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.
Effective Discipline: Bringing Classroom Strategies to a State Constitutional Crisis
Part of the Law Meets World series - Education, Labor & Law: The Teacher Strikes in Los Angeles and Across the U.S.
Rez For Ed, Teacher Walk-Outs on Arizona Tribal Reservations
Part of the Law Meets World series - Education, Labor & Law: The Teacher Strikes in Los Angeles and Across the U.S.
Oklahoma Teacher Walkout: What We Can Do Different Next Time
Part of the Law Meets World series - Education, Labor & Law: The Teacher Strikes in Los Angeles and Across the U.S.
A Human and Constitutional Right to a Quality Public Education: Looking ahead in the Struggle for the Rights of Teachers, Parents, and Students
Part of the Law Meets World series - Education, Labor & Law: The Teacher Strikes in Los Angeles and Across the U.S.
