The Harvard Law & Policy Review (HLPR) explores innovative approaches to policy challenges. HLPR is the official journal of the American Constitution Society.
False Claims Act attorneys @PoppyAlexander@McLambChris of @CCWhistleblower describe how TX's #SB8 - with its controversial bounty structure - is a "private vigilante law" rather than the kind of "private attorney general" statute on which it was modeled.
https://t.co/Z4J6e0BWXe
On Notice and Comment to close out Women's History Month with a bang! @MichelleSKallen and @allyrosecoll tackle the history and possible future of the Equal Rights Amendment: https://t.co/LqIq21RvXf
New on HLPR Notice and Comment:
What's in a Name? Prof. Ryan Nelson (@RyanHNelson) of the South Texas College of Law Houston looks at an underdiscussed, wild detail of the OSHA mask-or-vaccine mandate decision: https://t.co/kM78bzTdYV
Excellent rebuttal of the idea, which Justice Thomas pushed at oral argument, that SB8 is just like a private AG statute such as the False Claims Act. It's the opposite: a "Frankenstein law engineered solely to nullify the constit right to an abortion."
https://t.co/PTnWWpvqG0
New on HLPR’s Notice & Comment:
Prof. David S. Cohen (@dsc250) of @drexelkline writes about a “pernicious” and under-discussed provision in #SB8, Texas's anti-abortion law.
https://t.co/tdVEqdcI6y
The Harvard Law and Policy Review is seeking submissions for our student note competition, with winners to be published this winter! Please email [email protected]. The deadline for student note submission is Friday, October 1, 2021. https://t.co/ZWAygLdhF8
Haiyun Damon-Feng (@haiyundf) writes about the implications of the judiciary’s recent revival of the Trump administration’s “devastating” Remain in Mexico policy and what the Biden administration should do moving forward to protect asylum seekers: https://t.co/avVGWfW7Xp
Haiyun Damon-Feng makes the case that the Biden Administration should rescind removal orders from the Trump Admin's controversial "Remain in Mexico" policy. https://t.co/ZbI34XPJHr
Rachel Johnson-Farias of @BerkeleyLaw writes about how family separation policies disproportionately target families of color. Read the full piece in our newest print issue: https://t.co/qd1oLuJaO8
In our newest print issue, @gonzagalaw Lynn M. Daggett discusses the myth of student medical privacy through the lens of campus sexual assault: https://t.co/Ya04dIaVCU
In our new issue, The Politics of Pregnancy, @CrassHysteria and @cbsufrin analyze the legal, clinical, and socio-political dimensions of carceral control of reproduction. Read the full article here: https://t.co/Pks0vOqKMZ
.@GraceHowardPhD1 discusses how pregnant people are subject to surveillance, regulation, and control because of their pregnant status in our new print issue: https://t.co/B4TaeVuVzX
@StephBornstein writes in our new issue about "The Politics of Pregnancy Accommodation" and how reconstructive feminism should inform pregnant worker protections in our newest issue: https://t.co/fNODwy7xsR
In our newest issue @JoannaGrossman and Gillian Thomas of the @ACLU survey how lower courts have responded to Young v. UPS in the five years since @SCOTUS articulated a new framework for Pregnancy Discrimination Act claims:
https://t.co/KlQ6dRgOvY
We are proud to publish @BlkMamasMatter Research Working Group's research on Black Maternal Health, discussing principles and best practices for further research with, for, and by Black Mamas https://t.co/mWpqrvD7p5