The Southern Roundtable Report brought together the leading scholarship on the local Latinx community as part of the ABF’s Future of Latinos Project.
John Hagan and Holly Foster analyze the Affordable Care Act’s effectiveness in addressing the health issues of high-risk populations.
Ajay K. Mehrotra addresses critical questions about the promise and limits of fundamental tax reform in this article.
Stephen Daniels considers the history of law school accreditation, tuition, and accessibility that has led to the current business model of legal education in this book chapter.
This book chapter by Beth Mertz discusses how empirical critical race and anthropological perspectives can help explain implicit bias.
Reuben J. Miller reveals how the criminal record draws in actors outside of the criminal legal system to encourage, shape and produce new social forms.
Featuring Laura Beth Nielsen, this article shows how judges and laypeople make decisions about workplace accommodations for disabled workers, influenced by perceptions of the “deserving worker”.
Shapiro explores the complex decisions faced by families and medical professionals in the ICU as they make legal decisions for those in end-of-life care, navigating the ethical and legal considerations of providing care to dying patients.
This study, featuring Bob Nelson and Ronit Dinovitzer, examines self-reports of perceived discrimination in the legal workplace.