accept that a large part of the... |
2025 |
|
| James G. Dwyer |
THE KINCARE CRAZE IN CHILD PROTECTION: ROMANTICISM, SUBTERFUGE, AND RACIAL SEPARATISM |
19 FIU Law Review 1 (Spring, 2025) |
Among recent developments in family law, the most prevalent issue on legislative agendas has been Kincare as an alternative to non-relative foster care when maltreated children cannot remain with parents. Long an available option legally but traditionally regarded with skepticism by child protection workers, Kincare is now idealized. A steady... |
2025 |
|
| James T. Campbell |
THE LAW OF THE TERRITORIES: SHOULD IT EXIST? |
134 Yale Law Journal Forum 448 (2024-2025) |
February 10, 2025 abstract. The Law of the Territories is becoming an increasingly prominent academic heading for legal scholarship concerning the liminal status of U.S. territories. This Essay argues that the incipient momentum of this emerging field presents an obstacle rather than a pathway to meaningful scholarly engagement, sidelining... |
2025 |
|
| Grant Christensen , Anne Mullins |
THE LONE DISSENT |
82 Washington and Lee Law Review 1219 (Fall, 2025) |
What can be learned when a Supreme Court Justice decides to write a lone dissent? There exists a powerful set of incentives for Supreme Court opinions to achieve consensus. Although closely divided cases grab news headlines, unanimous opinions are actually the most commonly issued judicial alignment, and cases in which a single Justice dissents are... |
2025 |
|
| Matthew Boaz |
THE MIGRATION OF ABOLITION THEORY |
103 North Carolina Law Review 385 (January, 2025) |
This Article considers whether and how theories of abolition developed by criminal law scholars are transferrable to the realm of immigration enforcement. A key question is how abolitionist principles might be employed in support of critiques of the United States' immigration regulatory regime in the same way that these principles have been... |
2025 |
|
| Stefanie A. Lindquist , Neta Borshansky |
THE MODEL CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION: A SIMULATED EXERCISE IN CONSTITUTIONAL REFORM |
77 Florida Law Review 1369 (July, 2025) |
I. Introduction. 1369 II. Creating the Model Constitutional Convention. 1373 III. Structure of the Convention. 1376 IV. Application Process. 1378 V. Deliberations at the Convention. 1378 VI. Reactions to the MCC. 1380 VII. The Future of the MCC. 1381 |
2025 |
|
| Victoria Mikesell Mather |
THE MYTH OF BEST INTEREST OF THE CHILD |
127 West Virginia Law Review 385 (Spring, 2025) |
One of the basic tenets of Family Law as applied to children is consideration of best interest of the child in making decisions. Standards for custody, termination, adoption, and all other matters affecting children are overlaid with consideration of best interest. Unfortunately, the promise of best interest is lost in the actual mechanics of... |
2025 |
|
| Jacob Lewis |
THE NATIVE FIGHT FOR HUNTING RIGHTS: THE CROW TRIBE AND HERRERA v. WYOMING |
49 American Indian Law Review 97 (2025) |
The State of Wyoming has a long and storied history, but its history began even before it became a territory or a state. Native tribes have inhabited the region for centuries. Certainly, each tribe has left its mark on the land with Native culture and lifestyles. This Note discusses the Crow Tribe and the fight for the recognition of its hunting... |
2025 |
|
| Colton Gregg |
THE NAVAJO NATION AND THE COLORADO RIVER: THEIR CURRENT STATUSES AND THE TRIBE'S PATH FORWARD |
13 American Indian Law Journal 1 (January, 2025) |
C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 2 II. A Relevant History of the Navajo People. 3 A. Relocating the Navajo People. 4 B. The Horrors of Bosque Redondo. 5 C. Negotiating the Navajo Treaty. 7 III. The Colorado River Controversy. 11 A. Forming the Law of the River. 12 1. The Winters Doctrine. 12 2. The Colorado River Compact of 1922. 13 4.... |
2025 |
|
| David B. Owens |
THE OBJECTIVE OBSERVER: THE WASHINGTON STATE SUPREME COURT'S REMEDIAL ASPIRATIONS AND EXPERIENCE ON THE GROUND |
100 Washington Law Review 325 (June, 2025) |
Abstract: The Washington State Supreme Court has adopted an objective observer rule for addressing whether race impacted jury selection and extended this rule to evaluating all aspects of Washington courts, including jury trials. The objective observer rule allows courts to evaluate whether decisions in those courtrooms could be viewed as the... |
2025 |
|
| Michael D. Ramsey |
THE ORIGINALIST CASE AGAINST THE INSULAR CASES |
77 Florida Law Review 517 (March, 2025) |
Concurring in United States v. Vaello Madero, Justice Neil Gorsuch argued that the Insular Cases are contrary to the Constitution's original meaning and should be overruled. The Supreme Court's decisions in the Insular Cases, which created a second-class constitutional status for U.S. overseas territories, have also been criticized by leading... |
2025 |
|
| Jessica Ring Amunson, Amariah Becker, Dara Gold, Sam Hirsch, Arjun Ramamurti |
THE PROMISE OF COMPUTATIONAL REDISTRICTING: A PRACTICAL GUIDE TO UN-GERRYMANDERING |
60 Wake Forest Law Review 979 (2025) |
The post-2020 redistricting cycle was likely the last one in which political mapmakers drew electoral maps manually, one district at a time. After the 2030 Census, mapmakers may rely instead on the emerging science of computational redistricting, using algorithms to generate and evaluate statewide maps that attempt to optimize compliance with... |
2025 |
|
| Sam Bookman |
THE PUZZLING PERSISTENCE OF NATURE'S RIGHTS |
2025 Utah Law Review 165 (2025) |
The American experience of rights of Nature--the legal recognition of the rights and personhood of natural phenomena--presents a puzzle. On the one hand, no court has ever recognized such rights. Rights of Nature laws are routinely struck down and have proven impossible to enforce. On the other hand, dozens of communities, including municipalities... |
2025 |
|
| Nazune Menka |
THE REPARATIVE RETURN OF TREATYMAKING? LEGAL NORMS, NATIVE NATIONS, & THE UNITED STATES |
30 Texas Journal on Civil Liberties & Civil Rights 213 (Spring, 2025) |
This Article traces the various and conflicting legal norms that have influenced Indigenous Peoples Law over the last 400 years. While this Article builds upon several scholars at the nexus of Indigenous Peoples Law, constitutional law, and international law, it is the first to trace the thread of legal norms that weaves through history to the... |
2025 |
|
| Zalman Rothschild |
THE RIGHT TO EXIT RELIGION |
113 Georgetown Law Journal 1459 (June, 2025) |
This Article argues that just over fifty years ago, in Wisconsin v. Yoder, the Supreme Court recognized what might be called a right to exit religion. In this decision, the Court expressed appreciation for preserving insular religious communities, while simultaneously articulating the principle that accommodations for such communities must not... |
2025 |
|
| Grant Christensen |
THE RIGHT TO PROTEST IN INDIAN COUNTRY |
125 Columbia Law Review 1139 (June, 2025) |
From April 2016 until February 2017, thousands of people gathered along the Cannonball River on the border of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation to protest the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline. In response, state officials tried to close down roads leading to the Reservation, considered legislation that would immunize drivers who struck... |
2025 |
|
| Jared Danaher |
THE SECOND AMENDMENT'S CATHOLIC PROBLEM |
75 Duke Law Journal 299 (November, 2025) |
After New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, history is the touchstone of Second Amendment analysis. Thus, this Note explores an understudied part of America's long and complicated history with weapons: Catholic disarmament. By undertaking a detailed historical analysis of three Catholic disarmament measures in the late colonial United... |
2025 |
|
| Theophilus Edwin Coleman |
THE SILENT PRICE OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE: LABOR AND PERSONAL JURISDICTION IN THE GLOBAL SOUTH |
58 Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law 1223 (November, 2025) |
Despite the economic potential of artificial intelligence (AI), significant drawbacks exist, particularly the exploitation of digital labor in developing countries by large AI corporations. A crucial issue in AI development is the reliance on data annotators and digital workers from the Global South to train AI systems or models. These workers... |
2025 |
|
| Samuel A. Thumma , Michael O. Miller |
THE SLUMP: INFAMOUS UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT DECISIONS FROM THE GILDED AGE, EXPLANATIONS ABOUT WHAT HAPPENED, AND WHY IT MATTERS NOW |
28 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 1 (Winter, 2025) |
I. Introduction. 3 II. An Overview of the Gilded Age. 7 III. Constitutional Amendments Ratified During the Gilded Age. 10 A. The Thirteenth Amendment. 11 B. The Fourteenth Amendment. 11 C. The Fifteenth Amendment. 13 IV. The Supreme Court During the Gilded Age. 13 V. The Slump Cases. 16 A. The Slaughter-House Cases, 83 U.S. 36 (1873). 17 1.... |
2025 |
|
| Marco Basile |
THE SPLINTERING OF AMERICAN PUBLIC LAW |
92 University of Chicago Law Review 1529 (October, 2025) |
Constitutional tradition has never mattered more for arguing about what the Constitution means. Yet the very idea of a constitutional tradition presents a shape-shifting target. Rather than an entirely distinct body of law, early U.S. constitutional law mixed and blurred with the law of nations in a broader category of public law that, unlike... |
2025 |
|
| Jean-Marie Kamatali |
THE STATE OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA: LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE LAST THREE UNIVERSAL PERIODIC REVIEWS |
33 Tulane Journal of International and Comparative Law 515 (Spring, 2025) |
I. Introduction. 516 II. The UN Human Rights Council, the Universal Period Review, and the United States. 517 A. UPR as a Universal Review. 518 B. UPR as a Periodic Review. 519 C. The UPR as a Review. 519 D. HRC, UPR, and the United States. 521 E. Understanding UPR Reports. 523 III. The State of Human Rights in the U.S: Three Review Cycles, Three... |
2025 |
|
| Scott Dodson |
THE SUPREME COURT AND PUBLIC OPINION |
111 Iowa Law Review 117 (November, 2025) |
ABSTRACT: Alexander Hamilton famously called the Supreme Court the least dangerous branch because it was reliant on Congress for funding and the President for enforcement. To manage its relationship with the political branches in a way that affords the Court both independence from them and the necessary assistance from them, the Court must... |
2025 |
|
| Monte Mills |
THE SUPREME COURT'S OLD HABITS IN A NEW ERA? NATIVE NATIONS, STATEHOOD, AND AN INDIGENOUS-LED FUTURE FOR NATURAL RESOURCES |
77 Stanford Law Review Online 139 (June, 2025) |
After rising from the depths of eras in which the United States intended to eliminate Native Nations, tribal sovereignty remains ascendant. With respect to natural resources, the governance of Native Nations has expanded to more fully occupy the legal space reserved in treaties with the United States. Across the country, Native Nations have built... |
2025 |
|
| Ian Smith, Heather Tanana |
THE SUPREME COURT'S USE OF HISTORICAL EVIDENCE IN RECENT INDIAN LAW CASES |
39-WTR Natural Resources & Environment 4 (Winter, 2025) |
Justice Neil Gorsuch opened his opinion in the landmark case McGirt v. Oklahoma with a passage that underscored both his understanding of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation's treaty and removal history and the importance of that history in his decision. After briefly recounting the series of negotiations that led to the Tribe's removal from their... |
2025 |
|
| Matthew L.M. Fletcher |
THE THREE LIVES OF MAMENGWAA: TOWARD AN INDIGENOUS CANON OF CONSTRUCTION |
134 Yale Law Journal 696 (January, 2025) |
ABSTRACT. For too long, tribal judiciaries have been an afterthought in the story of tribal self-determination. Until the last half-century, many tribal nations relied on federally administered courts or had no court systems at all. As tribal nations continue to develop their law-enforcement and police powers, tribal justice systems now play a... |
2025 |
|
| Kekek Jason Stark |
THE UTMOST RIGHTS AND INTERESTS OF THE INDIANS: TRIBAL LAW INTERPRETATIONS OF THE INDIAN CIVIL RIGHTS ACT |
30 Texas Journal on Civil Liberties & Civil Rights 270 (Spring, 2025) |
Our Indian courts are necessary if tribal governments are to exercise the sovereign prerogatives of tribes as recognized by Congress and the federal courts. It is the job of Indian tribunals to interpret tribal laws and to apply them evenly to everyone under tribal jurisdiction. Congress has mandated in the Indian Civil Rights Act that this be... |
2025 |
|
| Leslie A. Hagen , James V. DeBergh , Assistant Director, Office of Legal Education, Attorney Advisor, Office of Tribal Justice |
THE VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN REAUTHORIZATION ACT OF 2022 AND THE RETURN OF TRIBAL CRIMINAL AUTHORITY IN ALASKA |
73 Department of Justice Journal of Federal Law and Practice 19 (August, 2025) |
All crimes are reprehensible, but the rates at which Alaska Native people are murdered, raped, and suffer from violent crime are all higher than national averages. We live in shadows. We live in the shadows of women who if they were features of landscape would be the tallest mounts, the widest rivers, the deepest part of our literary oceans, while... |
2025 |
|
| Chidi Oguamanam |
THE WIPO TREATY ON GENETIC RESOURCES AND ASSOCIATED TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE: A NEGOTIATING, CONTEXTUAL AND CONCEPTUAL APPRAISAL |
43 Boston University International Law Journal 321 (Summer, 2025) |
The World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) Treaty on Intellectual Property, Genetic Resources, and Associated Traditional Knowledge marks a significant milestone in the several decades of efforts at multilateral levels to open the global intellectual property system to the needs of people on the margins in the global south and north. The... |
2025 |
|