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Media, Law & Policy

College of Law Faculty Place Scholarship in Top Law Journals

Sunday, April 25, 2021, By Martin Walls
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College of LawResearch and Creative

Reaffirming the College of Law鈥檚 position as a leader in cutting-edge legal research, several top 50 law journals have accepted or published 黑料不打烊 Law faculty articles during 2020-2021. Addressing a spectrum of topics鈥攊ncluding criminal justice reform, disability, health care, long-term care, constitutional law, climate change and zoning鈥攁mong the College of Law’s recent notable placements are:

Doron Dorfman

  • 鈥,鈥 Boston College Law Review (forthcoming 2022) Using the example of PrEP鈥攁 highly effective, FDA-approved HIV-prevention treatment鈥擠orfman demonstrates how moral judgments around sexuality, which are unsupported by clear data, color public health decisions at both the policy and patient levels.
  • 鈥,鈥 University of Illinois Law Review (2021) Taking an empirical law and psychology approach, Dorfman assesses the 鈥渕oral panic鈥 and 鈥渁ssistance-animal disability con鈥 surrounding the perceived misrepresentation of pets as assistance animals and how people with disabilities who use service dogs are compelled to signal compliance to avoid harassment, questioning or exclusion.

David Driesen

  • 鈥,鈥 Emory Law Journal (forthcoming 2021) The 鈥減olitical remedies doctrine鈥 maintains that courts ought not adjudicate separation of powers claims until both political branches of government have asserted their rights. By arguing that courts should not apply this doctrine鈥攅xcept perhaps to avoid adjudication of challenges to bipartisan legislation signed by the president鈥擠riesen also provides new insights about the proper role of bargaining in resolving separation of powers, general theory about the relationship between law and politics, and understandings about how courts should approach justiciability.
  • 鈥,鈥 Hastings Law Journal (2020) Driesen analyzes the debate in the United States over the unitary executive theory in light of other countries鈥 experiences, primarily through case studies of recent democratic decline in Hungary, Poland, and Turkey. Driesen urges rejection of the unitary executive theory, which he maintains is a potential pathway to autocracy. An appreciation of the dangers that unitary theory poses to democracy should reframe the debate.

Nina Kohn

  • 鈥,鈥 Georgetown Law Journal Online (2021) Kohn explores the COVID-19 crisis in America鈥檚 nursing homes and its lessons for the future of long-term care. Her essay discusses how regulatory approaches employed in other parts of the U.S. health care system could be used to create a more humane and resilient long-term care system.
  • 鈥,鈥 Harvard Journal on Legislation (forthcoming 2021) Fueled by the promise of supported decision-making and mounting concerns about guardianship, states are rapidly adopting statutes that purport to enable and promote supported decision-making and advance the rights of persons with disabilities. Kohn observes that these statutes typically do neither. She further explains that the gap between the concept of supported decision-making and state legislation is the result of a confluence of political agendas. Kohn argues a person-centered approach is essential to empower individuals with disabilities.

Lauryn P. Gouldin

  • 鈥,鈥 Wake Forest Law Review (2020) Professor Gouldin argues that pretrial reform efforts aimed at shrinking the country鈥檚 swollen jail populations do too little to change fundamental aspects of judicial decision-making that have been a persistent source of pretrial dysfunction. She analyzes the decision-making processes that have historically led judges to rely too heavily on pretrial detention and overly restrictive release and outlines the costs of these flawed decisions. Gouldin calls for greater emphasis on judges鈥 obligations to mitigate harm and promote successful pretrial release.

Mark Nevitt

  • 鈥鈥 UC Davis Law Review (forthcoming 2021) Nevitt asks whether climate change鈥攁nd its multifaceted impacts鈥攊s an emergency that warrants using supplemental legal authorities. If so, what federal emergency authorities are available, and what are the normative stakes to democratic governance if a president declares a climate emergency?
  • 鈥,鈥 Cardozo Law Review (2020) With the accession of Justice Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court, a conservative judicial majority appears cemented for decades to come. Nevitt addresses how this transformed Supreme Court might impact future environmental and climate change cases, what influence it will have on policymaking and how it will affect the ability of plaintiffs to address challenges.

Danielle Stokes

  • 鈥,鈥 Minnesota Law Review (2021) Stokes draws upon a substantial body of scholarly work that advocates for federal or regional collaboration in renewable energy policymaking and for more balanced and dynamic federalism in the energy sector. She argues that the current fragmented and localized system of energy governance鈥攊ncluding zoning and land use planning鈥攃an delay and even deter renewable energy project development.
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Martin Walls

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