Posts by Digital Editor
No Rest for the “Wicked”: Congress Punishes Poor Americans for Wanting a Hot Meal
By Samiksha Manjani January 6, 2023 The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (“SNAP”) (formerly known as food stamps) in the United States has historically served two goals: (1) providing low-income Americans with food and (2) encouraging the consumption of surplus food items, which supports the domestic agricultural economy.[1] These two goals are so intertwined that SNAP…
Read MoreTitle VI and Affirmative Action: The Danger of “Color-Blind” Admissions for Immigrant Students of Color
By: Niki Iman Saleh November 3, 2022 The Supreme Court (“the Court”) will address the constitutionality of affirmative action this Fall term in the case of Students for Fair Admissions v. President and Fellows of Harvard College (“Students for Fair Admissions”).[1] The case challenges Grutter v. Bollinger, an affirmative action case where the Court held…
Read MoreStopping Bullying One Rule at a Time: Procedural Guardrails against Trademark Bullying
By: Austin Clements November 3, 2022 Trademark law is a doctrine that rests upon protecting your rights, lest they be whittled away by others. Trademarks, or signifiers of source of origin of goods and services, rest upon the idea that a name or signifier of origin for good or service is distinctive enough to warrant…
Read MoreAnchoring to Arbitrary Sentences: How the United States Sentencing Guidelines are Fueling Mass Incarceration
By Siena Richardson Published On: September 15, 2022 In 2012, a Texas court sentenced Willie James Smalls to forty-five years in prison.[1] This extraordinary sentence was imposed, not for a homicide or another severe violent crime, but for stealing a purse off the arm of an elderly woman.[2] Because Mr. Smalls had prior convictions,…
Read More“A Highly Disproportionate Percentage of Aborted Fetuses are Black”: The Subtle Misogynoir in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health
By: Rolonda Donelson Published on: September 15, 2022 On June 24, 2022, at around 10:30 am, the United States Supreme Court released an opinion in one of the most controversial cases of the term: Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization.[1] The Jackson Women’s Health Organization, the sole licensed abortion clinic in Mississippi, initiated the claim,…
Read MoreThe COVID-19 Pandemic Has Disproportionately Impacted Women. Women in Leadership Have Returned the Favor
By: Margaret Rice Published on September 15, 2022 The burdens of the COVID-19 pandemic have highlighted and exacerbated global shortcomings such as continued gender inequities, as women worldwide have been disproportionately impacted by the pandemic.[1] Women make up the majority of the health care workforce worldwide,[2] and at the onset of the pandemic the majority…
Read MoreThe EQUAL Act: Will Congress Finally Get It Right?
By: Adriana E. Morquecho On March 9, 2021, Representative Hakeem Jeffries introduced the Eliminating a Quantifiably Unjust Application of the Law Act of 2021 (“EQUAL Act”).[1] The EQUAL Act would eliminate the sentence disparities between cocaine offenses by repealing the amount of cocaine that triggers mandatory minimum sentencing.[2] While the House of Representatives passed the EQUAL…
Read MoreA Sport of Their Own: Are Equal Opportunities in College Athletics Truly Equal?
By: John Olorin As colleges and universities achieve a near-equal gender split in their student bodies, athletic departments across the country are cutting the men’s teams for smaller sports to maintain compliance with Title IX. The result is that, while schools are getting closer to offering an equal number of opportunities for both male and…
Read MoreLights, Camera, (Legal) Action: Expanding Child Entertainment Laws to Protect Children on Social Media
By: Margaret Arabpour The late 2000’s saw the introduction of the ‘mommy blogger,’ the first iteration of a parent using their experience as a parent and sharing the stories of their children’s lives to generate an income online.[1] As the internet shifted towards YouTube, and eventually Instagram, family vloggers emerged, creating a new industry worth…
Read MorePassage of “PRO” Act Would Bolster Starbucks Unionization Efforts
By: Kathryn Kelly The National Labor Relations Act (“NLRA”) ensures private-sector employees have the right to collectively bargain.[1] To that end, it established the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”), an independent agency meant to protect employees’ right to form a union and investigate violations of the NLRA.[2] Workers at various Starbucks locations across the country…
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