A new episode of California Law Review's official podcast, Source Collect, is live!๐๏ธ
Professors @cynthia_godsoe and @ShantaTrivedi join CLR's Juliette Draper to discuss their February California Law Review article, "Parenting as a Crime."
Listen wherever you get your podcasts!
@Claussen_K@Tim_L_Meyer@thomaskadri Ortal Issac discusses the double bind that healthcare professionals face when the very same emergency lifesaving care they can give might also make them criminally liable for performing an abortion and what legal ways forward there might be for reproductive activism.
@Claussen_K@Tim_L_Meyer@thomaskadri Rebecca Cooley surveys the changing legal landscape when it comes to immigration detention labor, and discusses what forms of legal relief detained immigrants might have.
A new episode of California Law Reviews's official podcast, Source Collect, is live!๐๏ธ
Professor Fanna Gamal at UC Los Angeles School of Law joins CLR's Davis Rich to discuss her April article, "The Algorithmic Racial Proxy."
Listen wherever you get your podcasts!
As part of CLR Online's Student Series Column, Berkeley Law student Dawson Wilcox analyzes the difference between three global economic blocs (the U.S., the E.U., and China) as tariffs are used as a tool of economic coercion.
Read the Column here: https://t.co/nwNbmnCTsl.
Special congratulations to our honorees of the night: Alumni of the Year, Shana Simmons (Vol. 97); Young Alumni of the Year, David Maxson (Vol. 109); Distinguished Service Award recipient, Max Friend (Vol. 114); and Diversity Award recipient, Shree Mehrotra (Vol. 114).
The California Law Review was proud to host our annual alumniย banquet, bringing together members, alumni, and distinguished guests for an evening of celebration and reflection. Thank you to everyone who made the night so memorable.
As part of CLR Online's Student Series Column, Berkeley Law student Cole Troutner evaluates how the Supreme Court's decision in Learning Resources v. Trump indicates trouble for the Major Questions Doctrine.
Read the Column here: https://t.co/tNVc1ASlei
CLR Online is back with a new piece by @GiladAbiri, "Corporations Constituting Intelligence."
Anthropic recently published an updated Constitution for its AI model Claude. But does that same Constitution create risks for a democratic society?
Read more: https://t.co/tEAcDdCEzL.
A new episode of CLR's official podcast, Source Collect, is live!๐๏ธ
@MABanerjee at the Jurisprudence and Social Policy Program of UC Berkeley Law joins CLR to discuss his CLR Online article, "What Harvard's Lawsuit Should Have Said."
Listen wherever you get your podcasts!
@susancmorse@dianareddy@NitishaBaronia Devanshi Patel-Martin looks at the jurisprudence that applies Calder v. Jones to online interactions, and argues that a new system of personal jurisdiction is necessary in our interconnected age.
@susancmorse@dianareddy@NitishaBaronia Emad Atiq interrogates some of the philosophical difficulties around the traditional use of the Hand Formula, and argues that a "disaggregated" approach to the Formula is more useful and effective.