The current cybersecurity landscape is unsustainable. Companies are increasingly relying on third parties for conducting services, yet these third-parties continue to be targets of attack due to their weak cybersecurity measures. However, blockchain technology should be implemented as part of a large company’s comprehensive cybersecurity plan. The trust that the blockchain offers, along with the...
Equitable Resettlement for Climate Change–Displaced Communities in the United States
This Comment explores ways in which environmental law and policy perpetuate injustice for socially vulnerable communities, particularly communities of color or low-income communities, often through biased environmental decisionmaking.
Incorporation Without Assimilation: Legislating Tribal Civil Jurisdiction over Nonmembers
For the last forty years the U.S. Supreme Court has been engaged in a measured attack on the sovereignty of Indian tribes when it comes to tribal court jurisdiction over people who are not members of the tribe asserting that jurisdiction. This Article proposes to legislatively reconfirm the civil jurisdiction of tribal courts over such nonmembers.
The Consequences of Automating and Deskilling the Police
Discussions of automation in the workplace typically omit policing. This is a mistake. The increasing combination of artificial intelligence and robotics will provide us with social benefits, but it will also create new problems as automation replaces human labor. Mass unemployment may be one consequence. Another is deskilling, the loss of the skills and knowledge needed to perform a job when...
An Ode to the Categorical Approach
Given that federal law attaches drastic consequences to crimes that states, localities, tribes, and territories have already punished, the categorical approach is good federalist policy. Until and unless these added consequences are abolished, courts should continue to apply the approach, and the Court’s fealty to categorical analysis is cause for celebration.
Criminalizing Survival: Homelessness and the Law (Part 2)
This episode is the second of a two part series examining the complexity of addressing homelessness. In this episode, we speak to Shayla Myers of the Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles to discuss her work litigating on behalf of the unhoused, as well as the legal and policy issues at play.
Student-Centered and Community-Supported Demands: The Key to Successful #RedforEd Strikes in Los Angeles and Nationwide
Part of the Law Meets World series - Education, Labor & Law: The Teacher Strikes in Los Angeles and Across the U.S.
We’ll Walk the Line: A Teacher’s Reflections on the 2019 UTLA Strike
Part of the Law Meets World series - Education, Labor & Law: The Teacher Strikes in Los Angeles and Across the U.S.