The final Comment in our Online Volume, Three Strikes, Youβre Out: Examining The Baseball Trilogy and the Path to Removing Its Antitrust Exemption, is written by Megan Young and available below!
https://t.co/mASW2TGJNd
Next in our Online Volume is a Comment written by Maya Vazquez about how sensationalizing trials dilutes methods of jury insulation. Check it out on our website below.
https://t.co/Yf2AmlO5TA
Three student Notes & Comments have been added to our Online Volume! First up is a piece written by Joseph Dowdell entitled, Mandating Climate-Related Risks and GHG Emissions: Does The Securities and Exchange Commission Have The Power? Check it out below!
https://t.co/UA1LbokJb9
Last up for our student pieces is Halina Bereday's Note entitled: West Virginia v. EPA: Majorly Questioning Administrative Agency Action & Authority.
https://t.co/IjoIvdi1Od
Next up for our student pieces, is Rosemary Ardman's which discusses victim impact statements, child sexual abuse, and the role of catharsis in criminal law through the lens of the Larry Nassar hearings.
https://t.co/qlGklDokA9
First up for our student Notes & Comments is a piece authored by Anna Manogue discussing the then-Court of Appeals of Maryland opinion in "In re S.F."
https://t.co/A7rNJ6P1ZC
Professor Michael Serota's Article, Guilty Minds, transforms the historically vague Guilty Minds approach into a multi- dimensional model of culpability rooted in the communityβs sense of justice.
https://t.co/04PQy0aWGA
In her second installment of the "Trap Chronicles," Professor Lahny Silva discusses one of the biggest traps in the American criminal justice system, correctional supervision. Check it out below.
https://t.co/M0zmC94VqV
Issue 3 is here! Check out Professor Yotam Kaplan's
article discussing "The Cathedral," a celebrated article authored by Guido Calabresi and Douglas Melamed.
https://t.co/Pb4DCHljov
Finally, in her Note, Tori Shaw argues that the Supreme Court in Jones v. Mississippi improperly detached a sentencer's consideration of a juvenile defendant's youth and any attendant circumstances from its principal purpose.
https://t.co/SYJjN8Duzc
In their Article, The New Normal: Regulatory Dysfunction as Policymaking, @minghsuchen and @daimeon_shanks expose the phenomenon of regulatory dysfunction in policymaking. Take a look below!
https://t.co/xevYTql4CK
Next up in Issue 2 is Professor Sam Kalen's Article suggesting a paradigm shift to remedy the antiquated past of the United States' public land laws.
https://t.co/Ng8HTvWG7H
Issue two is here! Professor Genevieve Mann's article proposes a more robust and creative framework to address the rise in elder financial exploitation due to power-of-attorney abuse. Check it out below!
https://t.co/nJt8pgLlOk
Originally published on the Maryland Law Review's blog, Professor Richard Boldt's "Dobbs" Essay argues that the right to reproductive autonomy was the product of reasoned judgment which has not been replaced with raw politics.
https://t.co/7t7NaaqRh7
Check out the Maryland Law Review's release event for A Butterfly in COVID: Structural Racism and Baltimore's Pretrial Legal System. Panelists included author Doug Colbert, author @ColinStarger, Dr. Lawrence T. Brown, and Professor Maneka Sinha.
https://t.co/QoV0yjinNO
It is with a heavy heart that the Maryland Law Review writes to commemorate Shane Doyle, a beloved Volume 80 Associate Editor and excellent writer who published a Comment on "silent concurrences." Our condolences go out Shane's friends and family.
https://t.co/uWMfpbe0Eo
Finally, Issue 1 pays tribute to Chief Judge Joseph M. Getty who retired from the bench in early 2022. Chief Judges Getty's former colleagues, Chief Judge Fader, Judge Watts, and Judge Booth, and former law clerks, Kaitlin E. Leary and Daniel M. Moore, each authored a tribute.