Tuesday, January 7, 2025

And here's what the AALS Criminal Law Section has lined up...

As an addendum to my last post, on behalf of the AALS Criminal Procedure Section, what follows is information about the events planned by the AALS Criminal Law Section for the AALS Annual Meeting (posted at the request of the Section's chair, Cortney Lollar):

 

2025 AALS Annual Meeting Criminal Law Section Panels

 

Criminal Law Junior Scholars’ Works-in-Progress

Jan. 8, 2:40-4:10pm, Moscone Center, Room 212

Panelists: Matthew P. Cavedon (Emory), Guha Krishnamurthi (Maryland), Isis Misdary (Seton Hall), Benjamin Pyle (Boston University), Raquel Wilson (Kentucky); Shawn Fields (California Western), moderator

 

This session presents exciting works-in-progress by junior scholars in the Criminal Law field.

 

Criminal Law, Shaping Law through Applied Storytelling, Critical Theories & Epistemology in the Classroom

Jan. 9, 2:40-4:10pm, Moscone Center, Room 205

Panelists: Matthew Boaz (Kentucky), Bennett Capers (Fordham), Sherri Lee Keene (Georgetown), Marisol Orihuela (Yale), Maybell Romero (Tulane); Yvette Butler (Indiana), moderator

 

Panelists and the audience will consider the similarities and differences, as well as the consequences, of using Applied Legal Storytelling, Critical Theory, and Epistemology in legal scholarship, clinical work, legal education, and the legal profession. Panelists are Criminal Law scholars who work and write on the criminalization of marginalized communities, and plan to address the ways these overlapping methodologies impact their scholarship and the criminal system. By the end of the program, all will leave with a better understanding of how these methodologies work and which ones should be utilized for different impacts on scholarship and the legal system.

 

 

Pregnancy Crimes: New Research and Advocacy

Jan. 10, 9:50-11:20am, Moscone Center, Room 211

Panelists: Wendy Bach (Tennessee), Valena Beety (Indiana), Mary D.M. Fan (U. Washington), Eve Hanan (UNLV), Brenda V. Smith (American), Karen Thompson (Pregnancy Justice); Cortney Lollar (Georgia State), moderator

 

This panel addresses trends in policing, prosecution, and punishment related to pregnancy outcomes. In keeping with the conference theme of “Courage in Action,” the panel highlights advocacy efforts against the use of criminal systems to surveil, regulate, and punish pregnancy outcomes. The panel will address who is being prosecuted for their actions during or the outcomes of their pregnancies; the crimes are being charged and what evidence is deemed sufficient proof; how these cases being litigated, and by whom; and how the trends in pregnancy prosecutions intersect with race, gender, gender identity, sexuality, poverty, rurality, and access to health care.

 

 

Prison Law: Operating in the Shadows

Jan. 11, 9:50-11:20am, Moscone Center, Room 205

Panelists: Paulina Arnold (Michigan), Nicole Godfrey (Denver), Danielle Jefferis (Nebraska), Zina Makar (Baltimore), Tiffany Yang (Maryland); Ben Levin (Washington U.), moderator

 

Prison law is emerging as its own unique domain of scholarship where civil law operates within the criminal law space to focus specifically on the impact incarceration has on an individual beyond their conviction. This panel features a diverse set of works-in-progress that provide important descriptive and analytical accounts that illuminate new developments in prisons and prison law–they also deepen our understanding of how incarceration and the civil justice system function in our system of criminal law.

https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/crimprof_blog/2025/01/and-heres-what-the-aals-criminal-law-section-has-lined-up.html

Conferences, Crim Pro Adjudication, Crim Pro Investigation, Criminal Law, Teaching | Permalink

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