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

Print Edition

Symposium, Essay, Volume 108, June 2020, Jon O. Newman California Law Review Symposium, Essay, Volume 108, June 2020, Jon O. Newman California Law Review

The Current Challenge of Federal Court Reform

Keynoter? What a daunting assignment before this gathering! I’m reminded of President John F. Kennedy’s remark at a dinner honoring Nobel Prize winners: “This is the most extraordinary collection of talent . . . that has ever been gathered together at the White House, with the possible exception of when Thomas Jefferson dined alone.” As I survey this…

Read More
Symposium, Essay, Volume 108, June 2020, Jeremy Fogel California Law Review Symposium, Essay, Volume 108, June 2020, Jeremy Fogel California Law Review

Foreword: Symposium on Charting a Path for Federal Judiciary Reform

A principal mission of the Berkeley Judicial Institute (BJI), which I am privileged to serve as Executive Director, is to “fill a long-standing need to establish an effective bridge between the legal academy and the judiciary.” This mission statement reflects a common perception among both legal scholars and judges that the two institutions often talk…

Read More
Symposium, Essay, Volume 107, December 2019, David Alan Sklansky California Law Review Symposium, Essay, Volume 107, December 2019, David Alan Sklansky California Law Review

Populism, Pluralism, and Criminal Justice

The story that James Forman Jr. tells in his superb book, Locking Up Our Own, is local and nuanced. Forman explains that mass incarceration resulted from many small decisions made in many different places. Although all of those decisions were shaped by the legacies of racism and racial oppression, Forman shows that mass incarceration was…

Read More
Symposium, Essay, Volume 107, December 2019, L. Song Richardson California Law Review Symposium, Essay, Volume 107, December 2019, L. Song Richardson California Law Review

The Fallacy of the (Racial) Solidarity Presumption

Mass incarceration in America is a story of race discrimination. On the one hand, this means our knowledge about discrimination helps explain why our criminal system looks the way it does. On the other hand, mass incarceration can also teach us something profound about the nature of discrimination itself. In Locking Up Our Own, James Forman Jr. does a masterful job excavating, analyzing…

Read More
Symposium, Essay, Volume 107, December 2019, Paul Butler California Law Review Symposium, Essay, Volume 107, December 2019, Paul Butler California Law Review

Locking Up My Own: Reflections of a Black (Recovering) Prosecutor

I was a prosecutor in the District of Columbia during the era of Locking Up Our Own. I was a trial attorney in the U.S. Department of Justice in the early 1990s. Most of my work was in the Public Integrity Section at Main Justice, but for approximately one year I was detailed to the misdemeanor section of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia. The U.S. Attorney’s Office serves as the…

Read More
Symposium, Essay, Volume 107, December 2019, Rachel E. Barkow California Law Review Symposium, Essay, Volume 107, December 2019, Rachel E. Barkow California Law Review

Three Lessons for Criminal Law Reformers

James Forman, Jr.’s Locking Up Our Own is that rare nonfiction work that is a page turner even when you know the ending. That is the product of exceptional writing, meticulous historical research, and the deep empathy of the author that gives the book its voice throughout. That is why it was both a worthy recipient the Pulitzer Prize and a feature on The Daily Show with Trevor Noah. It is as…

Read More
Symposium, Essay, Volume 107, December 2019, James Forman California Law Review Symposium, Essay, Volume 107, December 2019, James Forman California Law Review

Confronting Mass Incarceration: Lecture from the 2018–2019 Jorde Symposium

Thank you. It’s a real honor to be at any event that is sponsored by the Brennan Center. I read your tweets, your emails, your policy reports, and your articles in the Atlantic. You are a vital institution. Thank you for doing the work that you are doing. I had a chance to spend some time with Tom Jorde earlier this afternoon, and Tom, I want to tell you how much I appreciate you putting your name…

Read More
Symposium, Essay, Volume 107, June 2019, Stephen I. Vladeck California Law Review Symposium, Essay, Volume 107, June 2019, Stephen I. Vladeck California Law Review

Constitutional Remedies in Federalism’s Forgotten Shadow

“[F]ollowing our decision in Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64 (1938), federal courts are generally no longer permitted to promulgate new federal common law causes of action . . . .” “When a party seeks to assert an implied cause of action under the Constitution itself . . . separation-of-powers principles are or should be central to the analysis. The…

Read More

Speaking with a Different Voice: Why the Military Trial of Civilians and the Enemy is Constitutional

The Constitution declares that the “Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus” can be suspended by the federal government only “in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion [when] the public Safety may require it.” Because some regard this Habeas Clause as the Constitution’s only “emergency” provision, the Clause looms large in treatments of the Constitution’s…

Read More
Symposium, Essay, Volume 107, June 2019, James E. Pfander California Law Review Symposium, Essay, Volume 107, June 2019, James E. Pfander California Law Review

Constructive Constitutional History and Habeas Corpus Today

In her book, Habeas Corpus in Wartime: From the Tower of London to Guantanamo Bay, Professor Amanda Tyler has written a definitive constitutional history of the habeas privilege in the United States. Rather than rehearsing the book’s many virtues, I propose to devote this short Essay to the familiar yet intractable problem of historical translation…

Read More
Symposium, Essay, Volume 107, June 2019, William A. Fletcher California Law Review Symposium, Essay, Volume 107, June 2019, William A. Fletcher California Law Review

Symposium Introduction

I am honored to write an introduction to the Symposium on Professor Amanda Tyler’s brilliant historical study, Habeas Corpus in Wartime: From the Tower of London to Guantanamo Bay. Professor Tyler has unearthed and examined the details of an important but only partially understood aspect of the British and American experience. She scrupulously traces the evolution of the writ of…

Read More
Symposium, Comment, Volume 106, December 2018, Reva B. Siegel California Law Review Symposium, Comment, Volume 106, December 2018, Reva B. Siegel California Law Review

The Constitutionalization of Disparate Impact—Court-Centered and Popular Pathways: A Comment on Owen Fiss’s Brennan Lecture

At Yale Law School, I had the great fortune of studying with Owen Fiss, who provided a riveting introduction to constitutional law. He encouraged me to go into teaching at a time when there were scarcely any women on the faculty at Yale. His work on antisubordination—the group-disadvantaging principle—orients much of my work on inequality…

Read More
Symposium, Essay, Volume 106, December 2018, Richard Primus California Law Review Symposium, Essay, Volume 106, December 2018, Richard Primus California Law Review

Second Redemption, Third Reconstruction

In The Accumulation of Advantages, the picture that Professor Owen Fiss paints about equality during and since the Second Reconstruction is largely a picture in black and white. That makes some sense. The black/white experience is probably the most important throughline in the story of equal protection…

Read More
Symposium, Essay, Volume 106, December 2018, Justin Driver California Law Review Symposium, Essay, Volume 106, December 2018, Justin Driver California Law Review

The Keyes of Constitutional Law

Before beginning law school in 2001, I knew the names of an embarrassingly small number of judicial decisions. The only case names that I readily possessed were Brown v. Board of Education, Roe v. Wade, Bush v. Gore, and a smattering of other opinions that had managed to escape the narrow confines of the legal community. I did, however, know the name of at least one relatively obscure opinion…

Read More