Sunday, December 3, 2023
are here. The usual disclaimers apply.
Rank |
Paper |
Downloads |
1. |
American University - Washington College of Law
|
113 |
2. |
College of William and Mary - Department of Economics
|
103 |
3. |
Duke Law School and Brookings Institution
Date Posted: 08 Nov 2023 [4th last week]
|
102 |
4. |
University of Oregon School of Law
Date Posted: 18 Oct 2023 [3rd last week]
|
96 |
5. |
Government of the United States of America - United States Marshals Service (USMS) and Independent
|
78 |
6. |
Charles University in Prague - Faculty of Law
Date Posted: 06 Nov 2023 [10th last week]
|
69 |
7. |
St. Mary's University School of Law
Date Posted: 28 Sep 2023 [6th last week]
|
68 |
8. |
St. Mary's University School of Law
Date Posted: 28 Sep 2023 [7th last week]
|
64 |
9. |
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) - School of Law
Date Posted: 12 Oct 2023 [new to top ten]
|
49 |
10. |
Northwestern University - Pritzker School of Law and Independent
Date Posted: 26 Apr 2022 [new to top ten]
|
38 |
December 3, 2023 | Permalink
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Saturday, December 2, 2023
are here. The usual disclaimers apply.
Rank |
Paper |
Downloads |
1. |
University of Virginia School of Law
|
208 |
2. |
University of Utah - S.J. Quinney College of Law
|
164 |
3. |
University of Chicago, Booth School of Business, Students
|
147 |
4. |
American University - Washington College of Law
|
113 |
5. |
Government of the United States of America - Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts and District of Nevada Pretrial Services Office
|
92 |
6. |
University of California, Berkeley - School of Law
Date Posted: 09 Nov 2023 [7th last week]
|
85 |
7. |
Northwestern University - Pritzker School of Law
Date Posted: 05 Oct 2023 [6th last week]
|
84 |
8. |
Southern Methodist University - Dedman School of Law
|
74 |
9. |
University of San Diego School of Law
Date Posted: 26 Oct 2023 [10th last week]
|
63 |
10. |
University of Manitoba - Faculty of Law
Date Posted: 07 Oct 2023 [9th last week]
|
62 |
December 2, 2023 | Permalink
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Friday, December 1, 2023
This Article will critically examine the U.S. Supreme Court’s Vega holding that failed to provide meaningful protection against illegally obtained incriminating statements. First, this Article will examine Vega’s key holding and the factual context that gave rise to this case. Next, this Article will turn to a targeted discussion of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Miranda’s historical context. Last, this Article will address the Vega Court’s lackluster cost-benefit analysis.
December 1, 2023 | Permalink
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In his 1989 essay “The Embarrassing Second Amendment,” Sanford Levinson suggested that left-leaning scholars avoid studying the Second Amendment because they are embarrassed that its text might mean what gun-rights proponents claim it means – an individual right to bear arms. Levinson urged such scholars to better engage the text, both to model intellectual integrity and to avoid unnecessarily ceding the terms of a critical constitutional debate.
This Article makes a similar argument with respect to the right to counsel. The Sixth Amendment guarantees the “the assistance of counsel” in “all criminal prosecutions.” To be sure, the Supreme Court held in Scott v. Illinois (1979) that the right is not “fundamental” in state cases where a defendant is not sentenced to jail time, citing federalism and budget concerns. Relying on Scott, courts routinely subject defendants to criminal conviction, fines, pretrial detention, and significant collateral consequences like deportation, all without a lawyer. Yet Scott appears squarely at odds with the Sixth Amendment’s text. To retain Scott, the Court would either have to concede that “all criminal prosecutions” should not be enforced as written, or apply the text only in federal court, not state court. Either concession would be hard for the current Court to make, given its ostensible commitments to textualism and to “single-track incorporation.”
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December 1, 2023 | Permalink
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Thursday, November 30, 2023
RICO has for over 50 years presented something of a parlor game for lawyers, mostly because its text leaves wide latitude in interpretation. And, as is often the case with RICO, resolution of one question begets more. The Supreme Court’s recent decision in Yegiazaryan v. Smagin proves no exception. Here, the Court brought some clarity to a question left open by RJR Nabisco: viz, what must one plead and prove to satisfy the “domestic injury” requirement necessary to invoke an extraterritorial application of RICO. The Court held that a foreign plaintiff can indeed, given the right facts and circumstances, establish a domestic injury. But it declined to establish a bright line test—or really any test, leaving that to the lower courts to flesh out. The Court also declined to engage the question of whether RICO is an appropriate vehicle for enforcing all (or perhaps international) arbitral awards. And—more generally—domestic judgments. Those and many other questions remain for another day.
November 30, 2023 | Permalink
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Benjamin Smith has posted The Fraud of Federalism: How the Modern Court Has Used the Meaning of “Property” to Reshape Federal Fraud Jurisprudence (Columbia Law Review, Forthcoming) on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
For the past several decades, the Supreme Court has shown a renewed interest in federal fraud jurisprudence. In a series of cases, the Court has repeatedly sought to re-interpret the meaning of "property" within the fraud statutes to limit the degree to which federal prosecutors can regulate state official misconduct. While the Court's interpretive approach to the federal fraud statutes has drawn varying degrees of praise and criticism from different sides of the legal community, this Note seeks to ask—in a apolitical, value-neutral fashion—whether the Courts stated ends are justified by their analytical means. The Note first undertakes a deep-dive analysis of the evolution of the Court's mail and wire fraud jurisprudence. It then shows how, on the Court's own terms, the modern fraud doctrine fails to meaningfully further their goals of drawing clear limits for federal prosecutors. In undertaking this close doctrinal analysis, this Note exposes slapdash doctrines that are rooted more in ideological interests than rigorous analytical and interpretive methods, and offers an lens to analyze Supreme Court jurisprudence that can be applied far beyond the fraud statues themselves.
November 30, 2023 | Permalink
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Wednesday, November 29, 2023
In the wake of Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, state laws criminalizing abortion raise concerns about the investigation and prosecution of women seeking reproductive healthcare and about the surveillance such investigations will entail. The criminalization of abortion is not new, and the investigation of abortion crimes has always involved the surveillance of women. However, state statutes criminalizing abortion coupled with surveillance methods and technologies that did not exist pre-Roe present new and complex challenges surrounding the protection of women’s privacy and liberty interests—in addition to the interests of those who may provide or help pregnant people obtain reproductive care. Accordingly, surveillance, investigation, and the possibility of prosecution create new and more extensive privacy concerns than those traditionally associated with the right to decide whether to have an abortion.
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November 29, 2023 | Permalink
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This special issue of the Australian Journal of Asian Law (AJAL) investigates issues relevant to the death penalty in Asia: the continued common use of the death penalty in the region; the procedures used to implement it; the justifications offered in its support, as well as the critiques offered by the reformers who seek its abolition and the campaigns they lead to that end. The articles in this issue therefore explore the current state of laws and policies regulating capital punishment in Asian countries, variously describing their substance and history, examining selected judicial decisions of importance, or investigating recent legal and policy changes.
November 29, 2023 | Permalink
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Tuesday, November 28, 2023
This chapter situates the experiences of Black and Latine incarcerated women and femmes within the context of carceral secrecy. Secrecy is often invoked as a necessary element of ensuring traditional conceptions of security. Carceral spaces, which disproportionately confine Black and Latine women and femmes, present an opportunity to critically examine how secrecy can enable insecurity for incarcerated women and femmes of color and their communities simultaneously with the alleged production of generalized security for all. By virtue of their confinement within these secret, gendered, and racialized carceral spaces, incarcerated women and femmes of color experience distinct physical and mental harms. These harms also flow outward, harming their communities as well. Employing an intersectional analysis focusing on incarcerated women and femmes of color raises questions of “security for whom” and highlights how disrupting secrecy is a critical piece of reimagining security.
November 28, 2023 | Permalink
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My legal training was the liberal kind, and I started this paper with a vague goal of mounting a spirited defense of the Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule against the incursions of the modern Supreme Court. But the rule I set out to defend—where ill-gotten evidence is excluded irrespective of the underlying crime or the nature of the officer’s misconduct—is dead, and it has been for a while. Frankly, it was doomed from the start. Trial court judges are, under their judicial robes, human beings. Their decision-making was always going to express a “moral” exclusionary rule: one where exclusion of ill-gotten evidence is reserved for unignorable police misconduct and prosecutions of misdemeanors and vice crimes. It is time to accommodate this reality. It is time to adopt an exclusionary rule for the real world.
November 28, 2023 | Permalink
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Monday, November 27, 2023
The EU’s proclaimed nature as a value-based Union trumps its values in practice, as well as the most essential rights of Europeans caught in the maze of CJEU’s wishful thinking. This reveals the new face of the Union as a powerful actor of injustice, which is incapable – as years go by – to correct the excesses of own – not only national-level – departures from the essential values it was created to ensure, safeguard and uphold. We demonstrate that the application of the current standards of mutual trust in EU law lead the EU and the Member States to systematically disregard the most essential principles of law, such as the presumption of innocence. In the current context neither the political institutions, nor the CJEU have displayed willingness in fully addressing Rule of Law backsliding and significant breaches of Article 2 TEU within the framework of mutual recognition. This reluctance persists despite the other EU institutions either lacking the ability, or the willingness, to shoulder political responsibility and actively contribute to resolving the intricate problem of a crisis in shared values. As a result, the EU becomes complicit, via its institutions unable to ensure that the basic substance of the Rule of Law be adhered to on the ground, while at the same time demanding mutual trust based on the requirement of ignorance of the actual state of the Union. This is a significant and painful violation of the core ideas underpinning post-enlightenment criminal law and the most basic due process guarantees. While mutual trust is crucial for the Union’s functioning, it is rightly not mentioned among the founding values of Article 2 TEU. Treating mutual trust as a super-principle capable of outweighing those values in practice – the daily practice of CJEU today, as we have demonstrated – is a grave violation of EU law significantly endangering the European unification project.
November 27, 2023 | Permalink
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While there has been commendable progress in the protection of vulnerable groups, the definition of vulnerability has been a fragmented exercise. While there are many meaningful descriptions of this concept, there is also the perception that scholars have defined vulnerability either too broadly or too narrowly. Definitions of vulnerability can be at times vague and elusive but they can also be biased and limited in their scope when vulnerability is connected to closed groups and categories. In addition, there has been a significant misuse of the term ‘vulnerability’ in scholarship, popular science, and media. This misuse of the concept risks depriving it from its intended meaning and protective impact. Considering existing scholarship, we review the four most relevant conceptualizations of vulnerability which define this concept based on the notions of (i) exposure to harm; (ii) individual particularities; (iii) the universal character of vulnerability; and (iv) the existence of multiple layers of vulnerability.
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November 27, 2023 | Permalink
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Sunday, November 26, 2023
are here. The usual disclaimers apply.
Rank |
Paper |
Downloads |
1. |
American University - Washington College of Law
Date Posted: 09 Oct 2023 [2nd last week]
|
113 |
2. |
College of William and Mary - Department of Economics
Date Posted: 11 Oct 2023 [3rd last week]
|
100 |
3. |
University of Oregon School of Law
Date Posted: 18 Oct 2023 [4th last week]
|
95 |
4. |
Duke Law School and Brookings Institution
Date Posted: 08 Nov 2023 [5th last week]
|
87 |
5. |
Government of the United States of America - United States Marshals Service (USMS) and Independent
Date Posted: 19 Oct 2023 [6th last week]
|
77 |
6. |
St. Mary's University School of Law
Date Posted: 28 Sep 2023 [8th last week]
|
67 |
7. |
St. Mary's University School of Law
Date Posted: 28 Sep 2023 [9th last week]
|
60 |
8. |
University of Nevada, Las Vegas, William S. Boyd School of Law
Date Posted: 25 Sep 2023 [10th last week]
|
53 |
9. |
George Mason University - Antonin Scalia Law School
Date Posted: 25 Sep 2023 [new to top ten]
|
53 |
10. |
Charles University in Prague - Faculty of Law
Date Posted: 06 Nov 2023 [new to top ten]
|
44 |
November 26, 2023 | Permalink
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Saturday, November 25, 2023
are here. The usual disclaimers apply.
Rank |
Paper |
Downloads |
1. |
University of Virginia School of Law
|
204 |
2. |
University of Utah - S.J. Quinney College of Law
Date Posted: 13 Oct 2023 [3rd last week]
|
155 |
3. |
University of Chicago, Booth School of Business, Students
Date Posted: 16 Oct 2023 [4th last week]
|
140 |
4. |
American University - Washington College of Law
Date Posted: 09 Oct 2023 [5th last week]
|
113 |
5. |
Government of the United States of America - Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts and District of Nevada Pretrial Services Office
Date Posted: 03 Oct 2023 [6th last week]
|
91 |
6. |
Northwestern University - Pritzker School of Law
Date Posted: 05 Oct 2023 [7th last week]
|
81 |
7. |
University of California, Berkeley - School of Law
Date Posted: 09 Nov 2023 [10th last week]
|
80 |
8. |
Southern Methodist University - Dedman School of Law
Date Posted: 11 Oct 2023 [9th last week]
|
72 |
9. |
University of Manitoba - Faculty of Law
Date Posted: 07 Oct 2023 [new to top ten]
|
57 |
10. |
University of San Diego School of Law
Date Posted: 26 Oct 2023 [new to top ten]
|
56 |
November 25, 2023 | Permalink
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Friday, November 24, 2023
Md Romel Sharif has posted Unmasking the Hypothetical: Money Laundering through Foreign Contractors in Underdeveloped Countries on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
This discussion uncovers how, in the guise of development, public funds are clandestinely laundered, resulting in dire economic and social consequences. We explore a hypothetical scenario involving foreign contractors and ambitious projects in underdeveloped countries, highlighting the vulnerabilities in anti-money laundering efforts and advocating for regulatory enhancements and transparency. Real-world challenges, such as limited regulatory oversight, financial inclusion gaps, and corruption, are examined alongside common money laundering techniques. The erosion of key institutions amplifies the danger, exemplifying the perilous link between corruption and money laundering. This discussion serves as a clarion call for more robust anti-money laundering measures and enhanced international collaboration in countering this widespread and destructive phenomenon.
November 24, 2023 | Permalink
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This Essay critiques a set of arguments often made to justify the use of AI and algorithmic decision-making technologies. These arguments all share a common premise – that human decision-making is so deeply flawed that augmenting it or replacing it with machines will be an improvement.
In this Essay, we argue that these arguments fail to account for the full complexity of human and machine decision-making when it comes to deciding about humans. Making decisions about humans involves special emotional and moral considerations that algorithms are not yet prepared to make – and might never be able to make.
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November 24, 2023 | Permalink
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Thursday, November 23, 2023
Artificial intelligence is a new and extremely quickly developing technology, which is expected, and maybe even feared to bring enormous changes in every aspect of our society. Even though this technology is still comparatively underdeveloped, we already hand over a multitude of everyday-tasks. As for now AI is mostly used to take over tasks, which are often perceived as “annoying” or highly time consuming. Therefore, it shall enhance productivity in first place. It is expected to do many of the tasks even better than human beings. At least in future. Some of these tasks, such as autonomous driving are quite dangerous, bearing the potential to infringe peoples protected rights, and even cause physical harm and death to human beings. Obviously, such technology needs a solid and reliable legal basis, especially in terms of liability, if the inevitable happens and the technology causes events that were not intended to happen. However, a well-developed set of rules should not only concern private law. Especially when such technology causes harm or even death to human beings, the question of a criminal deed arises, in a sense of criminal negligence for example. Future criminal law must be prepared and probably adjusted effectively tackle any questions concerning criminal liability of artificial intelligence.
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November 23, 2023 | Permalink
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Wednesday, November 22, 2023
Whether crime victims should present victim impact statements (VISs) at sentencing remains a subject of controversy in the criminal justice literature. But relatively little is known about the content of VISs and how victims use them. This article provides a content analysis of the 168 VISs presented in a Michigan court sentencing of Larry Nassar, who pleaded guilty to decades of sexual abuse of young athletes while he was treating them for various sports injuries. Nassar committed similar crimes against each of his victims, allowing a robust research approach to answer questions about the content, motivations for, and benefits of submitting VISs. Specifically, it is possible to explore the question of whether (roughly) the same crimes produce (roughly) the same VISs. The VISs reveal the victims’/survivors’ motive for presenting VISs, their manner of presenting the impact of sexual abuse, their interactions with the sentencing judge and the defendant, and other features of the VISs. Analyzing the VISs’ contents confirms many of the arguments supporting using VISs at sentencing and challenges some lingering objections to them. The findings support the desirability of VISs for informational, therapeutic, and educational purposes in criminal sentencings.
November 22, 2023 | Permalink
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Tuesday, November 21, 2023
The Right to Financial Privacy Act of 1978 was enacted to protect Americans from warrantless surveillance. In theory, it was supposed to counter the financial surveillance born out of the Bank Secrecy Act of 1970 and the Supreme Court case United States v. Miller in 1976. In practice, however, the Right to Financial Privacy Act failed to live up to its name because it was enacted with a list of 20 different exceptions to its protections. From law enforcement inquiries to federal statutes, the exceptions covered nearly all forms of financial surveillance. Worse yet, these issues have only been compounded in the digital age. The prevalence of credit cards, mobile banking, and other app‐based financial tools has created an unprecedented supply of financial data. Government efforts like Operation Choke Point, the Treasury’s $600 reporting threshold proposal, and the constant increase of the scope of Bank Secrecy Act reporting have already made it evident how these financial data are being used. Such unrivaled access to the lives of all Americans makes it evident that now, more than ever, it is time to rethink how financial privacy is treated in the United States. Turning back the clock may not be possible, but removing the exceptions to the Right to Financial Privacy Act would establish the financial privacy protections that Americans should have had from the beginning.
November 21, 2023 | Permalink
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