Boston College Law Review
@BCLawReview
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The Boston College Law Review is the oldest scholarly publication at Boston College Law School. We publish articles on legal issues of national interest.
Newton, MA
Joined October 2012
Check out this week's #FeatureFriday read, @RachelJWechsler's Article "Intimate Partner Violence: Access to Protection Beyond the Pandemic," which uses empirical data to argue for more flexible hearing choices for survivors of IPV.
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Excited to share that Volume 65, Issue 7 of the Boston College Law Review is now available. This issue features four Articles by @RachelJWechsler, Brian J. Connolly, @AgingWithAPlan, and @gmdickinson, and three student Notes. Full content available here:
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Food allergy issues at work is an emerging problem that all employers should take seriously. @robertiafolla at Bloomberg has highlighted my research on this topic. https://t.co/Vx3lYS92dX My research, which will appear in the @BCLawReview, is here:
news.bloomberglaw.com
While Americans with Disabilities Act lawsuits related to food allergies have been rare, a generational boom in those conditions creates the potential for growth in the frequency of workplace...
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"Disability, Race, and Immigration: The Intersectional Impact of Policing" by @taniava05351239 is our #FeatureFriday. The Article examines police response to noncitizens facing an acute mental health event through an intersectional lens. Check it out here: https://t.co/sAzjfPYoNQ
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Moore v. Harper not only rejected a strong version of ISLT; it made it unlikely that any future ISLT claims will succeed. Read this new article by @BrianneGorod, @annajessurun, and myself, forthcoming in @BCLawReview, on ISLT post-Moore: https://t.co/qIhld4gkig
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On this BCLR #FeatureFriday we are excited to highlight @StaceyTovino's Article "Aborted Confidentiality," which evaluates the effectiveness of the HIPAA Privacy Rule's 2024 amendments in protecting patient confidentiality. Read the full Article here: https://t.co/OjkL2VIxQX
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Excited to share that my Article, "Digital Servitude," is forthcoming with @BCLawReview in 2025. The article explores forced labor practices facilitated by information and communication technology (ICT).... (1/x)
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I'm so pleased to share that my new paper, The Food Allergy Generation Goes to Work, will be appearing in @BCLawReview this spring. When it clears the SSRN screening process, you can find the manuscript here: https://t.co/BVaIGuPNje
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The June/July issue of the Boston College Law Review is now available. This issue features two Articles by @tovino_stacey and @taniava05351239, two student Notes, and eight student Case Comments. Full content is available on the BCLR website.
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(BCLR Twitter is making a comeback!) Happy to announce Volume 65, Issue 2 is now live, full of rich legal scholarship from @tncgonzalez, @DuncanHosie, @ShaniShisha, @pro_jo_sho, @jedshug & @EricChaffee, among others! Check it out:
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We’re excited to share this paper: Reproducing Inequality: Racial Capitalism and the Cost of Public Education. It’s a first-of-its-kind study of school-based fines and fees, published in the Boston College Law Review. #FineFreeSchoolsPA
https://t.co/ILdiKPGfOu
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New in the BCLR E. Supp.! The authors of "The Cost of Guilty Breach," examined 1,000 M&A contracts and interviewed 30 practitioners to question whether fault is irrelevant to contract breach in the real world. Read their findings here:
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Finally, we have published outstanding student Notes from Mitchell Feldman, Katherine Foley, Connor Romm, and Lucas Spremulli. Congratulations to all!
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Prof. Kathryn Stanchi's Article, "The Rhetoric of Racism in the U.S. Supreme Court," demonstrates how the Court’s definitions of “racism” and “white supremacy” undercut the law’s potential to achieve racial justice & have removed the Court as a player in the fight against racism.
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In "Entitlement-Shifting Rules," Prof. Troy A. Rule sets forth principles for identifying and analyzing entitlement-shifting rules, examines a diverse set of examples, and describes some basic strategies for deterring the most costly and unjust forms of entitlement shifting.
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Prof. @zacharykaufman's Article, "Digital Age Samaritans," argues that certain witnesses who are not physically present at the scene of a crime should be held criminally accountable for failing to report specified violent offenses of which they are aware.
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In "Beyond Plea Bargaining: A Theory of Criminal Settlement," Professors Jolly and Prescott advance a comprehensive framework of criminal settlement—one that leverages incomplete or partial settlements as an analytical frame that stretches beyond mere plea bargaining.
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Announcing BCLR Volume 62, Issue 4! This issue features four Articles and four student Notes. The full texts are available here: https://t.co/VxQ0poTCQY
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The BCLR was honored to host @JudgeFergusonTX this evening to discuss remote legal proceedings! Of course, we asked him about the famous #CatLawyer video. He encouraged students that the incident represents the best of our profession -- lawyers stepping up during the pandemic.
I'm looking forward to joining the @BCLawReview this afternoon to discuss the past, present and future of remote proceedings in criminal matters.
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