Articles, notes, and symposia pieces published in CLR’s print volumes.
Print Edition
“There Were No Founding Mothers”: Reimagining Constitutional Equality
Efforts to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment have resurged, and for the first time in nearly forty years, three new states have ratified the ERA. But there are several reasons to reconsider these efforts. Most importantly, the ERA’s substance is insufficient to address ongoing inequities. This Article argues that advocates should instead focus efforts on writing a new amendment constitutionalizing equality aimed at rectifying the constitutional Founding Era’s treatment of people of color, women, and other subordinated groups.
Economic Justice via Public Insurance: What Data Breach Law Can Learn from Pandemics and Worker Injuries
Data breach—the improper exposure of consumers’ personal information held in corporate databases—costs consumers and businesses hundreds of billions of dollars each year. Despite scrutiny, the scale and severity of breaches has rapidly increased. This Note lays out a policy framework for overcoming the intense industry opposition and political paralysis that has consistently derailed data breach reform efforts over the past decade.
The Reasonable Pregnant Worker
The Pregnant Workers Fairness Act entitles many workers to “reasonable accommodations” for pregnancy-related medical conditions—so long as they do not impose an “undue hardship” on their employer. This Article addresses how the chaotic Americans with Disabilities Act doctrine will impact the PWFA’s implementation. The Article proposes a framework for litigants and courts assessing claims under the PWFA.
Section 1983: A Strict Liability Statutory Tort
Scholars’ framing of Section 1983 as a “constitutional tort” and their focus on the qualified immunity doctrine miss the fundamental issue of Section 1983's transformation into a fault-based tort. This Article demonstrates how the judicial rewriting of Section 1983 has undermined its effectiveness and diverged from the Reconstruction Congress’ intent. The Article argues that Section 1983 should be interpreted as a strict liability statutory tort.
Welfare Debt
Past-due child support debt cannot be forgiven or discharged in bankruptcy. This policy is grounded in the assumption that all child support debt goes to a parent taking care of a child. However, billions of dollars of unpaid child support debt are instead owed to the government. Welfare debt often leads to a cycle of incarceration and criminal fines. This Article argues that for the bankruptcy system to uphold its normative principle of forgiving burdensome debt for the most economically vulnerable individuals, welfare debt must be forgiven.
Suicide By Cop? How Junk Science and Bad Law Undermine Accountability for Killings by Police
“Suicide by cop” refers to encounters in which civilians intentionally provoke a lethal response from law enforcement. Police and their advocates have developed suicide by cop into junk science that serves as a broad defense against liability. This Article explores the origins and use of suicide by cop, and argues that police should be required to exercise a higher duty of care to protect people from excessive use of force.