Articles, notes, and symposia pieces published in CLR’s print volumes.

Print Edition

Article, Podcast, Volume 110, February 2022, Matthew Clair, Amanda Woog California Law Review Article, Podcast, Volume 110, February 2022, Matthew Clair, Amanda Woog California Law Review

Courts and the Abolition Movement

This Article theorizes and reimagines the place of courts in the contemporary struggle for the abolition of racialized punitive systems of legal control and exploitation. In the spring and summer of 2020, the killings of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and many other Black and Indigenous people sparked continuous protests against racist police violence and other forms of oppression. Meanwhile…

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Viral Injustice

The COVID-19 pandemic blighted all aspects of American life, but people in jails, prisons, and other detention sites experienced singular harm and neglect. Housing vulnerable detainee populations with elevated medical needs, these facilities were ticking time bombs. They were overcrowded, underfunded, unsanitary, insufficiently ventilated, and failed to meet even minimum…

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Article, Podcast, Volume 110, February 2022, Jennifer D. Oliva California Law Review Article, Podcast, Volume 110, February 2022, Jennifer D. Oliva California Law Review

Dosing Discrimination: Regulating PDMP Risk Scores

Prescription drug monitoring program (PDMP) predictive surveillance platforms were designed for—and funded by—law enforcement agencies. PDMPs use proprietary algorithms to determine a patient’s risk for prescription drug misuse, diversion, and overdose. The proxies that PDMPs utilize to calculate patient risk scores likely produce artificially inflated scores for…

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Article, Volume 109, December 2021, Abhay P. Aneja California Law Review Article, Volume 109, December 2021, Abhay P. Aneja California Law Review

Voting for Welfare

For over a century, the Supreme Court has characterized the franchise as instrumental—a right that is preservative of all other rights. Statistics confirm that federal protection of the right to vote has produced higher levels of minority electoral participation and greater shares of minority politicians over the past half century. To voting rights advocates, indicators…

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Article, Volume 109, December 2021, Daniel S. Harawa California Law Review Article, Volume 109, December 2021, Daniel S. Harawa California Law Review

The False Promise

In Peña-Rodriguez v. Colorado, the Supreme Court recognized that racial bias influencing jury deliberations violates the Sixth Amendment’s impartial jury guarantee and is incompatible with the Fourteenth Amendment’s anti-discrimination principles. The Court therefore created a racial bias exception to the centuries-old no-impeachment rule, claiming the decision reflected “progress”…

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Article, Volume 109, December 2021, Blake E. Reid California Law Review Article, Volume 109, December 2021, Blake E. Reid California Law Review

Copyright and Disability

A vast array of copyrighted works—books, video programming, software, podcasts, video games, and more—remain inaccessible to people with disabilities. International efforts to adopt limitations and exceptions to copyright law that permit third parties to create and distribute accessible versions of books for people with print disabilities have drawn some attention to the role that copyright…

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Article, Volume 109, December 2021, Chan Tov McNamarah California Law Review Article, Volume 109, December 2021, Chan Tov McNamarah California Law Review

Misgendering

Pronouns are en vogue. Not long ago, introductions were limited to exchanges of names. Today, however, they are increasingly enhanced with a recitation of the speaker’s appropriate gendered forms of address: he/him/his, she/her/hers, they/them/theirs, or neopronouns like zie/zir/zirs, xe/xem/xirs, or sie/hir/hirs. This development—like every other dimension of progress for LGBTQ+…

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Article, Volume 109, October 2021, Jamelia N. Morgan California Law Review Article, Volume 109, October 2021, Jamelia N. Morgan California Law Review

Rethinking Disorderly Conduct

Disorderly conduct laws are a combination of common law offenses aimed at protecting the public order, peace, and tranquility. Yet, contrary to common legal conceptions, the criminalization of disorderly conduct is not just about policing behavior that threatens to disrupt public order or even the public’s peace and tranquility. Policing disorderly conduct reflects and reinforces…

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Article, Volume 109, October 2021, Ryan D. Doerfler, Samuel Moyn California Law Review Article, Volume 109, October 2021, Ryan D. Doerfler, Samuel Moyn California Law Review

Democratizing the Supreme Court

Progressives are taking Supreme Court reform seriously for the first time in almost a century. Owing to the rise of the political and academic left following the 2008 financial crisis and the hotly contested appointments of Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, progressives increasingly view the Supreme Court as posing a serious challenge to the…

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The Legality of Ranked-Choice Voting

With the rise of extreme polarization, intense political divisiveness, and gridlocked government, many Americans are turning to reforms of the democratic processes that create incentives for candidates and officeholders to appeal to broader coalitions. A centerpiece of these efforts is ranked-choice voting (RCV). RCV allows voters to rank candidates in order of preference: first, second…

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Article, Volume 109, October 2021, Aaron Tang California Law Review Article, Volume 109, October 2021, Aaron Tang California Law Review

Harm-Avoider Constitutionalism

How does the Supreme Court decide difficult questions of constitutional law? Standard accounts point to a range of interpretive approaches such as originalism, common law constitutionalism, political process theory, interest-balancing, and constitutional pluralism. And once the list of commonly used interpretive approaches is set, normative debates often follow…

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Article, Volume 109, August 2021, Andrew Elmore, Kati L. Griffith California Law Review Article, Volume 109, August 2021, Andrew Elmore, Kati L. Griffith California Law Review

Franchisor Power as Employment Control

Labor and employment laws are systematically underenforced in low-wage, franchised workplaces. Union contracts, and the benefits and protections they provide, are nonexistent. The Fight for Fifteen movement has brought attention to the low wages, systemic violations of workers’ rights, and lack of collective representation in fast-food franchises. Given that franchisees can be judgment…

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Article, Volume 109, August 2021, Barbara A. Fedders California Law Review Article, Volume 109, August 2021, Barbara A. Fedders California Law Review

The End of School Policing

Police officers have become permanent fixtures in public schools. The sharp increase in the number of school police officers over the last twenty years has generated a substantial body of critical legal scholarship. Critics question whether police make students safer. They argue that any safety benefits must be weighed against the significant role the police…

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Article, Volume 109, August 2021, Trevor G. Reed California Law Review Article, Volume 109, August 2021, Trevor G. Reed California Law Review

Fair Use as Cultural Appropriation

Over the last four decades, scholars from diverse disciplines have documented a wide variety of cultural appropriations from Indigenous peoples and the harms these have inflicted. Copyright law provides at least some protection against appropriations of Indigenous culture—particularly for copyrightable songs, dances, oral histories, and other forms of Indigenous cultural creativity…

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Article, Volume 109, June 2021, Alexandra B. Klass, Shantal Pai California Law Review Article, Volume 109, June 2021, Alexandra B. Klass, Shantal Pai California Law Review

The Law of Energy Exports

The fossil fuel industry has filed an increasing number of dormant Commerce Clause lawsuits against coastal states and cities that have rejected proposals for new coal and oil export facilities in their jurisdictions. These lawsuits are creating a wholly new “law of energy exports” that to date has been underexplored in the academic literature, even…

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Article, Volume 109, June 2021, Shayak Sarkar California Law Review Article, Volume 109, June 2021, Shayak Sarkar California Law Review

Capital Controls as Migrant Controls

The disparate treatment of capital and labor reflects one of globalization’s central asymmetries: the law often allows financial capital, but not people, to move freely across borders. Yet scholars have largely neglected the intersection of these two regimes, the legal restrictions on migrants’ capital, particularly when the migrants themselves are deemed illegal. These restrictions on…

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Article, Volume 109, June 2021, Joseph P. Fishman California Law Review Article, Volume 109, June 2021, Joseph P. Fishman California Law Review

Originality’s Other Path

Although the U.S. Supreme Court has famously spoken of a “historic kinship” between patent and copyright doctrine, the family resemblance is sometimes hard to see. One of the biggest differences between them today is how much ingenuity they require for earning protection. Obtaining a patent requires an invention so innovative that it would not have…

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Article, Volume 109, June 2021, Hannah Bloch-Wehba California Law Review Article, Volume 109, June 2021, Hannah Bloch-Wehba California Law Review

Visible Policing: Technology, Transparency, and Democratic Control

Law enforcement has an opacity problem. Police use sophisticated technologies to monitor individuals, surveil communities, and predict behaviors in increasingly intrusive ways. But legal institutions have struggled to understand—let alone set limits on—new investigative methods and techniques for two major reasons. First, new surveillance technology tends to operate in opaque and…

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Article, Volume 109, April 2021, Courtney G. Joslin California Law Review Article, Volume 109, April 2021, Courtney G. Joslin California Law Review

(Not) Just Surrogacy

Scholars have long debated whether surrogacy furthers or inhibits equality and reproductive liberty. What has gone almost entirely unremarked upon, however, is whether and to what extent the ways U.S. jurisdictions regulate surrogacy further these principles. This oversight is produced and re-produced by existing scholarship that focuses on the threshold question of whether to ban…

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The Big Data Regulator, Rebooted: Why and How the FDA Can and Should Disclose Confidential Data on Prescription Drugs and Vaccines

Medicines and vaccines are complex products, and it is often extraordinarily difficult to know whether they help or hurt. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) holds an enormous reservoir of data that sheds light on that precise question, yet currently releases only a trickle to researchers, doctors, and patients. Recent examples show that data secrecy…

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