AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYear
T. Anansi Wilson SEXUAL PROFILING & BLAQUEER FURTIVITY: BLAQUEERS ON THE RUN 24 Scholar: St. Mary's Law Review on Race and Social Justice 179 (2022) Introduction. 180 I. Theory of Sexual Profiling. 182 II. Governing the BlaQueer Body. 185 III. Definitions. 203 IV. A Refracted Lens: Furtiveness in BlaQueer (A Remix of Law, Culture, and History). 205 V. Remembrance: An Accounting of the Flesh, a Witnessing of a Lurking Profiling. 206 VI. LMJ Bruce on Tarrell Alvin McCraney's Moonlight: Loitering... 2022
Jill C. Engle SEXUAL VIOLENCE, INTANGIBLE HARM, AND THE PROMISE OF TRANSFORMATIVE REMEDIES 79 Washington and Lee Law Review 1045 (Summer, 2022) This Article describes alternative remedies that survivors of sexual violence can access inside and outside the legal system. It describes the leading restorative justice approaches and recommends one of the newest and most innovative of those--transformative justice--to heal the intangible harms of sexual violence. The Article also discusses the... 2022
Deborah M. Weissman SOCIAL JUSTICE AS DESISTANCE: RETHINKING APPROACHES TO GENDER VIOLENCE 72 American University Law Review 215 (October, 2022) C1-2Table of Contents Table of Contents. 215 Introduction. 216 I. Domestic Violence Intervention Programs: Overview, Critique, and Constraints. 221 A. DVIPs: A Brief Overview. 222 B. DVIPs: Critique. 225 1. Eliding systems and structures. 225 2. DVIPs and the criminal legal system. 231 3. Culture and constraints. 233 4. Law and constraints. 238 II.... 2022
Cesar M. Estrada SOCIAL MOVEMENT THEORY AND THE ROLE OF QUALIFIED IMMUNITY IN INCREASING POLITICAL VIOLENCE 36 Notre Dame Journal of Law, Ethics & Public Policy 347 (2022) On April 20, 2021, a Minneapolis jury returned a guilty verdict on three different homicide charges for former Minneapolis Police Officer Derek Chauvin for the murder of George Floyd in May 2020. George Floyd's murder, long down the list of police killings of Black Americans, was not unique in and of itself. In 2020 alone, 1,126 people were killed... 2022
Katrina Lee SOLVING FOR LAW FIRM INCLUSION: THE NECESSITY OF LAWYER WELL-BEING 24 Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment and Technology Law 323 (Winter, 2022) Chances are, in a room of one hundred law firm partners in the United States, at most, one Black woman would be present. Statistically, if there were a Black, Latinx, or Asian woman in that room, she would be the only one. Women of color make up only 3.79 percent of all partners, counting equity and nonequity partners. The percentage of Black women... 2022
Howard M. Wasserman , Charles W. “Rocky” Rhodes SOLVING THE PROCEDURAL PUZZLES OF THE TEXAS HEARTBEAT ACT AND ITS IMITATORS: NEW YORK TIMES v. SULLIVAN AS HISTORICAL ANALOGUE 60 Houston Law Review 93 (Fall, 2022) The Texas Heartbeat Act (S.B. 8) prohibits abortions following detection of a fetal heartbeat while delegating exclusive enforcement through private civil actions brought by any person, regardless of injury, for statutory damages of a minimum of $10,000 per prohibited abortion. Texas sought to impose costly litigation and potentially crippling... 2022
Blanche Bong Cook SOMETHING ROTS IN LAW ENFORCEMENT AND IT'S THE SEARCH WARRANT: THE BREONNA TAYLOR CASE 102 Boston University Law Review 1 (February, 2022) When police rammed the door of Breonna Taylor's home and shot her five times in a hail of thirty-two bullets, they lacked legal justification for being there. The affidavit supporting the warrant was perjurious, stale, vague, and lacking in particularity. The killing of Breonna Taylor, however, is not just a story about the illegality of the... 2022
Jacob Mchangama , Natalie Alkiviadou SOUTH AFRICA THE MODEL? A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF HATE SPEECH JURISPRUDENCE OF SOUTH AFRICA AND THE EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS 1 Journal of Free Speech Law 543 (2022) We compare the handling of hate speech by the European Court of Human Rights and the highest courts of South Africa: The latter, it turns out, adopts a more robust and well-articulated approach to the issues of hate speech than the former, falling more in line with the thresholds set out by documents such as the UN's Rabat Plan of Action. We argue... 2022
Aderson Bellegarde François SPEAK TO YOUR DEAD, WRITE FOR YOUR DEAD: DAVID GALLOWAY, MALINDA BRANDON, AND A STORY OF AMERICAN RECONSTRUCTION 111 Georgetown Law Journal 31 (October, 2022) Speak to your dead. Write for your dead. Tell them a story. What are you doing with this life? Let them hold you accountable. Let them make you bolder or more modest or louder or more loving, whatever it is, but ask them in, listen, and then write. someone will remember us I say even in another time For over ten years, the state of Tennessee... 2022
Emily Behzadi STATUES OF FRAUD: CONFEDERATE MONUMENTS AS PUBLIC NUISANCES 18 Stanford Journal of Civil Rights & Civil Liberties 1 (February, 2022) The deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and countless other African Americans have ignited a new wave of social activism throughout the United States. Notwithstanding the existence of one of the most infectious diseases of the twenty-first century, racist and unrestrained police violence continues to plague American society. The unprecedented... 2022
Michelle R. Gruber STAYING LEFT OF BOOM: A FEDERAL DOMESTIC TERRORISM STATUTE IS NECESSARY FOR SUCCESSFUL INVESTIGATIONS AND PROSECUTIONS OF DOMESTIC TERRORISTS 9 National Security Law Journal 295 (Summer, 2022) Introduction. 296 I. The Divide Between International and Domestic Terrorism. 300 A. Definitions. 301 B. Supporting Ideologies. 304 C. Legislative Treatment. 304 D. Investigative Scope. 307 E. Prosecutions. 308 F. Sentencing. 309 II. Recent Acts of Terrorism. 310 A. The El Paso Shooting. 310 B. The Pittsburgh Tree of Life Attack. 311 C. Plots... 2022
Devon W. Carbado STRICT SCRUTINY & THE BLACK BODY 69 UCLA Law Review 2 (March, 2022) When people in law think about strict scrutiny, often they are also thinking about equal protection law's treatment of race. For more than four decades, scholars have vigorously challenged that legal regime. Yet none of that contestation has interrogated the social manifestation of strict scrutiny. This Article does that work. Its central claim is... 2022
S. Lisa Washington SURVIVED & COERCED: EPISTEMIC INJUSTICE IN THE FAMILY REGULATION SYSTEM 122 Columbia Law Review 1097 (May, 2022) Recent calls to defund the police were quickly followed by calls to fund social service agencies, including the family regulation apparatus. These demands fail to consider the shared carceral logic of the criminal legal and family regulation system. This Essay utilizes the term family regulation system to more accurately describe the surveillance... 2022
Michael J. Glennon SYMBIOTIC SECURITY AND FREE SPEECH 14 Harvard National Security Journal 102 (2022) The marketplace of ideas exists today within a public square occupied mainly by social media platforms. Sheltered by the state action doctrine, which prohibits speech abridgment only by the government, and the government speech doctrine, which insulates the government's speech from constitutional constraints, the platforms and the government's... 2022
Aziz Z. Huq, John Rappaport SYMPOSIUM INTRODUCTION: THIS VIOLENT CITY? URBAN VIOLENCE IN CHICAGO AND BEYOND 89 University of Chicago Law Review 303 (March, 2022) To many, the city of Chicago conjures up a specter of unremitting urban violence. In 2014, the city was labeled the murder capital of the United States. The following year, a video of the police shooting Laquan McDonald became a cynosure of public concern. Commentators as disparate as Spike Lee and President Donald Trump agree: Chicago is... 2022
Kevin R. Johnson SYSTEMIC RACISM IN THE U.S. IMMIGRATION LAWS 97 Indiana Law Journal 1455 (Spring, 2022) This Essay analyzes how aggressive activism in a California mountain town at the tail end of the nineteenth century commenced a chain reaction resulting in state and ultimately national anti-Chinese immigration laws. The constitutional immunity through which the Supreme Court upheld those laws deeply affected the future trajectory of U.S.... 2022
Luz Estella Nagle , Juan Manuel Zarama TAKING RESPONSIBILITY UNDER INTERNATIONAL LAW: HUMAN TRAFFICKING AND COLOMBIA'S VENEZUELAN MIGRATION CRISIS 53 University of Miami Inter-American Law Review 1 (Spring, 2022) For more than six million Venezuelans, crossing international borders has become imperative to ensuring security and a livelihood that their country has failed to assure. These migrants and refugees, particularly young women and children, are vulnerable to many depredations, criminal acts, and the risk of becoming trafficking victims for forced... 2022
Clay Calvert TAKING THE FIGHT OUT OF FIGHTING WORDS ON THE DOCTRINE'S EIGHTIETH ANNIVERSARY: WHAT "N" WORD LITIGATION TODAY REVEALS ABOUT ASSUMPTIONS, FLAWS AND GOALS OF A FIRST AMENDMENT PRINCIPLE IN DISARRAY 87 Missouri Law Review 493 (Spring, 2022) Analyzing a trio of recent rulings involving usage of the N word by white people directed at Black individuals, this Article explores problems with the United States Supreme Court's fighting words doctrine on its eightieth anniversary. In the process of examining these cases and the troubles they illuminate, including the doctrine's dubious... 2022
Carly Margolis TARGETING POLICE UNIONS, RETHINKING REFORM 46 New York University Review of Law and Social Change 224 (2022) Police unions are a powerful obstacle to reform and abolition movements alike. This article tracks the (re)emergence of a political strategy targeting police unions as a site of police reform and abolition amid the summer 2020 uprising. It takes Washington, D.C.'s Defund MPD (Metropolitan Police Department) movement as a case study on the... 2022
Ben Clements THE BIG TECH ACCOUNTABILITY ACT: REFORMING HOW THE BIGGEST CORPORATIONS CONTROL AND EXPLOIT ONLINE COMMUNICATIONS 44 Western New England Law Review 5 (2022) A handful of global corporations have taken control of the internet, the dominant medium of modern communication and commerce, and have used that control to create and sell databases of personal information of Americans and to systematically amplify dangerous disinformation and violence on an unprecedented scale. This has created a growing threat... 2022
Josh Gehret THE CASE FOR REQUIRING FEDERAL LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENTS TO WEAR IDENTIFYING INSIGNIAS: PROGRESS MADE AND NEXT STEPS 51 University of Baltimore Law Review 275 (Spring, 2022) I. BRIEF OVERVIEW OF RECENT DEVELOPMENTS, CONGRESSIONAL ACTION, AND UNRESOLVED ISSUES. 276 II. LEGISLATIVE HISTORY--THE INSURRECTION ACT AND CONGRESSIONAL INTENT. 282 III. CIVIL DISTURBANCE INTERPRETATIONS BY COURTS REFERS TO VIOLENT OCCURRENCES. 284 A. U.S. Supreme Court. 285 B. State Courts. 286 IV. FEDERAL GOVERNMENT'S AUTHORITY TO COMMAND LAW... 2022
Tom I. Romero, II THE COLOR OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT: OBSERVATIONS OF A BROWN BUFFALO ON RACIAL IMPACT STATEMENTS IN THE MOVEMENT FOR WATER JUSTICE 25 CUNY Law Review 241 (Summer, 2022) This Article advocates for the adoption of racial impact statements (RIS) in local government decision making, particularly among water utilities. Situated in the larger history of water and climate injustice in Colorado and the arid American West, this Article examines ways that racially minoritized communities engage and contest legal and... 2022
Sherri Lee Keene, Susan A. McMahon THE CONTEXTUAL CASE METHOD: MOVING BEYOND OPINIONS TO SPARK STUDENTS' LEGAL IMAGINATIONS 108 Virginia Law Review Online 72 (February, 2022) A new student arrives at law school for her 1L year. She knows it sounds corny, but she's here to make the world a better place. She's seen injustice and tragedy (George Floyd, Parkland, climate change). She's protested with Black Lives Matter and March for Our Lives and the Sunrise Movement. She's heard, again and again, how her generation will... 2022
Cortney E. Lollar THE COSTS OF THE PUNISHMENT CLAUSE 106 Minnesota Law Review 1827 (April, 2022) Introduction. 1828 I. The Punishment Clause's History. 1834 A. Slavery and Involuntary Servitude. 1836 1. The Consequences of Failing to Define Slavery and Involuntary Servitude. 1836 2. Advocating for a Broader Interpretation. 1840 B. The Consequences of Failing to Define Punishment. 1843 1. Exploring the Types of Financial Punishments.... 2022
Angela Onwuachi-Willig THE CRT OF BLACK LIVES MATTER 66 Saint Louis University Law Journal 663 (Summer, 2022) Critical Race Theory (CRT), or at least its principles, stands at the core of most prominent social movements of today--from the resurgence of the #MeToo Movement, which was founded by a Black woman, Tarana Burke, to the Black Lives Matter Movement, which was founded by three Black women: Opal Tometi, Alicia Garza, and Patrisse Cullors. In fact,... 2022
Thomas Ward Frampton THE DANGEROUS FEW: TAKING SERIOUSLY PRISON ABOLITION AND ITS SKEPTICS 135 Harvard Law Review 2013 (June, 2022) Prison abolition, in the span of just a few short years, has established a foothold in elite criminal legal discourse. But the basic question of how abolitionists would address the dangerous few often receives superficial treatment; the problem constitutes a spectral force haunting abolitionist thought . as soon as abolitionist discourses... 2022
Ngozi Okidegbe THE DEMOCRATIZING POTENTIAL OF ALGORITHMS? 53 Connecticut Law Review 739 (February, 2022) Jurisdictions are increasingly embracing the use of pretrial risk assessment algorithms as a solution to the problem of mass pretrial incarceration. Conversations about the use of pretrial algorithms in legal scholarship have tended to focus on their opacity, determinativeness, reliability, validity, or their (in)ability to reduce high rates of... 2022
Joshua Gutzmann THE DIVERSITY FORMULA: A RACE-NEUTRAL PLAYBOOK FOR EQUITABLE STUDENT ASSIGNMENT AND ITS APPLICATION TO MAGNET SCHOOLS 107 Minnesota Law Review 415 (November, 2022) We deal here with the right of all of our children, whatever their race, to an equal start in life and to an equal opportunity to reach their full potential as citizens. Those children who have been denied that right in the past deserve better than to see fences thrown up to deny them that right in the future. Our nation, I fear, will be ill served... 2022
Shannon Malone Gonzalez , Samantha J. Simon , Katie Kaufman Rogers THE DIVERSITY OFFICER: POLICE OFFICERS' AND BLACK WOMEN CIVILIANS' EPISTEMOLOGIES OF RACE AND RACISM IN POLICING 56 Law and Society Review 477 (September, 2022) Diversifying police forces has been suggested to improve police-minority relations amidst national uprisings against police violence. Yet, little research investigates how police and black civilians--two groups invoked in discourse on police-minority relations--understand the function of diversity interventions. We draw on 100 in-depth... 2022
Katherine Beckett, Allison Goldberg THE EFFECTS OF IMPRISONMENT IN A TIME OF MASS INCARCERATION 51 Crime and Justice 349 (2022) Imprisonment has deleterious effects on prisoners' mental, physical, social, and economic well-being. These harms are long lasting and affect prisoners' partners and children. In the United States and elsewhere, imprisonment disproportionately inflicts these harms on people of color and people living in poverty. Although imprisonment is regarded as... 2022
Noa Ben-Asher THE EMERGENCY NEXT TIME 18 Stanford Journal of Civil Rights & Civil Liberties 51 (February, 2022) This Article offers a new conceptual framework to understand the connection between law and violence in emergencies. It is by now well-established that governments often commit state violence in times of national security crisis by implementing excessive emergency measures. The Article calls this type of legal violence Emergency-Affirming Violence... 2022
Robert J. Sampson , Brian L. Levy THE ENDURING NEIGHBORHOOD EFFECT, EVERYDAY URBAN MOBILITY, AND VIOLENCE IN CHICAGO 89 University of Chicago Law Review 323 (March, 2022) A longstanding tradition of research linking neighborhood disadvantage to higher rates of violence is based on the characteristics of where people reside. This Essay argues that we need to look beyond residential neighborhoods to consider flows of movement throughout the wider metropolis. Our basic premise is that a neighborhood's well-being... 2022
Rabia Belt THE FAT PRISONERS' DILEMMA: SLOW VIOLENCE, INTERSECTIONALITY, AND A DISABILITY RIGHTS FRAMEWORK FOR THE FUTURE 110 Georgetown Law Journal 785 (April, 2022) America is having a reckoning on mass incarceration. Events such as George Floyd's killing, COVID behind bars, and Black Lives Matter have punctured our collective consciousness. Advocates and scholars alike are pushing U.S. society to examine the costs--financial, psychic, social--of putting millions of people behind bars. Despite this... 2022
Rachel Simon THE FIREARM PREEMPTION PHENOMENON 43 Cardozo Law Review 1441 (April, 2022) Forty-five states have adopted express preemption statutes curtailing or entirely prohibiting local gun regulation, and several jurisdictions now threaten localities with penalties for violating such restrictions. These measures have been remarkably effective in reducing the breadth and variety of gun laws nationwide, but their consequences have... 2022
K-Sue Park THE HISTORY WARS AND PROPERTY LAW: CONQUEST AND SLAVERY AS FOUNDATIONAL TO THE FIELD 131 Yale Law Journal 1062 (February, 2022) This Article addresses the stakes of the ongoing fight over competing versions of U.S. history for our understanding of law, with a special focus on property law. Insofar as legal scholarship has examined U.S. law within the historical context in which it arose, it has largely overlooked the role that laws and legal institutions played in... 2022
Ben Horton THE HYDRAULICS OF INTERMEDIARY LIABILITY REGULATION 70 Cleveland State Law Review 201 (2022) The intermediary immunity created by Section 230 probably protects claims based on the non-legal harms of hate speech and misinformation as well as a European-style proportionality system of content moderation better than a more legalized intermediary liability regime would. Contrasting the existing non-copyright content moderation systems with... 2022
Kayla Bokzam THE IMPACT OF COVID-19 ON DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AND DIGITAL ABUSE: ADDRESSING THE PROBLEM THROUGH A NATIONAL ACTION PLAN 30 University of Miami International and Comparative Law Review 185 (Fall, 2022) This Article discusses the impact of COVID-19 on domestic violence and digital abuse around the world, with a focus on the United States. Violence against women has increased since the start of the pandemic largely due to lockdown restrictions and other measures taken by governments to slow the spread of the virus. Further, with an increase in the... 2022
Erik R. Zimmerman THE INCOMPATIBILITY OF THE POLICE USE OF FORCE OBJECTIVE REASONABLENESS STANDARD AND SPLIT-SECOND DECISION-MAKING 37-SUM Criminal Justice 36 (Summer, 2022) On July 14, 2018, Harith Augustus, a 37-year-old Black man, was walking home from his work at a barbershop on the Southside of Chicago when he was stopped by a police officer. The officer would eventually cite Augustus's acting like a typical armed person as justification for the stop. Augustus, who was wearing a holstered gun under his shirt... 2022
Andrew T. Hayashi THE LAW AND ECONOMICS OF ANIMUS 89 University of Chicago Law Review 581 (May, 2022) People sometimes want to harm other people. This truism points to a blind spot in law and economics scholarship, which generally assumes that people are indifferent to the effects of their actions on other people. Diverse areas of the law, such as hate-crime legislation and constitutional equal protection doctrine, reside in this blind spot because... 2022
Adam Crepelle THE LAW AND ECONOMICS OF CRIME IN INDIAN COUNTRY 110 Georgetown Law Journal 569 (March, 2022) C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 569 I. Crime in Indian Country. 576 II. Tribal Sovereignty and Criminal Justice. 579 III. The Economics of Crime. 586 IV. The Law and Economics of Crime in Indian Country. 589 V. Solutions. 601 a. jurisdictional fix. 603 b. more cops. 606 c. improve tribal economies. 609 Conclusion. 611 2022
Saul Cornell THE LONG ARC OF ARMS REGULATION IN PUBLIC: FROM SURETY TO PERMITTING, 1328-1928 55 U.C. Davis Law Review 2545 (June, 2022) C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 2545 I. Early Modern Rights Talk and On-Going Problems of Presentism in Second Amendment Scholarship and Law. 2548 II. The Modern Gun Rights Invention of a Right to Peaceable Armed Travel: English History vs. Gun Rights Fantasy. 2553 III. The Absorption and Transformation of the Common Law in Early America.... 2022
Xiaoyang Zhang THE LUKASHENKO CASE: IS HE PERSONA NON GRATA IN THE DIPLOMATIC SENSE? 23 Oregon Review of International Law 97 (2022) Abstract. 97 Introduction. 98 I. The Vienna Convention: The Right Law in the Lukashenko Case?. 100 II. What Are Lukashenko's Mandated Duties and Rights?. 105 III. Is the Lukashenko Case a Public Interest Case?. 106 IV. Magnitsky-Like Mechanisms Throughout the World. 112 Conclusion. 120 2022
Etienne C. Toussaint THE MISEDUCATION OF PUBLIC CITIZENS 29 Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy 287 (Spring, 2022) The American Bar Association Model Rules of Professional Conduct calls upon lawyers, as public citizens, to embrace a special responsibility for the quality of justice in the legal profession and in society. Yet, some law professors have historically adopted a formalistic and doctrinally neutral approach to law teaching that elides critical... 2022
Pitrina Gilger THE MODERN SECOND AMENDMENT: A PROGRESSIVE APPROACH TO LIMITING INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS UNDER THE SECOND AMENDMENT 31 Southern California Interdisciplinary Law Journal 403 (Winter, 2022) When a country with less than five percent of the world's population has nearly half of the world's privately owned guns and makes up nearly a third of the world's mass shootings, it's time to stop saying guns make us safer. DaShanne Stokes Gun ownership is a protected American right under the Second Amendment, which the Supreme Court has... 2022
Cynthia Godsoe THE PLACE OF THE PROSECUTOR IN ABOLITIONIST PRAXIS 69 UCLA Law Review 164 (March, 2022) Progressive prosecutors have been widely hailed as the solution to mass incarceration. This Article argues, to the contrary, that the legal arm of law enforcement can never be the full answer to its problems. While scholars critique police and call to defund and dismantle them, they overlook prosecutors. Building on the work of abolitionist... 2022
Ronald E. Britt II THE POLITICAL AND SOCIAL CHANGE DRIVEN BY PROTEST: THE NEED TO REFORM THE ANTI-RIOT ACT AND EXAMINE ANTI-RIOT PROVISIONS 90 Fordham Law Review 2269 (April, 2022) The right to join in peaceful assembly and petition is critical to an effective democracy and is at the core of the First Amendment. The assault of peaceful protestors in the pursuit of racial justice is not a new phenomenon, and legislators at the federal and state levels have drafted anti-riot provisions as a measure to target protestors they... 2022
Kate Levine THE PROGRESSIVE LOVE AFFAIR WITH THE CARCERAL STATE 120 Michigan Law Review 1225 (April, 2022) The Feminist War on Crime: The Unexpected Role of Women's Liberation in Mass Incarceration. By Aya Gruber. Oakland: University of California Press. 2020. Pp. xii, 288. Cloth, $29.95; paper, $24.95. Famed feminist attorney Gloria Allred, pictured above, has a wide smile as she holds up a sign displaying the sentence given to movie mogul and sexual... 2022
Sara Dillon THE PROPAGANDA CONUNDRUM: HOW TO CONTROL THIS SCOURGE ON DEMOCRACY 23 Oregon Review of International Law 123 (2022) Introduction. 123 I. Introducing Propaganda: We Cannot Go on Like This. 125 A. A Rights-Based Approach to the Propaganda Problem. 125 B. The Nature of Propaganda: Attacks on Freedom of Thought and Understanding. 135 C. Flooding the Zone: Turning Democracy Against Itself. 137 II. When Information Is the Weapon, How Do You Fight the War?. 143 A. New... 2022
Michael Milov-Cordoba THE RACIAL INJUSTICE AND POLITICAL PROCESS FAILURE OF PROSECUTORIAL MALAPPORTIONMENT 97 New York University Law Review 402 (April, 2022) District attorneys are responsible for the vast majority of criminal prosecutions in the United States, and most of them are elected by the public from prosecutorial districts. Yet these districts are massively malapportioned, giving rural, disproportionately white voters significantly more voting power over their district attorneys than urban... 2022
Dalia Castillo-Granados , Rachel Leya Davidson , Laila L. Hlass , Rebecca Scholtz THE RACIAL JUSTICE IMPERATIVE TO REIMAGINE IMMIGRANT CHILDREN'S RIGHTS: SPECIAL IMMIGRANT JUVENILES AS A CASE STUDY 71 American University Law Review 1779 (June, 2022) The immigration legal system has codified and perpetuated racial violence in many ways, yet the experiences of young people of color in this system have yet to be deeply examined. This Article surfaces the distinct and varied racialized harms that children experience in the immigration system through the example of Special Immigrant Juveniles.... 2022
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