Wednesday, May 25, 2022
The unconstitutional conditions doctrine limits the ability of governments to force individuals to choose between retaining a right and enjoying a government benefit. The doctrine has primarily remained a creature of federal law, with neither courts nor commentators focusing on the potentially important role of state doctrines of unconstitutional conditions. This omission has become especially significant during the COVID-19 pandemic, as actions by state and local governments have presented unconstitutional conditions questions in a range of novel contexts.
As attention turns to distinctive state constitutional rights, in the context of COVID-19 litigation and more generally, state courts should develop their own state doctrines of unconstitutional conditions, rather than simply reverting to federal unconstitutional conditions analysis.
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May 25, 2022 | Permalink
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Tuesday, May 24, 2022
Does law enforcement use of face recognition technology paired with eyewitness identifications increase the incidence of wrongful convictions in U.S. criminal law? This Article explores this critical question and posits that the answer may be yes. Facial recognition is frequently used by law enforcement agencies to help generate investigative leads that are then presented to eyewitnesses for positive identification. But erroneous eyewitness accounts are the number one cause of wrongful convictions, and the use of face recognition to generate investigative leads may create the conditions for erroneous eyewitness identifications to take place. This is because face recognition technology is designed to query a large database of faces to find lookalikes, and sometimes an innocent lookalike will resemble a suspect so closely that police may mistakenly select that person as an investigative lead, and an eyewitness may be unable to tell the difference between the lookalike and the actual suspect. This Article explores this possible problem and offers policy recommendations to help address it.
May 24, 2022 | Permalink
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This Article uses the recent NFL “race-norming” scandal—in which Black players with concussion claims were scored differently on cognitive impairment tests, based on the assumption that they were less intelligent at baseline—as an entry point to a broad-ranging analysis of inconsistencies in the law’s treatment of statistical discrimination. The Supreme Court has emphatically and repeatedly rejected efforts to justify otherwise-illegal discrimination against individuals by resort to statistical generalizations about groups. This doctrine makes practices like the NFL’s not just repugnant, but illegal—yet such practices are pervasive and persistent, in high-stakes settings far beyond the NFL. Similar race-norming in diagnostic algorithms is ubiquitous in medicine, for example, but has avoided legal scrutiny. Moreover, the justice system itself has embraced numerous similar practices, including demographic norming of intellectual-capacity assessments for defendants facing the death penalty, explicit class-based discrimination in criminal justice risk assessments, and the use of race- and sex-specific actuarial data to calculate tort damages. This Article examines these practices, the law governing them, and the reasons for these disconnects between law and practice.
May 24, 2022 | Permalink
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Monday, May 23, 2022
This article discusses in broad terms the longstanding and significant problem of convicted sex offenders traveling internationally to abuse children, and the efforts underway in the United States to prevent such offending behavior. It focuses on how the United States shares information about known offenders when they travel internationally and provides an overview of existing sex offender registration systems around the world. These discussions demonstrate that many nations are in a position to proactively exchange information about known sex offenders with one another to better protect their own countries.
The Article proceeds in seven parts. A general discussion about the problem of the sexual exploitation of children in travel and tourism (SECTT) is found in Part I.
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May 23, 2022 | Permalink
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Nino Monea has posted Is the Contempt Power Obsolete? (127 Dickinson Law Review __ (2022)) on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
Contempt power has been with us for as long as we’ve had courts in this country. Through summary contempt proceedings, judges may imprison any person they deem insufficiently respectful to the authority of the court—with significantly less due process than a person would be entitled to under any other criminal offense. In theory, this is necessary to maintain order in the court. But in practice, summary contempt power is serially and seriously abused. Judges use incarceration to deal with piddling offenses or seemingly for no real reason at all. This Article argues that the concept of allowing judges nearly unbridled discretion to jail people for rudeness is outdated and should be reformed.
May 23, 2022 | Permalink
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Sunday, May 22, 2022
are here. The usual disclaimers apply.
Rank |
Paper |
Downloads |
1. |
University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School
Date Posted: 21 Mar 2022 [2nd last week]
|
257 |
2. |
University of Oxford
Date Posted: 05 Oct 2021 [3rd last week]
|
213 |
3. |
University of Colorado Law School
Date Posted: 10 May 2022 [new to top ten]
|
166 |
4. |
SMU Dedman School of Law
Date Posted: 11 Apr 2022 [new to top ten]
|
135 |
5. |
Ontario Superior Court of Justice
Date Posted: 17 Apr 2022 [8th last week]
|
122 |
6. |
University of Pennsylvania - Carey Law School
Date Posted: 28 Mar 2022 [7th last week]
|
116 |
7. |
Harvard Law School
Date Posted: 14 May 2022 [new to top ten]
|
116 |
8. |
Northwestern University - Pritzker School of Law and Bar-Ilan UniversityUC Berkeley School of Law
Date Posted: 06 Apr 2022 [6th last week]
|
113 |
9. |
University of North Carolina School of Law, Wake Forest University - School of Law and Independent
Date Posted: 17 Apr 2022 [new to top ten]
|
111 |
10. |
University of Minnesota - Twin Cities - School of Law
Date Posted: 05 Oct 2021 Last Revised: 05 Oct 2021
|
91 |
May 22, 2022 | Permalink
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Saturday, May 21, 2022
are here. The usual disclaimers apply.
Rank |
Paper |
Downloads |
1. |
Tulane University Law School
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705 |
2. |
Washington and Lee University - School of Law
|
630 |
3. |
Washington and Lee University - School of Law
|
609 |
4. |
Washington and Lee University - School of Law
|
594 |
5. |
Washington and Lee University - School of Law and Washington University School of Law
Date Posted: 01 Apr 2022 [6th last week]
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496 |
6. |
Washington University in St. Louis - School of Law and Washington University in St. Louis - School of Law
Date Posted: 21 Mar 2022 [5th last week]
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479 |
7. |
University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School
|
257 |
8. |
Pace University - School of Law and Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University
|
219 |
9. |
University of Colorado Law School
Date Posted: 10 May 2022 [new to top ten]
|
166 |
10. |
Southern Methodist University - Dedman School of Law and Tulane University - Law School
Date Posted: 15 Mar 2022 [9th last week]
|
138 |
May 21, 2022 | Permalink
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Friday, May 20, 2022
In this Article, I explore the practical and theoretical conflicts that might
surface when the diversion movement and the Victims’ Rights Movement
intersect. I focus on two possible sites of tension: victim input into the diversion
offer and the victim’s right to receive restitution as a term of diversion.
Protocols to give victims greater voice in the justice process have been
a mainstay of the burgeoning Victims’ Rights Movement for the past several
decades, but I argue that those protocols must be understood within
(and thus limited by) the contexts of fiscal responsibility, compassion for
the offender, and proportionality in the justice system that lie at the heart of
diversion schemes. Any other arrangement risks elevating retribution over
rehabilitation and inserts a level of arbitrariness into the diversion process
that would subvert our commitment to fairness and transparency.
May 20, 2022 | Permalink
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Amber Baylor (Columbia Law School) has posted an abstract of
Unexceptional Protest (
UCLA Law Review, Vol. 70, No. 3, 2023 Forthcoming) on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
Anti-protest legislation is billed as applying only in the extreme circumstances of mass-movements and large-scale civil disobedience. Mass protest exceptionalism provides justification for passage of anti-protest laws, even in states otherwise hesitant to expand public order criminal regulation. Examples include a Virginia bill that heightens penalties for a “failure to disperse following a law officer’s order”; a Tennessee law directing criminal penalties for “blocking traffic”; a bill in New York criminalizing “incitement to riot by nonresidents.” These laws might be better described as anti-protest expansions of public order legislation. The consequences of anti-protest legislation on highly surveilled communities are alarming.
While existing critiques of these laws emphasize the chilling effects on protestor speech, this analysis masks the threat of such legislation outside of mass protest. In actuality, the application of anti-protest legislation is not limited to “exceptional” circumstances, increasing everyday public order, criminal law regulation for Black, Latinx, and other targeted communities.
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May 20, 2022 | Permalink
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Thursday, May 19, 2022
Maëlle Stricot has posted Understanding the factors behind the (under-)reporting of sexual violence: Evidence from France on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
Using data from the French victimisation survey, this paper explores the determinants of reporting sexual violence to the police. My contribution to the economics of crime and economics of social norms literature is threefold. First, using binary regression models, I show that assault characteristics have higher explanatory power than victim's socio-demographic characteristics on this high-stakes individual decision. This descriptive analysis also highlights the significant influence of victims' social stigmatisation on the decision to file a complaint. Second, I employ a difference-in-difference strategy comparing the reporting rate for sexual and physical violence to analyse the effect of two high-profile sexual assault cases that pictured different representations of victims and the reporting process. On average, I find a 158% drop in sexual violence reporting following the allegations against Dominique Strauss-Kahn in May 2011, compared to a 111% increase after the ones against Harvey Weinstein in October 2017. Third, I provide evidence that changes in opinions and representations about sexual violence seem to be the primary mechanism explaining the increase in sexual violence reporting after the Weinstein case and #MeToo. These results suggest that social norms and representations surrounding sexual violence firmly influence the victim's reporting decision.
May 19, 2022 | Permalink
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In this paper we argue that prosecutors ought to embrace deflection programs for substance users who commit low-level offenses. Deflection programs provide services to substance users and other vulnerable populations before, or outside of, the point of arrest. They offer participants voluntary admission and wrap-around services to help them get back on their feet – out from under the threat of incarceration if they relapse. Innovators have embraced the term “deflection” because the goal is to keep the substance user out of the justice system entirely, and to provide a warm handoff to service providers instead of a cold transport to county jail.
The benefits of prosecutor involvement are numerous.
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May 19, 2022 | Permalink
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Nino Monea has posted Low Income, Poor Outcome: Unequal Treatment of Indigent Defendants (Wayne Law Review, Vol. 67, No. 2, 2022) on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
It is no secret that the law treats poor people worse than rich ones. This is true in criminal law and everywhere else. But some laws do not simply result in disparate impact upon the poor—the way they are written explicitly targets or disadvantages the poor. This Article examines the spectrum of expressly biased laws in four major categories. First, laws that criminalize poverty: bans on poor housing or no housing, traffic laws that require nothing more than paying for things, and cash bail that imprisons people without access to credit. Second, courts impose an enormous number of unwaivable fees at every step of the criminal justice system, and failure to pay results in incarceration—a modern day debtor prison. Third, many criminal procedure rules place the needy on unequal footing. Only indigent defendants are required to suffer reduced expectations of privacy, disclose certain information, face judicial scrutiny, endure low caps on what their attorneys can be paid, or go into hearing without an attorney. And fourth, after conviction, these defendants face unique hurdles to recover for wrongful imprisonment or expensive expungement processes.
May 19, 2022 | Permalink
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Wednesday, May 18, 2022
What if instead of seeing criminal court as an institution driven by the operation of rules, we saw it as a workplace where people labor to criminalize those with the misfortune to be prosecuted? I offer three different ways to think about labor in criminal court: (1) labor as a source of sociological value, (2) labor as an input that generates certain measurable outcomes, and (3) labor as a vehicle to advance abolitionist reforms. First, through their quotidian activities, criminal courts’ workers enact a practical philosophy that communicates lessons about who and how we value each other. Drawing on ethnographic accounts, I argue that criminal courts’ actors—prosecutors and judges, among others—engage in “violence work.” The violence is not only physical but also social and structural. Their labor weakens social bonds and entrenches group-level hierarchies, expressed as race, class, and ability.
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May 18, 2022 | Permalink
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Gil Rothschild Elyassi has posted The Datafication of Law: How Technology Encodes Carceral Power and Affects Judicial Practice in the United States (Law and Social Inquiry, Vol. 47, No. 1, 2022) on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
This inquiry explores how data analyses about US Federal sentences have transformed sentencing practice beginning in the mid-1980s. I consider this inquiry an early case of the datafication of law, a pervasive process that translates legal practice into data and embeds it in digital networks so it can be tracked and analyzed in real time. To explore datafication historically and in relation to legal practice and power, I consider it not as an objective and passive undertaking but, rather, as an ideological and performative process that encodes and enacts normative presumptions and desirable futures. The empirical inquiry traverses “levels of analysis” and thus bridges prominent perspectives in sociolegal research. In so doing, I identify four mechanisms that mediate “large-scale” processes and “local” practices: field assembly, symbolic projection, material inscription, and boundaries spanning. Substantively, I show how datafication has not simply described, but also transformed, sentencing practice according to a colorblind-carceral imaginary that strives to fix the present in place. By relentlessly translating decisions into data forms that derive from this carceral imaginary, datafication affects judicial action and partakes in sustaining legacies of oppression. Yet, like other technologies, datafication also reveals dialectic dimensions in opening up to new actors and subjecting its ideological underpinnings to contestation and change.
May 18, 2022 | Permalink
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Barnett Harris has posted Is Misdemeanor Cash Bail an Unconstitutional Excessive Fine? (2021 Pepp. L. Rev. 72 (2022)) on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
“[H]ere we are in 2018 . . . still litigating incorporation of the Bill of Rights. Really? Come on . . . .”
– Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch
“[O]ur bail system—excuse the expression—is totally ass-backwards in every respect.”
– New York Court of Appeals Chief Judge Jonathan Lippman
The Excessive Fines Clause is one of the least developed clauses pertaining to criminal procedure in the Bill of Rights. In fact, the Supreme Court has only interpreted the Clause a few times in its entire history. Yet, on any given day, hundreds of thousands of people languish in jails without having been convicted of anything, because most of these people are unable to meet the bail amount a judge sets.
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May 18, 2022 | Permalink
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Tuesday, May 17, 2022
We know there are problems in the use of artificial intelligence in policing, but we don’t quite know what to do about them. One can also find many reports and white papers today offering principles for the responsible use of AI systems by the government, civil society organizations, and the private sector. Yet, largely missing from the current debate in the United States is a shared framework for thinking about the ethical and responsible use of AI that is specific to policing. There are many AI policy guidance documents now, but their value to the police is limited. Simply repeating broad principles about the responsible use of AI systems are less helpful than ones that 1) take into account the specific context of policing, and 2) consider the American experience of policing in particular. There is an emerging consensus about what ethical and responsible values should be part of AI systems. This essay considers what kind of ethical considerations can guide the use of AI systems by American police.
May 17, 2022 | Permalink
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Women have been accorded equal status to males under the Constitution, yet equality with their male counterparts remains a distant dream. Post-independence, several laws were enacted to meet international obligations toward the betterment of women, but they were largely ineffective due to irrational provisions and poor implementation. Women are vulnerable internally as well as externally in our society. Internal violence or domestic violence is the most heinous kind of crime against women because the perpetrators are those who have been entrusted with the custody of women, and the location of the occurrence is where a woman is supposed to feel safe and protected. It must however be noted that abuse committed within the private walls is not merely limited to the relationship of marriage and also extends to other relationships in the nature of marriage as well as other unions. In this paper, the authors attempt to analyse the laws in India which protect women from sexual and domestic violence in relationships in order to measure their efficacy. Moreover, the laws must change in order to meet the changing demands of the society. With the courts according to legal recognition to other forms of relationships such as live-in-relationships, this paper attempts to analyse the protection accorded to women from abuse within the walls of such relationships.
May 17, 2022 | Permalink
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I. Bennett Capers (Fordham University School of Law) has posted
Future Sex (
NYU ANNUAL SURVEY OF AMERICAN LAW 2021) on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
If we care about crafting reforms to protect women and men from unwanted sex, then it behooves us to first have an open and honest discussion about wanted sex. It also behooves us to imagine what a future with only wanted sex would look like. Future Sex—the second work in a trilogy that began with Afrofuturism, Critical Race Theory, and Policing in the Year 2044, 94 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 1 (2019)—considers where we have been, and where we are going, when it comes to reforming sexual assault laws. Equally important, it considers where we want to be. It explores how feminist futurists have imagined sexual autonomy in a utopian world. After all, it is this future that should be our north star, that will help us keep our eyes on the prize and reduce the likelihood of being sidetracked or losing track and ending up someplace else. It will reduce too the likelihood of our passing reforms that inadvertently contribute to mass incarceration, over-criminalization, and the racialized and gendered policing that seem to accompany them. In short, we should all be thinking about future sex.
May 17, 2022 | Permalink
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Monday, May 16, 2022
Issue summary is from ScotusBlog, which also links to papers:
- Jones v. Hendrix: Whether federal inmates who did not — because established circuit precedent stood firmly against them — challenge their convictions on the ground that the statute of conviction did not criminalize their activity may apply for habeas relief under 28 U.S.C § 2241 after the Supreme Court later makes clear in a retroactively applicable decision that the circuit precedent was wrong and that they are legally innocent of the crime of conviction.
May 16, 2022 | Permalink
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