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JURY NULLIFICATION
Jury nullification dates all the way back to English common law. It was designed as a check and balance on the government’s power, and it has played a big role in American history. During the revolutionary war it was illegal to speak out against the British. ButCOMMUTING COPS
In 1976, a Philadelphia firefighter took the issue all the way to the US Supreme Court in McCarthy v. Philadelphia Civil Serv. Com’n. Despite the fire department’s residency requirement, he wanted to move out of town. But he lost the case, and lost his job. WAIT, WHAT? NO DUTY TO RESCUE In Wait, What?, our law student contributors share unexpected lessons from law school. Here, Gilad Edelman writes on the duty to rescue (spoiler alert: there is no such thing). A pillar of every first-year law curriculum is the subject of torts, the area of law covering suits over harm to people aTHE DIAPER WARS
The makers of Huggies and Pampers, the two biggest brands, want those dollars — they don’t want to have to compete with each other to get them. Which is why, in the 1980s and 90s, they tried to litigate each other out of existence in a patent battle known as the diaper wars. “It’s a 150-year-old term to refer to these things as warsBAIL OR BUST
He and his wife were throwing a party at their house in the Bronx. There was music, dancing, family. Around midnight, his brother-in-law, who’d had a lot to drink, grabbed his car keys. PADILLA: He wanted to drive some of the family members home. So I took it 10 THINGS EVERY JUVENILE PRISON SHOULD DO Will Harrell, J.D., LL.M. is the Founder and Director of the Justice Collaborative, a consulting firm on criminal and juvenile justice reform initiatives. He has been a reformer of criminal and juvenile justice systems in 6 states and 5 countries, and currently monitors conditions of confinement in INTEGRATING MINDFULNESS INTO THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM The practice of mindfulness is making great inroads through American society. In the healthcare field, Jon Kabat-Zinn’s Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction program is a standard practice. The “mindful schools” movement is growing rapidly in our secondary schools. Thearmed forces are
HOME - LIFE OF THE LAWPERSONAL/FAMILYLAW AND SOCIETY ASSOCIATIONSCIENCECRIMINAL JUSTICEHEALTHNEWSLETTERS It’s official, and it’s one more amazing step into the future at Life of the Law: we have a new Executive Director. Six years after Nancy Mullane, Tom Hilbink LOGIC AND EXPERIENCE "The Life of the law has not been logic. It has been experience." Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. We took our project's name from this very famous quote by one of the giants of American law. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. (his father, OWH, Sr. was famous in his SHOULD LAWYERS UNIONIZE? A recent article in Salon argues that the reason unionization is so low (and, consequently, wages are so low) in the US is that white collar Americans insist on thinking of themselves as management, even when they are in no way in charge of their own work. This is nowhere more true than in the profession of law. Eric McClelland writes that “working class’ should be defined by yourJURY NULLIFICATION
Jury nullification dates all the way back to English common law. It was designed as a check and balance on the government’s power, and it has played a big role in American history. During the revolutionary war it was illegal to speak out against the British. ButCOMMUTING COPS
In 1976, a Philadelphia firefighter took the issue all the way to the US Supreme Court in McCarthy v. Philadelphia Civil Serv. Com’n. Despite the fire department’s residency requirement, he wanted to move out of town. But he lost the case, and lost his job. WAIT, WHAT? NO DUTY TO RESCUE In Wait, What?, our law student contributors share unexpected lessons from law school. Here, Gilad Edelman writes on the duty to rescue (spoiler alert: there is no such thing). A pillar of every first-year law curriculum is the subject of torts, the area of law covering suits over harm to people aTHE DIAPER WARS
The makers of Huggies and Pampers, the two biggest brands, want those dollars — they don’t want to have to compete with each other to get them. Which is why, in the 1980s and 90s, they tried to litigate each other out of existence in a patent battle known as the diaper wars. “It’s a 150-year-old term to refer to these things as warsBAIL OR BUST
He and his wife were throwing a party at their house in the Bronx. There was music, dancing, family. Around midnight, his brother-in-law, who’d had a lot to drink, grabbed his car keys. PADILLA: He wanted to drive some of the family members home. So I took it 10 THINGS EVERY JUVENILE PRISON SHOULD DO Will Harrell, J.D., LL.M. is the Founder and Director of the Justice Collaborative, a consulting firm on criminal and juvenile justice reform initiatives. He has been a reformer of criminal and juvenile justice systems in 6 states and 5 countries, and currently monitors conditions of confinement in INTEGRATING MINDFULNESS INTO THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM The practice of mindfulness is making great inroads through American society. In the healthcare field, Jon Kabat-Zinn’s Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction program is a standard practice. The “mindful schools” movement is growing rapidly in our secondary schools. Thearmed forces are
OUR SHOW - LIFE OF THE LAW Life of the Law’s team of investigative journalists, audio producers, editors, and scholars work as partners in cities around the country to produce bi-weekly feature episodes — investigative reports, in-studio discussions about all things law, and live storytelling. You can listen to one or binge-listen to more than 100episodes of Life of
WAIT, WHAT? NO DUTY TO RESCUE In Wait, What?, our law student contributors share unexpected lessons from law school. Here, Gilad Edelman writes on the duty to rescue (spoiler alert: there is no such thing). A pillar of every first-year law curriculum is the subject of torts, the area of law covering suits over harm to people aWHO'S THE CRIMINAL?
In the United States, somewhere between 70 and 100 million people have criminal records. That’s a quarter to a third of all adults. People of color are punished for crimes at much higher rates than white Americans. Even crimes that whites and people of color commit at the same rate. There’s also a disparity in who ends up being punishedand
ONE CONJUGAL VISIT
If you’re married or in a domestic partnership, you might be eligible for something called a family visit, also known as a conjugal visit, or on the inside, a booty call. It means a couple can be together, inside prison, alone or with their children for extendedTHE DIAPER WARS
The makers of Huggies and Pampers, the two biggest brands, want those dollars — they don’t want to have to compete with each other to get them. Which is why, in the 1980s and 90s, they tried to litigate each other out of existence in a patent battle known as the diaper wars. “It’s a 150-year-old term to refer to these things as warsUNEQUAL PROTECTION
America is a country plagued by racism. Culturally, politically, economically. But what about in the courts? 30 years ago, Warren McCleskey, a black man on Georgia’s death row, took proof to the US Supreme Court that his trial and sentence had been affected by racial prejudice. It’s a landmark caseLIFE AFTER DOXING
Post their information to 4chan and watch the hell begin.”. Doxing is when someone researches you, finds out things like your full name and street address, and posts them in an open forum online. A lot of times, they’ll be matched up to a photo. The term comes from the slang “dropping dox.” “Dox” is short for documents. FULL INTERVIEW WITH JUSTIN HELZER Justin Helzer died Sunday night, April 14th. He committed suicide inside his cell on San Quentin's Death Row (the cell in this photo). If you look closely you can see him sitting on his bunk, leaning against the door. Listen to his full interview with Nancy Mullane in this Life of the Law special.BOILED ANGEL
The cover of “Boiled Angel #6” depicts a naked man kneeling over a dead woman. The man is ejaculating and holding a bloody knife. The woman has a screwdriver sticking out of her eye and is also naked, her stomach sliced open and the man is pulling a baby out of it. “I did a lot of baby mutilation, anti-religious material,” says Diana. TNDCLA: IF I OPEN A RESTAURANT, DO I HAVE TO OFFER A Dear TNDCLA, I’m planning to open a restaurant. The premise is that we put laxatives in everything. So even if you’re eating a ton, odds are you’ll leave us a little skinnier. Or a LOT skinnier, depending how many orders of “Bagel and Lax,” “No. 2 Brownies” and “Caramel Poop-corn” you order. Th HOME - LIFE OF THE LAWPERSONAL/FAMILYLAW AND SOCIETY ASSOCIATIONSCIENCECRIMINAL JUSTICEHEALTHNEWSLETTERS It’s official, and it’s one more amazing step into the future at Life of the Law: we have a new Executive Director. Six years after Nancy Mullane, Tom Hilbink LOGIC AND EXPERIENCE "The Life of the law has not been logic. It has been experience." Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. We took our project's name from this very famous quote by one of the giants of American law. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. (his father, OWH, Sr. was famous in his SHOULD LAWYERS UNIONIZE? A recent article in Salon argues that the reason unionization is so low (and, consequently, wages are so low) in the US is that white collar Americans insist on thinking of themselves as management, even when they are in no way in charge of their own work. This is nowhere more true than in the profession of law. Eric McClelland writes that “working class’ should be defined by your WAIT, WHAT? NO DUTY TO RESCUE In Wait, What?, our law student contributors share unexpected lessons from law school. Here, Gilad Edelman writes on the duty to rescue (spoiler alert: there is no such thing). A pillar of every first-year law curriculum is the subject of torts, the area of law covering suits over harm to people aCOMMUTING COPS
In 1976, a Philadelphia firefighter took the issue all the way to the US Supreme Court in McCarthy v. Philadelphia Civil Serv. Com’n. Despite the fire department’s residency requirement, he wanted to move out of town. But he lost the case, and lost his job.JURY NULLIFICATION
Jury nullification dates all the way back to English common law. It was designed as a check and balance on the government’s power, and it has played a big role in American history. During the revolutionary war it was illegal to speak out against the British. ButBAIL OR BUST
He and his wife were throwing a party at their house in the Bronx. There was music, dancing, family. Around midnight, his brother-in-law, who’d had a lot to drink, grabbed his car keys. PADILLA: He wanted to drive some of the family members home. So I took itONE CONJUGAL VISIT
If you’re married or in a domestic partnership, you might be eligible for something called a family visit, also known as a conjugal visit, or on the inside, a booty call. It means a couple can be together, inside prison, alone or with their children for extended 10 THINGS EVERY JUVENILE PRISON SHOULD DO Will Harrell, J.D., LL.M. is the Founder and Director of the Justice Collaborative, a consulting firm on criminal and juvenile justice reform initiatives. He has been a reformer of criminal and juvenile justice systems in 6 states and 5 countries, and currently monitors conditions of confinement in INTEGRATING MINDFULNESS INTO THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM The practice of mindfulness is making great inroads through American society. In the healthcare field, Jon Kabat-Zinn’s Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction program is a standard practice. The “mindful schools” movement is growing rapidly in our secondary schools. Thearmed forces are
HOME - LIFE OF THE LAWPERSONAL/FAMILYLAW AND SOCIETY ASSOCIATIONSCIENCECRIMINAL JUSTICEHEALTHNEWSLETTERS It’s official, and it’s one more amazing step into the future at Life of the Law: we have a new Executive Director. Six years after Nancy Mullane, Tom Hilbink LOGIC AND EXPERIENCE "The Life of the law has not been logic. It has been experience." Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. We took our project's name from this very famous quote by one of the giants of American law. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. (his father, OWH, Sr. was famous in his SHOULD LAWYERS UNIONIZE? A recent article in Salon argues that the reason unionization is so low (and, consequently, wages are so low) in the US is that white collar Americans insist on thinking of themselves as management, even when they are in no way in charge of their own work. This is nowhere more true than in the profession of law. Eric McClelland writes that “working class’ should be defined by your WAIT, WHAT? NO DUTY TO RESCUE In Wait, What?, our law student contributors share unexpected lessons from law school. Here, Gilad Edelman writes on the duty to rescue (spoiler alert: there is no such thing). A pillar of every first-year law curriculum is the subject of torts, the area of law covering suits over harm to people aCOMMUTING COPS
In 1976, a Philadelphia firefighter took the issue all the way to the US Supreme Court in McCarthy v. Philadelphia Civil Serv. Com’n. Despite the fire department’s residency requirement, he wanted to move out of town. But he lost the case, and lost his job.JURY NULLIFICATION
Jury nullification dates all the way back to English common law. It was designed as a check and balance on the government’s power, and it has played a big role in American history. During the revolutionary war it was illegal to speak out against the British. ButBAIL OR BUST
He and his wife were throwing a party at their house in the Bronx. There was music, dancing, family. Around midnight, his brother-in-law, who’d had a lot to drink, grabbed his car keys. PADILLA: He wanted to drive some of the family members home. So I took itONE CONJUGAL VISIT
If you’re married or in a domestic partnership, you might be eligible for something called a family visit, also known as a conjugal visit, or on the inside, a booty call. It means a couple can be together, inside prison, alone or with their children for extended 10 THINGS EVERY JUVENILE PRISON SHOULD DO Will Harrell, J.D., LL.M. is the Founder and Director of the Justice Collaborative, a consulting firm on criminal and juvenile justice reform initiatives. He has been a reformer of criminal and juvenile justice systems in 6 states and 5 countries, and currently monitors conditions of confinement in INTEGRATING MINDFULNESS INTO THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM The practice of mindfulness is making great inroads through American society. In the healthcare field, Jon Kabat-Zinn’s Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction program is a standard practice. The “mindful schools” movement is growing rapidly in our secondary schools. Thearmed forces are
OUR SHOW - LIFE OF THE LAW Life of the Law’s team of investigative journalists, audio producers, editors, and scholars work as partners in cities around the country to produce bi-weekly feature episodes — investigative reports, in-studio discussions about all things law, and live storytelling. You can listen to one or binge-listen to more than 100episodes of Life of
JURY NULLIFICATION
Jury nullification dates all the way back to English common law. It was designed as a check and balance on the government’s power, and it has played a big role in American history. During the revolutionary war it was illegal to speak out against the British. ButWHO'S THE CRIMINAL?
In the United States, somewhere between 70 and 100 million people have criminal records. That’s a quarter to a third of all adults. People of color are punished for crimes at much higher rates than white Americans. Even crimes that whites and people of color commit at the same rate. There’s also a disparity in who ends up being punishedand
THE RIGHT TO BEG
Bill Quigley is a professor of law and poverty at Loyola University in New Orleans. He says the first known laws addressing begging were passed in England in 1349. During the feudal period, poor people belonged to feudal lords. But when the system collapsed, the poor were suddenly on their own. “People were wandering.ONE CONJUGAL VISIT
If you’re married or in a domestic partnership, you might be eligible for something called a family visit, also known as a conjugal visit, or on the inside, a booty call. It means a couple can be together, inside prison, alone or with their children for extended TRUTHS BEHIND “NEITHER CONFIRM NOR DENY” Since it originated in the 1970s, the phrase “neither confirm nor deny” has entered the popular language as a signal of bureacratic dodginess or obsfucation. Yet, as I would find out, the Glomar Response has a real story behind it and comes from a struggle,actually, to
THE DIAPER WARS
The makers of Huggies and Pampers, the two biggest brands, want those dollars — they don’t want to have to compete with each other to get them. Which is why, in the 1980s and 90s, they tried to litigate each other out of existence in a patent battle known as the diaper wars. “It’s a 150-year-old term to refer to these things as warsLIFE AFTER DOXING
Post their information to 4chan and watch the hell begin.”. Doxing is when someone researches you, finds out things like your full name and street address, and posts them in an open forum online. A lot of times, they’ll be matched up to a photo. The term comes from the slang “dropping dox.” “Dox” is short for documents. TDNCLA: WHO CAN CONJUGAL(LY) VISIT ME IN PRISON? Mississippi explicitly defines marriage for conjugal visiting purposes to be between a man and a woman. But best be careful because one spoiled apple can ruin the whole bunch. In some prisons that allow conjugal visits, the inmate must show that he or she is clear of any sexually transmitted diseases. Now, if your spouse suddenly starts HOW A QUIRK OF THE EQUAL PAY ACT CAUSES SOME WOMEN TO MISS If you’ve been paid $10,000 a year less than men in your department for the same work, the Equal Pay Act allows you to recover $20,000 per year in damages. This can result in an extra $20,000-30,000 in damages, above and beyond what Title VII offers in back pay compensation. Title VII doesn’t have a liquidated damages provision. HOME - LIFE OF THE LAWPERSONAL/FAMILYLAW AND SOCIETY ASSOCIATIONSCIENCECRIMINAL JUSTICEHEALTHNEWSLETTERS It’s official, and it’s one more amazing step into the future at Life of the Law: we have a new Executive Director. Six years after Nancy Mullane, Tom Hilbink LOGIC AND EXPERIENCE "The Life of the law has not been logic. It has been experience." Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. We took our project's name from this very famous quote by one of the giants of American law. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. (his father, OWH, Sr. was famous in his SHOULD LAWYERS UNIONIZE? A recent article in Salon argues that the reason unionization is so low (and, consequently, wages are so low) in the US is that white collar Americans insist on thinking of themselves as management, even when they are in no way in charge of their own work. This is nowhere more true than in the profession of law. Eric McClelland writes that “working class’ should be defined by your SHANNON HEFFERNAN, AUTHOR AT LIFE OF THE LAW Shannon Heffernan, Life of the Law Co-Founder and Contributing Editor, is a producer for Chicago Public Media/WBEZ's in-depth reporting project Front and Center, where she has reported on everything from tribal fishing rights to the validity of GED testing.Prior to working at Chicago Public Media/WBEZ, Heffernan was awarded an Open Society Foundation Media Fellowship.COMMUTING COPS
In 1976, a Philadelphia firefighter took the issue all the way to the US Supreme Court in McCarthy v. Philadelphia Civil Serv. Com’n. Despite the fire department’s residency requirement, he wanted to move out of town. But he lost the case, and lost his job. WAIT, WHAT? NO DUTY TO RESCUE In Wait, What?, our law student contributors share unexpected lessons from law school. Here, Gilad Edelman writes on the duty to rescue (spoiler alert: there is no such thing). A pillar of every first-year law curriculum is the subject of torts, the area of law covering suits over harm to people aBAIL OR BUST
He and his wife were throwing a party at their house in the Bronx. There was music, dancing, family. Around midnight, his brother-in-law, who’d had a lot to drink, grabbed his car keys. PADILLA: He wanted to drive some of the family members home. So I took itONE CONJUGAL VISIT
If you’re married or in a domestic partnership, you might be eligible for something called a family visit, also known as a conjugal visit, or on the inside, a booty call. It means a couple can be together, inside prison, alone or with their children for extendedTHE DIAPER WARS
The makers of Huggies and Pampers, the two biggest brands, want those dollars — they don’t want to have to compete with each other to get them. Which is why, in the 1980s and 90s, they tried to litigate each other out of existence in a patent battle known as the diaper wars. “It’s a 150-year-old term to refer to these things as wars 10 THINGS EVERY JUVENILE PRISON SHOULD DO Will Harrell, J.D., LL.M. is the Founder and Director of the Justice Collaborative, a consulting firm on criminal and juvenile justice reform initiatives. He has been a reformer of criminal and juvenile justice systems in 6 states and 5 countries, and currently monitors conditions of confinement in HOME - LIFE OF THE LAWPERSONAL/FAMILYLAW AND SOCIETY ASSOCIATIONSCIENCECRIMINAL JUSTICEHEALTHNEWSLETTERS It’s official, and it’s one more amazing step into the future at Life of the Law: we have a new Executive Director. Six years after Nancy Mullane, Tom Hilbink LOGIC AND EXPERIENCE "The Life of the law has not been logic. It has been experience." Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. We took our project's name from this very famous quote by one of the giants of American law. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. (his father, OWH, Sr. was famous in his SHOULD LAWYERS UNIONIZE? A recent article in Salon argues that the reason unionization is so low (and, consequently, wages are so low) in the US is that white collar Americans insist on thinking of themselves as management, even when they are in no way in charge of their own work. This is nowhere more true than in the profession of law. Eric McClelland writes that “working class’ should be defined by your SHANNON HEFFERNAN, AUTHOR AT LIFE OF THE LAW Shannon Heffernan, Life of the Law Co-Founder and Contributing Editor, is a producer for Chicago Public Media/WBEZ's in-depth reporting project Front and Center, where she has reported on everything from tribal fishing rights to the validity of GED testing.Prior to working at Chicago Public Media/WBEZ, Heffernan was awarded an Open Society Foundation Media Fellowship.COMMUTING COPS
In 1976, a Philadelphia firefighter took the issue all the way to the US Supreme Court in McCarthy v. Philadelphia Civil Serv. Com’n. Despite the fire department’s residency requirement, he wanted to move out of town. But he lost the case, and lost his job. WAIT, WHAT? NO DUTY TO RESCUE In Wait, What?, our law student contributors share unexpected lessons from law school. Here, Gilad Edelman writes on the duty to rescue (spoiler alert: there is no such thing). A pillar of every first-year law curriculum is the subject of torts, the area of law covering suits over harm to people aBAIL OR BUST
He and his wife were throwing a party at their house in the Bronx. There was music, dancing, family. Around midnight, his brother-in-law, who’d had a lot to drink, grabbed his car keys. PADILLA: He wanted to drive some of the family members home. So I took itONE CONJUGAL VISIT
If you’re married or in a domestic partnership, you might be eligible for something called a family visit, also known as a conjugal visit, or on the inside, a booty call. It means a couple can be together, inside prison, alone or with their children for extendedTHE DIAPER WARS
The makers of Huggies and Pampers, the two biggest brands, want those dollars — they don’t want to have to compete with each other to get them. Which is why, in the 1980s and 90s, they tried to litigate each other out of existence in a patent battle known as the diaper wars. “It’s a 150-year-old term to refer to these things as wars 10 THINGS EVERY JUVENILE PRISON SHOULD DO Will Harrell, J.D., LL.M. is the Founder and Director of the Justice Collaborative, a consulting firm on criminal and juvenile justice reform initiatives. He has been a reformer of criminal and juvenile justice systems in 6 states and 5 countries, and currently monitors conditions of confinement in OUR SHOW - LIFE OF THE LAW Life of the Law’s team of investigative journalists, audio producers, editors, and scholars work as partners in cities around the country to produce bi-weekly feature episodes — investigative reports, in-studio discussions about all things law, and live storytelling. You can listen to one or binge-listen to more than 100episodes of Life of
WAIT, WHAT? NO DUTY TO RESCUE In Wait, What?, our law student contributors share unexpected lessons from law school. Here, Gilad Edelman writes on the duty to rescue (spoiler alert: there is no such thing). A pillar of every first-year law curriculum is the subject of torts, the area of law covering suits over harm to people aWHO'S THE CRIMINAL?
In the United States, somewhere between 70 and 100 million people have criminal records. That’s a quarter to a third of all adults. People of color are punished for crimes at much higher rates than white Americans. Even crimes that whites and people of color commit at the same rate. There’s also a disparity in who ends up being punishedand
THE RIGHT TO BEG
Bill Quigley is a professor of law and poverty at Loyola University in New Orleans. He says the first known laws addressing begging were passed in England in 1349. During the feudal period, poor people belonged to feudal lords. But when the system collapsed, the poor were suddenly on their own. “People were wandering.ONE CONJUGAL VISIT
If you’re married or in a domestic partnership, you might be eligible for something called a family visit, also known as a conjugal visit, or on the inside, a booty call. It means a couple can be together, inside prison, alone or with their children for extendedJURY NULLIFICATION
Jury nullification dates all the way back to English common law. It was designed as a check and balance on the government’s power, and it has played a big role in American history. During the revolutionary war it was illegal to speak out against the British. ButTHE DIAPER WARS
The makers of Huggies and Pampers, the two biggest brands, want those dollars — they don’t want to have to compete with each other to get them. Which is why, in the 1980s and 90s, they tried to litigate each other out of existence in a patent battle known as the diaper wars. “It’s a 150-year-old term to refer to these things as wars 10 THINGS EVERY JUVENILE PRISON SHOULD DO Will Harrell, J.D., LL.M. is the Founder and Director of the Justice Collaborative, a consulting firm on criminal and juvenile justice reform initiatives. He has been a reformer of criminal and juvenile justice systems in 6 states and 5 countries, and currently monitors conditions of confinement in Ohio juvenile prison facilities.JAILHOUSE LAWYERS
In California, there are hundreds if not thousands of people practicing criminal law though they’ve never passed a bar exam. They don’t wear suits. They don’t have secretaries. And they can’t bill for their time. They’re called Jailhouse Lawyers. They’re inmates who pursue the equivalent of a lawyer TDNCLA: WHO CAN CONJUGAL(LY) VISIT ME IN PRISON? Mississippi explicitly defines marriage for conjugal visiting purposes to be between a man and a woman. But best be careful because one spoiled apple can ruin the whole bunch. In some prisons that allow conjugal visits, the inmate must show that he or she is clear of any sexually transmitted diseases. Now, if your spouse suddenly starts HOME - LIFE OF THE LAWPERSONAL/FAMILYLAW AND SOCIETY ASSOCIATIONSCIENCECRIMINAL JUSTICEHEALTHNEWSLETTERS It’s official, and it’s one more amazing step into the future at Life of the Law: we have a new Executive Director. Six years after Nancy Mullane, Tom Hilbink LOGIC AND EXPERIENCE "The Life of the law has not been logic. It has been experience." Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. We took our project's name from this very famous quote by one of the giants of American law. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. (his father, OWH, Sr. was famous in his SHOULD LAWYERS UNIONIZE? A recent article in Salon argues that the reason unionization is so low (and, consequently, wages are so low) in the US is that white collar Americans insist on thinking of themselves as management, even when they are in no way in charge of their own work. This is nowhere more true than in the profession of law. Eric McClelland writes that “working class’ should be defined by your SHANNON HEFFERNAN, AUTHOR AT LIFE OF THE LAW Shannon Heffernan, Life of the Law Co-Founder and Contributing Editor, is a producer for Chicago Public Media/WBEZ's in-depth reporting project Front and Center, where she has reported on everything from tribal fishing rights to the validity of GED testing.Prior to working at Chicago Public Media/WBEZ, Heffernan was awarded an Open Society Foundation Media Fellowship.COMMUTING COPS
In 1976, a Philadelphia firefighter took the issue all the way to the US Supreme Court in McCarthy v. Philadelphia Civil Serv. Com’n. Despite the fire department’s residency requirement, he wanted to move out of town. But he lost the case, and lost his job. WAIT, WHAT? NO DUTY TO RESCUE In Wait, What?, our law student contributors share unexpected lessons from law school. Here, Gilad Edelman writes on the duty to rescue (spoiler alert: there is no such thing). A pillar of every first-year law curriculum is the subject of torts, the area of law covering suits over harm to people aBAIL OR BUST
He and his wife were throwing a party at their house in the Bronx. There was music, dancing, family. Around midnight, his brother-in-law, who’d had a lot to drink, grabbed his car keys. PADILLA: He wanted to drive some of the family members home. So I took itONE CONJUGAL VISIT
If you’re married or in a domestic partnership, you might be eligible for something called a family visit, also known as a conjugal visit, or on the inside, a booty call. It means a couple can be together, inside prison, alone or with their children for extendedTHE DIAPER WARS
The makers of Huggies and Pampers, the two biggest brands, want those dollars — they don’t want to have to compete with each other to get them. Which is why, in the 1980s and 90s, they tried to litigate each other out of existence in a patent battle known as the diaper wars. “It’s a 150-year-old term to refer to these things as wars 10 THINGS EVERY JUVENILE PRISON SHOULD DO Will Harrell, J.D., LL.M. is the Founder and Director of the Justice Collaborative, a consulting firm on criminal and juvenile justice reform initiatives. He has been a reformer of criminal and juvenile justice systems in 6 states and 5 countries, and currently monitors conditions of confinement in HOME - LIFE OF THE LAWPERSONAL/FAMILYLAW AND SOCIETY ASSOCIATIONSCIENCECRIMINAL JUSTICEHEALTHNEWSLETTERS It’s official, and it’s one more amazing step into the future at Life of the Law: we have a new Executive Director. Six years after Nancy Mullane, Tom Hilbink LOGIC AND EXPERIENCE "The Life of the law has not been logic. It has been experience." Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. We took our project's name from this very famous quote by one of the giants of American law. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. (his father, OWH, Sr. was famous in his SHOULD LAWYERS UNIONIZE? A recent article in Salon argues that the reason unionization is so low (and, consequently, wages are so low) in the US is that white collar Americans insist on thinking of themselves as management, even when they are in no way in charge of their own work. This is nowhere more true than in the profession of law. Eric McClelland writes that “working class’ should be defined by your SHANNON HEFFERNAN, AUTHOR AT LIFE OF THE LAW Shannon Heffernan, Life of the Law Co-Founder and Contributing Editor, is a producer for Chicago Public Media/WBEZ's in-depth reporting project Front and Center, where she has reported on everything from tribal fishing rights to the validity of GED testing.Prior to working at Chicago Public Media/WBEZ, Heffernan was awarded an Open Society Foundation Media Fellowship.COMMUTING COPS
In 1976, a Philadelphia firefighter took the issue all the way to the US Supreme Court in McCarthy v. Philadelphia Civil Serv. Com’n. Despite the fire department’s residency requirement, he wanted to move out of town. But he lost the case, and lost his job. WAIT, WHAT? NO DUTY TO RESCUE In Wait, What?, our law student contributors share unexpected lessons from law school. Here, Gilad Edelman writes on the duty to rescue (spoiler alert: there is no such thing). A pillar of every first-year law curriculum is the subject of torts, the area of law covering suits over harm to people aBAIL OR BUST
He and his wife were throwing a party at their house in the Bronx. There was music, dancing, family. Around midnight, his brother-in-law, who’d had a lot to drink, grabbed his car keys. PADILLA: He wanted to drive some of the family members home. So I took itONE CONJUGAL VISIT
If you’re married or in a domestic partnership, you might be eligible for something called a family visit, also known as a conjugal visit, or on the inside, a booty call. It means a couple can be together, inside prison, alone or with their children for extendedTHE DIAPER WARS
The makers of Huggies and Pampers, the two biggest brands, want those dollars — they don’t want to have to compete with each other to get them. Which is why, in the 1980s and 90s, they tried to litigate each other out of existence in a patent battle known as the diaper wars. “It’s a 150-year-old term to refer to these things as wars 10 THINGS EVERY JUVENILE PRISON SHOULD DO Will Harrell, J.D., LL.M. is the Founder and Director of the Justice Collaborative, a consulting firm on criminal and juvenile justice reform initiatives. He has been a reformer of criminal and juvenile justice systems in 6 states and 5 countries, and currently monitors conditions of confinement in OUR SHOW - LIFE OF THE LAW Life of the Law’s team of investigative journalists, audio producers, editors, and scholars work as partners in cities around the country to produce bi-weekly feature episodes — investigative reports, in-studio discussions about all things law, and live storytelling. You can listen to one or binge-listen to more than 100episodes of Life of
WAIT, WHAT? NO DUTY TO RESCUE In Wait, What?, our law student contributors share unexpected lessons from law school. Here, Gilad Edelman writes on the duty to rescue (spoiler alert: there is no such thing). A pillar of every first-year law curriculum is the subject of torts, the area of law covering suits over harm to people aWHO'S THE CRIMINAL?
In the United States, somewhere between 70 and 100 million people have criminal records. That’s a quarter to a third of all adults. People of color are punished for crimes at much higher rates than white Americans. Even crimes that whites and people of color commit at the same rate. There’s also a disparity in who ends up being punishedand
THE RIGHT TO BEG
Bill Quigley is a professor of law and poverty at Loyola University in New Orleans. He says the first known laws addressing begging were passed in England in 1349. During the feudal period, poor people belonged to feudal lords. But when the system collapsed, the poor were suddenly on their own. “People were wandering.ONE CONJUGAL VISIT
If you’re married or in a domestic partnership, you might be eligible for something called a family visit, also known as a conjugal visit, or on the inside, a booty call. It means a couple can be together, inside prison, alone or with their children for extendedJURY NULLIFICATION
Jury nullification dates all the way back to English common law. It was designed as a check and balance on the government’s power, and it has played a big role in American history. During the revolutionary war it was illegal to speak out against the British. ButTHE DIAPER WARS
The makers of Huggies and Pampers, the two biggest brands, want those dollars — they don’t want to have to compete with each other to get them. Which is why, in the 1980s and 90s, they tried to litigate each other out of existence in a patent battle known as the diaper wars. “It’s a 150-year-old term to refer to these things as wars 10 THINGS EVERY JUVENILE PRISON SHOULD DO Will Harrell, J.D., LL.M. is the Founder and Director of the Justice Collaborative, a consulting firm on criminal and juvenile justice reform initiatives. He has been a reformer of criminal and juvenile justice systems in 6 states and 5 countries, and currently monitors conditions of confinement in Ohio juvenile prison facilities.JAILHOUSE LAWYERS
In California, there are hundreds if not thousands of people practicing criminal law though they’ve never passed a bar exam. They don’t wear suits. They don’t have secretaries. And they can’t bill for their time. They’re called Jailhouse Lawyers. They’re inmates who pursue the equivalent of a lawyer TDNCLA: WHO CAN CONJUGAL(LY) VISIT ME IN PRISON? Mississippi explicitly defines marriage for conjugal visiting purposes to be between a man and a woman. But best be careful because one spoiled apple can ruin the whole bunch. In some prisons that allow conjugal visits, the inmate must show that he or she is clear of any sexually transmitted diseases. Now, if your spouse suddenly starts HOME - LIFE OF THE LAWADVERTISINGPERSONAL/FAMILYLAW AND SOCIETY ASSOCIATIONSCIENCECRIMINAL JUSTICEHEALTHCALIFORNIA END OF LIFE LAWTHE LAW OF LIFE CHARACTERTHE LAW OF LIFE SUMMARYTHE LAW OF LIFE THEMETHE LAWS OF LIFE PDFEND OF LIFE LAW It’s official, and it’s one more amazing step into the future at Life of the Law: we have a new Executive Director. Six years after Nancy Mullane, Tom Hilbink OUR SHOW - LIFE OF THE LAWTHE LAW OF LIFE CHARACTERTHE LAW OF LIFE SUMMARYTHE LAW OF LIFE THEMETHE LAWS OF LIFE PDFTHE UNIVERSAL LAWS OF LIFETHE LAW OF LIFE JACK LONDON PDF Life of the Law’s team of investigative journalists, audio producers, editors, and scholars work as partners in cities around the country to produce bi-weekly feature episodes — investigative reports, in-studio discussions about all things law, and live storytelling. You can listen to one or binge-listen to more than 100episodes of Life of
LOGIC AND EXPERIENCE "The Life of the law has not been logic. It has been experience." Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. We took our project's name from this very famous quote by one of the giants of American law. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. (his father, OWH, Sr. was famous in his AUSTIN SARAT, AUTHOR AT LIFE OF THE LAW Austin Sarat is Associate Dean of the Faculty and William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Jurisprudence and Political Science at Amherst College and Hugo L. Black Visiting Senior Scholar at the University of Alabama School of Law. Professor Sarat is a pioneering figure in the development of legal study in the liberal arts, of the humanistic study of law, and of the cultural study of law.COMMUTING COPS
In 1976, a Philadelphia firefighter took the issue all the way to the US Supreme Court in McCarthy v. Philadelphia Civil Serv. Com’n. Despite the fire department’s residency requirement, he wanted to move out of town. But he lost the case, and lost his job. WAIT, WHAT? NO DUTY TO RESCUE In Wait, What?, our law student contributors share unexpected lessons from law school. Here, Gilad Edelman writes on the duty to rescue (spoiler alert: there is no such thing). A pillar of every first-year law curriculum is the subject of torts, the area of law covering suits over harm to people aONE CONJUGAL VISIT
If you’re married or in a domestic partnership, you might be eligible for something called a family visit, also known as a conjugal visit, or on the inside, a booty call. It means a couple can be together, inside prison, alone or with their children for extendedTHE DIAPER WARS
The makers of Huggies and Pampers, the two biggest brands, want those dollars — they don’t want to have to compete with each other to get them. Which is why, in the 1980s and 90s, they tried to litigate each other out of existence in a patent battle known as the diaper wars. “It’s a 150-year-old term to refer to these things as wars FULL INTERVIEW WITH JUSTIN HELZER Justin Helzer died Sunday night, April 14th. He committed suicide inside his cell on San Quentin's Death Row (the cell in this photo). If you look closely you can see him sitting on his bunk, leaning against the door. Listen to his full interview with Nancy Mullane in this Life of the Law special. Q&A WITH A LEGAL STARTUP: LEGITIMO, THE APP THAT DRAFTS About a year ago, Nikhil Jhunjhnuwala got a frantic call from a young friend named Julia asking him if he thought she had a legal case. A week earlier, the venue that had held her quinceanera—the 15th birthday celebration—had breached almost all of their previously agreed upon obligations: the space was a mess, the band left early, and there weren’t enough staff people to HOME - LIFE OF THE LAWADVERTISINGPERSONAL/FAMILYLAW AND SOCIETY ASSOCIATIONSCIENCECRIMINAL JUSTICEHEALTHCALIFORNIA END OF LIFE LAWTHE LAW OF LIFE CHARACTERTHE LAW OF LIFE SUMMARYTHE LAW OF LIFE THEMETHE LAWS OF LIFE PDFEND OF LIFE LAW It’s official, and it’s one more amazing step into the future at Life of the Law: we have a new Executive Director. Six years after Nancy Mullane, Tom Hilbink OUR SHOW - LIFE OF THE LAWTHE LAW OF LIFE CHARACTERTHE LAW OF LIFE SUMMARYTHE LAW OF LIFE THEMETHE LAWS OF LIFE PDFTHE UNIVERSAL LAWS OF LIFETHE LAW OF LIFE JACK LONDON PDF Life of the Law’s team of investigative journalists, audio producers, editors, and scholars work as partners in cities around the country to produce bi-weekly feature episodes — investigative reports, in-studio discussions about all things law, and live storytelling. You can listen to one or binge-listen to more than 100episodes of Life of
LOGIC AND EXPERIENCE "The Life of the law has not been logic. It has been experience." Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. We took our project's name from this very famous quote by one of the giants of American law. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. (his father, OWH, Sr. was famous in his AUSTIN SARAT, AUTHOR AT LIFE OF THE LAW Austin Sarat is Associate Dean of the Faculty and William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Jurisprudence and Political Science at Amherst College and Hugo L. Black Visiting Senior Scholar at the University of Alabama School of Law. Professor Sarat is a pioneering figure in the development of legal study in the liberal arts, of the humanistic study of law, and of the cultural study of law.COMMUTING COPS
In 1976, a Philadelphia firefighter took the issue all the way to the US Supreme Court in McCarthy v. Philadelphia Civil Serv. Com’n. Despite the fire department’s residency requirement, he wanted to move out of town. But he lost the case, and lost his job. WAIT, WHAT? NO DUTY TO RESCUE In Wait, What?, our law student contributors share unexpected lessons from law school. Here, Gilad Edelman writes on the duty to rescue (spoiler alert: there is no such thing). A pillar of every first-year law curriculum is the subject of torts, the area of law covering suits over harm to people aONE CONJUGAL VISIT
If you’re married or in a domestic partnership, you might be eligible for something called a family visit, also known as a conjugal visit, or on the inside, a booty call. It means a couple can be together, inside prison, alone or with their children for extendedTHE DIAPER WARS
The makers of Huggies and Pampers, the two biggest brands, want those dollars — they don’t want to have to compete with each other to get them. Which is why, in the 1980s and 90s, they tried to litigate each other out of existence in a patent battle known as the diaper wars. “It’s a 150-year-old term to refer to these things as wars FULL INTERVIEW WITH JUSTIN HELZER Justin Helzer died Sunday night, April 14th. He committed suicide inside his cell on San Quentin's Death Row (the cell in this photo). If you look closely you can see him sitting on his bunk, leaning against the door. Listen to his full interview with Nancy Mullane in this Life of the Law special. Q&A WITH A LEGAL STARTUP: LEGITIMO, THE APP THAT DRAFTS About a year ago, Nikhil Jhunjhnuwala got a frantic call from a young friend named Julia asking him if he thought she had a legal case. A week earlier, the venue that had held her quinceanera—the 15th birthday celebration—had breached almost all of their previously agreed upon obligations: the space was a mess, the band left early, and there weren’t enough staff people to OUR SHOW - LIFE OF THE LAW Life of the Law’s team of investigative journalists, audio producers, editors, and scholars work as partners in cities around the country to produce bi-weekly feature episodes — investigative reports, in-studio discussions about all things law, and live storytelling.. You can listen to one or binge-listen to more than 100 episodes of Life of the Law on Panoply, iTunes, Stitcher, and on WAIT, WHAT? NO DUTY TO RESCUE In Wait, What?, our law student contributors share unexpected lessons from law school. Here, Gilad Edelman writes on the duty to rescue (spoiler alert: there is no such thing). A pillar of every first-year law curriculum is the subject of torts, the area of law covering suits over harm to people aWHO'S THE CRIMINAL?
In the United States, somewhere between 70 and 100 million people have criminal records. That’s a quarter to a third of all adults. People of color are punished for crimes at much higher rates than white Americans. Even crimes that whites and people of color commit at the same rate. There’s also a disparity in who ends up being punishedand
SIMONESEIVER
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THE RIGHT TO BEG
Bill Quigley is a professor of law and poverty at Loyola University in New Orleans. He says the first known laws addressing begging were passed in England in 1349. During the feudal period, poor people belonged to feudal lords. But when the system collapsed, the poor were suddenly on their own. “People were wandering.ONE CONJUGAL VISIT
If you’re married or in a domestic partnership, you might be eligible for something called a family visit, also known as a conjugal visit, or on the inside, a booty call. It means a couple can be together, inside prison, alone or with their children for extendedJURY NULLIFICATION
Jury nullification dates all the way back to English common law. It was designed as a check and balance on the government’s power, and it has played a big role in American history. During the revolutionary war it was illegal to speak out against the British. ButBAD CONSTITUTION
With more than 300,000 words and over 800 amendments, Alabama’s Constitution is 40 times longer than the US Constitution, and holds the record for being the longest active constitution in the world. Originally written in 1901 by men seeking to establish the law of white supremacy in the state, the cLIFE AFTER DOXING
Post their information to 4chan and watch the hell begin.”. Doxing is when someone researches you, finds out things like your full name and street address, and posts them in an open forum online. A lot of times, they’ll be matched up to a photo. The term comes from the slang “dropping dox.” “Dox” is short for documents. TDNCLA: WHO CAN CONJUGAL(LY) VISIT ME IN PRISON? Mississippi explicitly defines marriage for conjugal visiting purposes to be between a man and a woman. But best be careful because one spoiled apple can ruin the whole bunch. In some prisons that allow conjugal visits, the inmate must show that he or she is clear of any sexually transmitted diseases. Now, if your spouse suddenly starts* Listen
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Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. It’s official, and it’s one more amazing step into the future at Life of the Law: we have a new Executive Director. Six years after Nancy Mullane, Tom Hilbink and Shannon Heffernan launched the first...Read More
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CALL NOW!
by Life of the Law
| July 17, 2018
When things go bad all you need to do is pick up the phone and CALL. Since the US Supreme Court allowed lawyers to advertise in the 1970s, practices like these have skyrocketed, with often... Read MoreJuly 17, 2018
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LAW AND SOCIETY ASSOCIATION CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTSby Life of the Law
| June 19, 2018
Where does one find a discussion of research on abduction for forced marriage amidst West and Central African conflicts? Where does one find research on how ‘yes means yes’ policies on university campuses have affected... Read MoreJune 19, 2018
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NEW VOICES SERIES: LAW STUDENTS TAKE ON IMMIGRATIONby Life of the Law
| June 6, 2018
Immigration law is a mystery. Unless you’re an immigrant seeking relief under the law, or you’re an immigration law attorney, it’s an unknown. Then, earlier this year, Karla McKanders, a professor of immigration law at... Read MoreJune 6, 2018
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IN-STUDIO: PERIL AND PROMISE OF GENETIC TESTINGby Life of the Law
| May 24, 2018
“In light of what we’ve learned about the role of Facebook and Cambridge Analytica in the 2016 Election, people are now asking new derivative questions about other entities that are holding data or information about... Read MoreMay 24, 2018
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GATTACA REVISTED: UP THE BORROWED LADDER by Tony Gannon & Andrea Hendrickson| May 10, 2018
“Consider God’s handiwork: who can straighten what He hath made crooked.” – Ecclesiastes 7:13 “I not only think we will tamper with Mother Nature, I think Mother wants us to” – Willard Gaylin Some two... Read MoreMay 10, 2018
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IN-STUDIO: POLICE, RACE AND FATAL FORCEby Life of the Law
| April 16, 2018
Mothers, brothers, sons and daughters in cities across the country are suffering from the loss of a loved one to police use of fatal force. In 2017 The Washington Post reports police officers in the...Read More
April 16, 2018
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