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The University of Chicago Law Review Online

The University of Chicago Law Review Online

Started in 2018, The University of Chicago Law Review Online is an online platform focused on publishing legal analysis and scholarship for a general-interest audience. 

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Month: November 2020

Post

Zoom Trials as the New Normal: A Cautionary Tale

The pandemic has changed how courts operate. Angela Chang examines the pitfalls of remote proceedings—and how courts, parties, and jurors might combat them.

Featured PostCOVID-19Leave a comment
Series

COVID-19 and Criminal Justice

Valena Beety and Brandon Garrett present a timely series at the intersection of criminal justice and the coronavirus pandemic.

November 16, 2020November 16, 2020covid series, COVID-19Leave a comment
Post

Mass Incarceration, Meet COVID-19

Sharon Dolovich explores how the criminal justice system has responded—or not—to COVID-19 in America's prisons.

November 16, 2020November 16, 2020covid series, COVID-19Leave a comment
Post

Law Enforcement as Disease Vector

Maybell Romero argues that the pandemic has shown, more clearly than ever, why police should be treated as a disease vector.

November 16, 2020November 15, 2020covid series, COVID-191 Comment
Post

Pretrial Dismissal in the Interest of Justice: A Response to COVID-19 and Protest Arrests

Valena E. Beety explains how courts might deploy an obscure but powerful equitable tool to release the dual pressures of pandemic and social turmoil.

November 16, 2020November 15, 2020covid series, COVID-19Leave a comment
Post

Virtual Criminal Courts

Deniz Ariturk, William E. Crozier, and Brandon L. Garrett survey the transformation wrought by virtual court proceedings.

November 16, 2020November 15, 2020covid series, COVID-19Leave a comment
Post

COVID-19 and the Ruralization of U.S. Criminal Court Systems

Pamela Metzger and Gregory Guggenmos show how rural communities have long struggled with the distance, scale, and scarcity that the pandemic has now brought to more populous places.

November 16, 2020November 15, 2020covid series, COVID-19Leave a comment
Post

Policing the Pandemic

Barry Friedman and Robin Tholin argue that restraining the pandemic will require judicious application of government power.

November 16, 2020November 16, 2020covid series, COVID-19Leave a comment
Post

Policing Opioid Use Disorder in a Pandemic

Jennifer Oliva examines how the pandemic has disrupted access to opioid treatment—and for some more than others.

November 16, 2020November 15, 2020covid series, COVID-191 Comment
Uncategorized

Briefly 4.7 – Law, Psychology & False Confessions

Why do people confess to crimes they didn't commit? Host Taiyee Chien and guest Professor Richard A. Leo (U. San Francisco Law) explore this difficult and persistent psychological phenomenon—and how the law can address it going forward.

November 11, 2020November 10, 2020PodcastLeave a comment

Recent Posts

  • A Sea Change in Class Action Jurisprudence? Olean v. Bumble Bee Foods LLC and Its Implications for Certifying Classes with Uninjured Members
  • Privacy Peg, Trade Hole: Why We (Still) Shouldn’t Put Data Privacy in Trade Law
  • Religious Coercion and Kennedy v. Bremerton School District

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