Jonathon Booth, University of Colorado Law School, has posted Policing after Slavery: Race, Crime, and Resistance in Atlanta, which is forthcoming in the University of Colorado
Law Review: [...]
Jonathon Booth, University of Colorado Law School, has posted Policing after Slavery: Race, Crime, and Resistance in Atlanta, which is forthcoming in the University of Colorado
Law Review: [...]
This article re-conceptualizes norm conflict in international law by uncovering the experiential dimension of its definition and the intentional dimension of its resolution,
which have been missing from the traditional accounts. The article locates the basis of recognizing norm conflict in the experienced sense of incompatibility between [...]
Because scholars have academic freedom, we can write about anything we want, without direction by deans or clients. So our choice of topics and perspectives is a good indicator
of what we really care about. Over the years, I was struck by the eclectic mix of subjects that Elayne Greenberg wrote about. A common thread … Continue reading [...]
Happy Passover to all! Here is the last student blog of the trip (other than I’ll post my own wrap up later this week) Our last part of the trip were two speakers that
I wanted to save for the end in order to really focus on the skills and thinking that our law students … Continue reading Israel Reflections–Day 4–Listening [...]
I have listened to most of yesterday's Supreme Court oral argument in City of Grants Pass v. Johnson. I share the basic sentiments reflected in the headlines of these press
accounts of the SCOTUS argument: From the New York Times, "Supreme Court Seems Poised to Uphold Local Bans on Homeless Encampments: A majority of the justices appeared [...]
The US Sentencing Commission yesterday released this new compassionate release data report, which includes data on "the compassionate release motions filed with the courts
and decided during the first quarter of fiscal year 2024." (For the USSC, the first quarter of FY 2024 is actually the last three months of 2023.) I noticed [...]
Ronald J. Allen, Michael S. Pardo, William J. Lawrence, and Christopher Smiciklas (Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law, Georgetown University Law Center, Sidley
Austin LLP and Northwestern University - Pritzker School of Law) have posted Minimal Rationality and the Law... [...]
Natasha Sarin (Yale; Google Scholar) presents Broken Budgeting (with Safia Sayed (J.D. 2025, Yale)) at Georgetown today as part of its Tax Law and Public Finance Workshop hosted
by Emily Satterthwaite and Dayanand Manoli: As peacetime deficits rose over the course of the last half century, policymakers searched for tools... [...]
Maria Dugas (Schulich School of Law, Dalhousie University) has posted Addressing anti-Black Racism in Sentencing: A Critical Comparison of R v Anderson, and R v Morris (The
Canadian Bar Review | December 2024 (v 102(3))) on SSRN. Here is the... [...]
[First posted in AWOL 15 November 2012, updated 23 August 2024] Les Cahiers du Centre Gustave Glotz sont nés en 1990, sous la forme d’un recueil d’articles sur le thème
« Du pouvoir dans l’antiquité », coordonné par Claude Nicolet. Dès l’année suivante, ils se transformèrent en une revue annuelle d’histoire de l’Antiquité, [...]