Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year |
Carly E. Zipper |
LET US NOT BE INTIMIDATED: PAST AND PRESENT APPLICATIONS OF SECTION 11(B) OF THE VOTING RIGHTS ACT |
97 Washington Law Review 301 (March, 2022) |
Abstract: As John Lewis said, [the] vote is precious. Almost sacred. It is the most powerful non-violent tool we have to create a more perfect union. The Voting Rights Act (VRA), likewise, is a powerful tool. This Comment seeks to empower voters and embolden their advocates to better use that tool with an improved understanding of its... |
2022 |
Ingrid V. Eagly, Joanna C. Schwartz |
LEXIPOL'S FIGHT AGAINST POLICE REFORM |
97 Indiana Law Journal 1 (Winter, 2022) |
We are in the midst of a critically important moment in police reform. National and local attention is fixed on how to reduce the number of people killed and injured by the police. One approach--which has been recognized for decades to reduce police killings--is to limit police power to use force. This Article is the first to uncover how an... |
2022 |
Andrew Truong |
LINGUISTIC LEGAL DESERTS: ADDRESSING LANGUAGE ACCESS IN THE UNITED STATES LEGAL SYSTEM FOR LIMITED ENGLISH PROFICIENT ASIAN AMERICANS AND PACIFIC ISLANDERS |
102 Boston University Law Review 1441 (May, 2022) |
Language access remains a significant access to justice issue in the United States. While many rural Americans face legal deserts due to the physical distance between themselves and accessible legal assistance, this Note establishes the term linguistic legal desert to describe how limited English proficient (LEP) individuals face a... |
2022 |
Joseph Blocher, Maisie Wilson |
LIVING WITH GUNS: LEGAL AND CONSTITUTIONAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR THOSE COHABITING WITH TEMPORARILY PROHIBITED POSSESSORS |
35 Journal of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers 47 (2022) |
The Second Amendment is frequently portrayed as among the most individualistic of constitutional rights, even within the broadly individualistic American rights tradition. Especially now that the U.S. Supreme Court has detached the Amendment from the collective entity--the well regulated militia--that might otherwise be central to its... |
2022 |
David A. J. Richards |
LOVE ACROSS THE BOUNDARIES: THE CASE OF JUSTICE JOHN MARSHALL HARLAN--A BOOK REVIEW: PETER S. CANELLOS, THE GREAT DISSENTER: THE STORY OF JOHN MARSHALL HARLAN, AMERICA'S JUDICIAL HERO (NEW YORK: SIMON & SCHUSTER, 2021) |
15 NYU Journal of Law & Liberty 503 (2022) |
In understanding the development of the American constitutional law of free speech, the dissents of Oliver Wendell Holmes and Louis Brandeis are understandably central in part because their approaches to free speech were quite different. Holmes appealed to some version of John Stuart Mill's great utilitarian argument for free speech in On Liberty,... |
2022 |
Adam A. Davidson |
MANAGING THE POLICE EMERGENCY |
100 North Carolina Law Review 1209 (May, 2022) |
There is a policing emergency in the United States. Police across the country cause massive, widespread, and unpredictable physical harm--killings, beatings; psychological harm--negative stress-related birth and educational outcomes, general worsened mental health; and sociological harm--advancing the racial, gender, and economic hierarchies that... |
2022 |
Gregory S. Parks |
MARTIAL ARTS AS A REMEDY FOR RACIALIZED POLICE VIOLENCE |
83 Ohio State Law Journal Online 41 (2022) |
C1-3Table of Contents I. Introduction. 41 II. Race and Police Violence. 42 III. Reducing Police Lethality Through Martial Arts. 46 IV. Conclusion. 52 |
2022 |
Andrew J. Arden |
MASS INCARCERATION, DEPRIVATION OF RIGHTS, AND RACIAL SUBORDINATION: U.S. v. GARY, THE AMERICAN GUN CONTROL NARRATIVE, AND UGLY TRUTH BEHIND 18 U.S.C. 922(G) |
2 North Carolina Civil Rights Law Review 141 (Spring, 2022) |
Any unarmed people are slaves or are subject to slavery at any given moment . There is a world of difference between thirty million unarmed, submissive Black people and thirty million Black people armed with freedom and defense guns and the strategic methods of liberation. - Huey P. Newton, Co-Founder and Minister of Defense, Black Panther Party... |
2022 |
David Angelatos |
MISINFORMATION ABOUT MARIJUANA: COMMERCIALIZATION, CONSOLIDATION, AND THE NEW FIRST AMENDMENT |
71 American University Law Review 2157 (August, 2022) |
From Reefer Madness to This Is Your Brain on Drugs, Americans have lived through decades of anti-cannabis propaganda. Legalization is poised to turn this information environment on its head, unleashing a torrent of corporate-funded, pro-cannabis misinformation that regulators cannot prevent or dispel. This appears to be a problem caused by the... |
2022 |
Ann C. McGinley |
MISOGYNY AND MURDER |
45 Harvard Journal of Law & Gender 177 (Spring, 2022) |
C1-2Table of Contents Abstract. 178 Introduction: Mass Murder and Invisible Misogyny. 180 I. Involuntary Celibates (Incels): Identity, Ideology, and Behavior. 189 A. Incels: Who and Where are They?. 189 B. Identity and Ideology. 190 C. Private and Public Violence. 195 D. Relationship to the Atlanta-area Killings: Violence and Misogyny. 198 II.... |
2022 |
Gilad Abiri |
MODERATING FROM NOWHERE |
47 Brigham Young University Law Review 757 (2022) |
We are living in the midst of a battle over online hate speech regulation, and the stakes could not be higher. Hate speech not only harms its intended victims, be they individuals or groups, but it also polarizes and divides society in ways that undermine the health of democratic regimes. While there is widespread agreement that the current... |
2022 |
Brandon Hasbrouck |
MOVEMENT JUDGES |
97 New York University Law Review 631 (May, 2022) |
Judges matter. The opinions of a few impact the lives of many. Judges romanticize their own impartiality, but apathy in the face of systems of oppression favors the status quo and clears the way for conservative agendas to take root. The lifetime appointments of federal judges, the deliberate weaponization of the bench by reactionary opponents of... |
2022 |
Andrew Gall |
MOVING FROM HARM MITIGATION TO AFFIRMATIVE DISCRIMINATION MITIGATION: THE UNTAPPED POTENTIAL OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE TO FIGHT SCHOOL SEGREGATION AND OTHER FORMS OF RACIAL DISCRIMINATION |
31 Catholic University Journal of Law & Technology 145 (Fall, 2022) |
The United States government took an increasingly hands-on approach to AI development and governance during the 116 and 117 Congresses under Presidents Trump and Biden--creating the Select Committee on AI and the AI Research and Development Interagency Working Group, launching AI.gov, releasing three major reports on the status of AI in the United... |
2022 |
Lisa A. Crooms-Robinson |
MURDERING CROWS: PAULI MURRAY, INTERSECTIONALITY, AND BLACK FREEDOM |
79 Washington and Lee Law Review 1093 (Summer, 2022) |
What is intersectionality's origin story and how did it make its way into human rights? Beginning in the 1940s, Pauli Murray (1910-1985) used Jane Crow to capture two distinct relationships between race and sex discrimination. One Jane used the race-sex analogy to show that race and sex were both unconstitutionally arbitrary. The other Jane... |
2022 |
Michael Swistara |
MUTUAL LIBERATION: THE USE AND ABUSE OF NON-HUMAN ANIMALS BY THE CARCERAL STATE AND THE SHARED ROOTS OF OPPRESSION |
12 University of Miami Race & Social Justice Law Review 312 (Spring, 2022) |
The carceral state has used non-human animals as tools to oppress Black, Indigenous, and People of the Global Majority (BIPGM) for centuries. From bloodhounds violently trained by settlers to aid in their genocidal colonial project through the slave dogs that enforced a racial caste system to the modern deployment of police dogs, non-consenting... |
2022 |
Lily Talerman |
NAME AND SHAME: HOW INTERNATIONAL PRESSURE ALLOWS CIVIL RIGHTS ACTIVISTS TO INCORPORATE HUMAN RIGHTS NORMS INTO AMERICAN JURISPRUDENCE |
17 Duke Journal of Constitutional Law & Public Policy Sidebar 303 (4/8/2022) |
The United States has ratified international human rights treaties sparingly. Where it has ratified, it has provided such a large number of reservations that the treaties' domestic effects are effectively nullified. Even though international human rights law has not been directly incorporated into American jurisprudence, however, international... |
2022 |
Patrick Sharkey , Alisabeth Marsteller |
NEIGHBORHOOD INEQUALITY AND VIOLENCE IN CHICAGO, 1965-2020 |
89 University of Chicago Law Review 349 (March, 2022) |
This Essay analyzes trends in violence from a spatial perspective, focusing on how changes in the murder rate are experienced by communities and groups of residents within the city of Chicago. The Essay argues that a spatial perspective is essential to understanding the causes and consequences of violence in the United States and begins by... |
2022 |
Natalie Nanasi |
NEW APPROACHES TO DISARMING DOMESTIC ABUSERS |
67 Villanova Law Review 561 (2022) |
Laws prohibiting perpetrators of intimate partner violence from possessing firearms have long been on the books. But the failure to enforce them, thus allowing abusers to keep their weapons, has led to deadly consequences. While the criminal justice system has in recent years increased efforts to disarm domestic abusers, they have yielded minimal... |
2022 |
Kai Wiggins |
NEXT STEPS FOR CONGRESS ON HATE CRIME REPORTING |
33 Stanford Law and Policy Review 393 (September, 2022) |
Named after two victims whose murders were prosecuted as hate crimes but not reported in hate crime statistics, the Khalid Jabara and Heather Heyer No Hate Act attempts to improve hate crime reporting in the United States by encouraging state and local jurisdictions to adopt best practices for hate crime data collection. Covered jurisdictions must... |
2022 |
Madison N. Heckel |
NO JUSTICE, NO PEACE: THE NEED FOR A STATE VERSION OF § 1983 IN RESPONSE TO THE MOVEMENT FOR BLACK LIVES |
15 DePaul Journal for Social Justice 1 (Winter/Spring, 2021-2022) |
After the Civil War, violence raged across the South against Black Americans as an attempt by racist Confederates to refuse the racial equality guaranteed by the recent Constitutional Amendments. Congress recognized the lack of state action in enforcing the Reconstruction Amendments and passed the Ku Klux Klan Act in response, which allowed... |
2022 |
Jeffrey Fagan |
NO RUNS, FEW HITS, AND MANY ERRORS: STREET STOPS, BIAS, AND PROACTIVE POLICING |
68 UCLA Law Review 1584 (February, 2022) |
Equilibrium models of racial discrimination in law enforcement encounters suggest that in the absence of racial discrimination, the proportion of searches yielding evidence of illegal activity (the hit rate) will be equal across races. Searches that disproportionately target one racial group, resulting in a relatively low hit rate, are inefficient... |
2022 |
Brandon Hasbrouck |
ON LENITY: WHAT JUSTICE GORSUCH DIDN'T SAY |
108 Virginia Law Review 1289 (September, 2022) |
Facially neutral doctrines create racially disparate outcomes. Increasingly, legal academia and mainstream commentators recognize that this is by design. The rise of this colorblind racism in Supreme Court jurisprudence parallels the rise of the War on Drugs as a political response to the Civil Rights Movement. But, to date, no member of the... |
2022 |
Brandon Hasbrouck |
ON LENITY: WHAT JUSTICE GORSUCH DIDN'T SAY |
108 Virginia Law Review Online 239 (August, 2022) |
Facially neutral doctrines create racially disparate outcomes. Increasingly, legal academia and mainstream commentators recognize that this is by design. The rise of this colorblind racism in Supreme Court jurisprudence parallels the rise of the War on Drugs as a political response to the Civil Rights Movement. But, to date, no member of the... |
2022 |
Melissa J. Araiza |
ONCE MENTALLY ILL, ALWAYS SO? MAYBE YES, MAYBE NO: ADDRESSING THE 18 U.S.C. § 922(G)(4) CIRCUIT SPLIT AND LIFETIME GUN BANS FOR THE (FORMERLY) MENTALLY ILL |
100 Nebraska Law Review 785 (2022) |
C1-2TABLE OF CONTENTS I. Introduction. 786 II. History of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(4). 788 III. Challenges to § 922(g)(4) in the Sixth, Third, and Ninth Circuits. 791 A. Tyler v. Hillsdale County Sheriff's Department. 791 1. Factual Background. 791 2. Procedural History. 792 B. Beers v. Attorney General United States. 793 C. Mai v. United States. 795 1.... |
2022 |
David Kaye |
ONLINE PROPAGANDA, CENSORSHIP AND HUMAN RIGHTS IN RUSSIA'S WAR AGAINST REALITY |
116 AJIL Unbound 140 (2022) |
Russia's invasion of Ukraine has exposed the capriciousness of state and corporate power over human rights online. Events since the invasion have demonstrated the coercive power of the state over online expression, privacy, and public protest. Russia's longtime war against reality has deepened in its repression and is dependent on the raw power... |
2022 |
Farah Peterson |
OUR CONSTITUTIONALISM OF FORCE |
122 Columbia Law Review 1539 (October, 2022) |
The Founders' constitution--the one they had before the Revolution and the one they fought the Revolution to preserve--was one in which violence played a lawmaking role. An embrace of violence to assert constitutional claims is worked deeply into our intellectual history and culture. It was entailed upon us by the Founding generation, who sincerely... |
2022 |
Michal Buchhandler-Raphael |
OVERMEDICALIZATION OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE IN THE NONCARCERAL STATE |
94 Temple Law Review 589 (Summer, 2022) |
Scholars have recently cast doubt on the justifications for the criminalization of domestic violence, arguing that the criminal legal system proves inadequate in preventing future battering. Domestic violence, the argument continues, is largely a public health problem, which requires implementing noncarceral measures to effectively address it.... |
2022 |
Charisa Smith |
OVER-PRIVILEGED: LEGAL CANNABIS, DRUG OFFENDING & THE RIGHT TO FAMILY INTEGRITY |
67 South Dakota Law Review 569 (2022) |
Haphazard marijuana legality among U.S. jurisdictions, and our failure to confront federalism concerns, create civil rights consequences that cannot be underestimated. Although long-awaited federal legislation to legalize marijuana in Summer 2022 was backed by diverse, respected institutions and offers the strongest potential for a national... |
2022 |
Franita Tolson |
PARCHMENT RIGHTS |
135 Harvard Law Review Forum 525 (6/21/2022) |
Like many places in central Louisiana, Grant Parish became a haven for oil and gas prospecting in the late 1890s. Once speculators discovered the rich reserves, they hoped the new industry would displace the plantation economy that had been lucrative for only a few farmers in the post-Civil War era. In 1899, prospectors dug an eleven-hundred-foot... |
2022 |
Jules Lobel |
PARTICIPATORY LITIGATION: A NEW FRAMEWORK FOR IMPACT LAWYERING |
74 Stanford Law Review 87 (January, 2022) |
Abstract. This Article argues that the manner in which class-action and impact lawyers have traditionally litigated leaves little room for class participation in lawsuits, and that a new, participatory framework can and should be adopted. Through the story of a successful class-action suit challenging California's use of prolonged solitary... |
2022 |
Sean Kolkey |
PEOPLE OVER PROFIT: THE CASE FOR ABOLISHING THE PRISON FINANCIAL SYSTEM |
110 California Law Review 257 (February, 2022) |
The term mass incarceration is used to describe a crisis that, to many, is both abstract and distant. But for Black, Latinx, Indigenous, low-income, and other communities whose lives are disproportionately affected by the criminal legal system, the reality of carceral exploitation is as unavoidable as it is harmful. Incarceration has always had... |
2022 |
Griffin Edwards , Stephen Rushin |
POLICE VEHICLE SEARCHES AND RACIAL PROFILING: AN EMPIRICAL STUDY |
91 Fordham Law Review 1 (October, 2022) |
In 1981, the U.S. Supreme Court held in New York v. Belton that police officers could lawfully search virtually anywhere in a vehicle without a warrant after the arrest of any occupant in the vehicle. Then, in 2009, the Court reversed course in Arizona v. Gant, holding that police could only engage in vehicle searches after such arrests in a... |
2022 |
Anthony Gregory |
POLICING JIM CROW AMERICA: ENFORCERS' AGENCY AND STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATIONS |
40 Law and History Review 91 (February, 2022) |
These districts are not usually protected by police--rather victimized and tyrannized over by them. No one who does not know can realize what tyranny a low-grade white policeman can exercise in a colored neighborhood. W.E.B. Du Bois Scholars widely agree that law enforcers came to serve white supremacy in the post-Civil War United States. More... |
2022 |
Fred O. Smith, Jr. |
POLICING MASS INCARCERATION: PRESUMED GUILTY: HOW THE SUPREME COURT EMPOWERED THE POLICE AND SUBVERTED CIVIL RIGHTS. BY ERWIN CHEMERINSKY. NEW YORK, N.Y.: LIVERIGHT PUBLISHING CORPORATION. 2021. PP. XIII, 362. $27.95 |
135 Harvard Law Review 1853 (May, 2022) |
C1-2CONTENTS Introduction. 1854 I. Mechanisms of Police Empowerment. 1860 A. The Role of Human-Scale Legal Narrative. 1861 B. Doctrinal Choices. 1863 1. Remedies. 1863 2. Constitutional Criminal Procedure. 1866 C. Solutions. 1867 II. Values. 1868 A. Violence. 1870 B. Reliability. 1871 C. Dignitary Interests. 1871 D. Inequality. 1872 III. Mass... |
2022 |
Maya Chaudhuri |
POLICING THE BODY POLITIC |
69 UCLA Law Review 318 (March, 2022) |
This Comment focuses on the convergence of racialized policing and voter suppression of communities of color. While much attention has been given to the disenfranchisement of people upon felony conviction, there has been little attention paid to the policing and subsequent prosecution of people-- disproportionately Black and Latinx--for voting or... |
2022 |
Eisha Jain |
POLICING THE POLITY |
131 Yale Law Journal 1794 (April, 2022) |
The era of Chinese Exclusion left a legacy of race-based deportation. Yet it also had an impact that reached well beyond removal. In a seminal decision, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld a law that required people of Chinese descent living in the United States to display a certificate of residence on demand or risk arrest, detention, and possible... |
2022 |
Taylor Comerford |
PORNOGRAPHY ISN'T THE PROBLEM: A FEMINIST THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVE ON THE WAR AGAINST PORNHUB |
63 Boston College Law Review 1177 (March, 2022) |
Abstract: Over the last year, Pornhub and its parent company, MindGeek, ignited public outcry against the prevalence of content users posted to their sites featuring sexual violence, nonconsensual pornography, and sex trafficking. Activists, journalists, and legislators allege that Pornhub and similar pornography sites are apathetic toward the... |
2022 |
Catherine S. Shaffer , Jodi L. Viljoen , Kevin S. Douglas |
PREDICTIVE VALIDITY OF THE SAVRY, YLS/CMI, AND PCL:YV IS POOR FOR INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE PERPETRATION AMONG ADOLESCENT OFFENDERS |
46 Law and Human Behavior 189 (June, 2022) |
Objective: Despite advances in developing structured risk assessment instruments, there is currently no instrument to assess and manage the risk of intimate partner violence perpetration among adolescents. Given the empirical link between many forms of antisocial behavior, we tested whether structured tools commonly used by professionals to... |
2022 |
Ali Rosenblatt |
PROPER CAUSE FOR CONCERN: NEW YORK STATE RIFLE & PISTOL ASSOCIATION v. BRUEN |
17 Duke Journal of Constitutional Law & Public Policy Sidebar 239 (2/24/2022) |
Gun rights and gun control advocates alike are watching the Supreme Court, to see what happens in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, Inc. v. Bruen. In this pivotal Second Amendment case, the Court finds its first opportunity to substantially extend its 2008 decision in District of Columbia v. Heller, and to define the scope of the Second... |
2022 |
Carol M. Rose |
PROPERTY LAW AND INEQUALITY: LESSONS FROM RACIALLY RESTRICTIVE COVENANTS |
117 Northwestern University Law Review 225 (2022) |
Abstract--A long-standing justification for the institution of property is that it encourages effort and planning, enabling not only individual wealth creation but, indirectly, wealth creation for an entire society. Equal opportunity is a precondition for this happy outcome, but some have argued that past inequalities of opportunity have distorted... |
2022 |
Marissa Jackson Sow |
PROTECT AND SERVE |
110 California Law Review 743 (June, 2022) |
There exists a substantial body of literature on racism and brutality in policing, police reform and abolition, the militarization of the police, and the relationship of the police to the State and its citizenry. Many theories abound with respect to the relationship between the police and Black people in the United States, and most of these... |
2022 |
Liam H. McMillin |
PROVING RACISM: GIBSON BROS. INC. v. OBERLIN COLLEGE AND THE IMPLICATIONS ON DEFAMATION LAW |
90 University of Cincinnati Law Review 1021 (2022) |
Within a day of the election of Donald Trump in 2016, a seemingly innocuous event occurred in the small college town of Oberlin, Ohio: an Oberlin College student visited a local business, Gibson's, and attempted to use a fake ID to buy a bottle of wine, with two more bottles hidden under his shirt. The man at the counter, Allyn D. Gibson Jr.,... |
2022 |
Connor Bishop |
PROVING THE NEGATIVE: FLORIDA'S STAND YOUR GROUND LAW AND THE BURDEN OF PROOF |
27 Barry Law Review 200 (Spring, 2022) |
Self-defense and Stand Your Ground laws are controversial subjects in today's world. On one side, some argue that these laws protect our Second Amendment right to bear arms, protect ourselves, and our loved ones without fear of criminal prosecution. On the other hand, opponents argue that Stand Your Ground laws encourage evermore violent acts and... |
2022 |
Jillian K. Peterson , James A. Densley , Kyle Knapp , Stasia Higgins , Amanda Jensen |
PSYCHOSIS AND MASS SHOOTINGS: A SYSTEMATIC EXAMINATION USING PUBLICLY AVAILABLE DATA |
28 Psychology, Public Policy, and Law 280 (May, 2022) |
Mass shootings are often blamed on serious mental illness. This study assesses the role of psychosis in contributing to mass shootings along a continuum. The role of psychosis is compared with other motivations for mass shootings including employment issues, interpersonal conflict, relationship issues, hate, and fame-seeking. Perpetrators motivated... |
2022 |
Jen Jenkins |
PU'UHONUA NOT PRISONS, A MANIFESTO |
46 Harbinger 103 (3/30/2022) |
Jen Jenkins chronicles how the Prison Industrial Complex, as a capitalist and white supremacist tool, has oppressed Native Hawaiian culture and people throughout its colonial history and into the present. Ultimately, Jenkins calls for prison abolition in Hawai'i, and urges policy makers and community members to center the self-determination of... |
2022 |
Katherine Mims Crocker |
QUALIFIED IMMUNITY, SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY, AND SYSTEMIC REFORM |
71 Duke Law Journal 1701 (May, 2022) |
Qualified immunity has become a central target of the movement for police reform and racial justice since George Floyd's murder. And rightly so. Qualified immunity, which shields government officials from damages for constitutional violations even in many egregious cases, should have no place in federal law. But in critical respects, qualified... |
2022 |
Joseph Blocher , Reva B. Siegel |
RACE AND GUNS, COURTS AND DEMOCRACY |
135 Harvard Law Review Forum 449 (6/21/2022) |
Is racism in gun regulation reason to look to the Supreme Court to expand Second Amendment rights? While discussion of race and guns recurs across the briefs in New York State Rifle & Pistol Ass'n v. Bruen, it is especially prominent in the brief of legal aid attorneys and public defenders who employed their Second Amendment arguments to showcase... |
2022 |
Edward A. Purcell, Jr. |
RACE AND THE LAW: THE VISIBLE AND THE INVISIBLE |
66 New York Law School Law Review 141 (2021/2022) |
I am an invisible man. -Ralph Ellison I don't see color. People tell me I'm white and I believe them because police call me sir. -Stephen Colbert Sometimes the law sees race, and sometimes it does not. Sometimes it recognizes race as legally relevant, in other words, and sometimes it does not. Over the centuries, American law has always... |
2022 |
The Task Force 2.0 Research Working Group |
RACE AND WASHINGTON'S CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM: 2021 REPORT TO THE WASHINGTON SUPREME COURT |
45 Seattle University Law Review 969 (Spring, 2022) |
As Editors-in-Chief of the Washington Law Review, Gonzaga Law Review, and Seattle University Law Review, we represent the flagship legal academic publications of each law school in Washington State. Our publications last joined together to publish the findings of the first Task Force on Race and the Criminal Justice System in 2011/12. A decade... |
2022 |
The Task Force 2.0 Research Working Group |
RACE AND WASHINGTON'S CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM: 2021 REPORT TO THE WASHINGTON SUPREME COURT |
57 Gonzaga Law Review 119 (2021/2022) |
C1-2Table of Contents Message from the Task Force Co-Chairs. 121 Participating Organizations and Institutions. 123 Acknowledgments. 125 Definitions. 129 Executive Summary. 134 I. Introduction. 139 II. Capsule Summary of 2011 Findings and Some Key Developments Since Then. 140 A. Capsule Summary of 2011 Findings. 140 B. Some Key Court Developments... |
2022 |