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

Print Edition

Symposium, Volume 110, June 2022, Jennifer M. Chacón California Law Review Symposium, Volume 110, June 2022, Jennifer M. Chacón California Law Review

Recounting: An Optimistic Account of Migration

To be forced to move from a beloved home is a tragedy, no matter the cause. But such moves need not end tragically. Though the wounds of losing a homeland may never fully heal, people with the strength and resilience necessary to withstand these kinds of moves are also often well-equipped to build something positive out of pain. They can be tremendous assets to others in their newfound homes.

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Symposium, Volume 110, June 2022, Seth Davis California Law Review Symposium, Volume 110, June 2022, Seth Davis California Law Review

Responsibility Sharing Within Borders

The international community has long recognized the principle that countries should share responsibility for hosting and supporting refugees. The 2018 Global Compact on Refugees’ recognition of an “urgent need” for greater responsibility sharing across borders reflects widespread agreement that the existing distribution of…

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Principles for Responsibility Sharing: Proximity, Culpability, Moral Accountability, and Capability

Responsibility sharing was a central commitment in the 2016 New York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants. It was also a key commitment in the preamble to the landmark 1951 Refugee Convention, in which countries of first asylum were promised “international cooperation” in return for providing refuge—though the Convention…

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Article, Volume 110, June 2022, Daniel S. Harawa California Law Review Article, Volume 110, June 2022, Daniel S. Harawa California Law Review

Lemonade: A Racial Justice Reframing of The Roberts Court’s Criminal Jurisprudence

The saying goes, when life gives you lemons, make lemonade. When it comes to the Supreme Court’s criminal jurisprudence and its relationship to racial (in)equity, progressive scholars often focus on the tartness of the lemons. In particular, they have studied how the Court often ignores race in its criminal decisions, a move that in turn reifies a racially subordinating criminalization system…

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Article, Podcast, Volume 110, June 2022, Norrinda Brown Hayat California Law Review Article, Podcast, Volume 110, June 2022, Norrinda Brown Hayat California Law Review

Housing the Decarcerated: Covid-19, Abolition, and the Right to Housing

The coronavirus pandemic revealed the need to advance the right to housing and abolition movements. The need for advancements in both spaces was no more painfully apparent than among the recently decarcerated population. Securing housing for the recently decarcerated is particularly difficult due to the “culture of exclusion” that has long pervaded subsidized housing policy, enabled by a patchwork of federal laws, including the Anti-Drug Abuse Act (ADA) of 1988 and the Supreme Court’s ruling in HUD v. Rucker

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Note, Volume 110, June 2022, Janelle Lamb California Law Review Note, Volume 110, June 2022, Janelle Lamb California Law Review

He Said. She Said. The iPhone Said. The Use of Secret Recordings in Domestic Violence Litigation

This Note explores the use of secret recordings in domestic violence litigation. It is particularly concerned with how the criminalization of domestic violence influences the laws governing the creation and use of secret recordings in this context. Secret recordings can provide determinative evidence of domestic violence. However, a domestic violence survivor who makes a secret recording is criminally and civilly liable under California’s Anti-Eavesdropping Statute (CEPA). CEPA also renders secret recordings inadmissible as evidence.

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Symposium, Volume 110, June 2022, Ayelet Shachar California Law Review Symposium, Volume 110, June 2022, Ayelet Shachar California Law Review

Instruments of Evasion: The Global Dispersion of Rights-Restricting Migration Policies

Border control is often seen as the last bastion of sovereignty. The term conjures up images of fortified walls and barbed wire separating one country from another. These fortifications determine access; entry can easily be denied to those on the other side. Defensive walls date back to prehistoric times. Think of Gilgamesh’s Uruk or the…

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Article, Volume 110, June 2022, I. India Thusi California Law Review Article, Volume 110, June 2022, I. India Thusi California Law Review

The Pathological Whiteness of Prosecution

Criminal law scholarship suffers from a Whiteness problem. While scholars appear to be increasingly concerned with the racial disparities within the criminal legal system, the scholarship’s focus tends to be on the marginalized communities and the various discriminatory outcomes they experience as a result of the system. Scholars frequently mention racial bias in the criminal…

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Article, Podcast, Volume 110, June 2022, Marissa Jackson Sow California Law Review Article, Podcast, Volume 110, June 2022, Marissa Jackson Sow California Law Review

Protect and Serve

There exists a substantial body of literature on racism and brutality in policing, police reform and abolition, the militarization of the police, and the relationship of the police to the State and its citizenry. Many theories abound with respect to the relationship between the police and Black people in the United States, and most of…

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Note, Volume 110, April 2022, Christine Hulsizer California Law Review Note, Volume 110, April 2022, Christine Hulsizer California Law Review

A Proposed Future for the Progressive Realization of Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights in California

As the country’s most populous state and the world’s fifth largest economy, California has often been characterized as a “nation-state,” historically independent in its governing priorities. Yet even as the state’s political identity coalesces in favor of recognizing greater social welfare provisions for its inhabitants, formal…

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Article, Volume 110, April 2022, Ryan Thoreson California Law Review Article, Volume 110, April 2022, Ryan Thoreson California Law Review

“Discriminalization”: Sexuality, Human Rights, and the Carceral Turn in Antidiscrimination Law

As lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) rights gain traction around the globe, many states have turned toward carceral punishment as a means of sanctioning discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity. The carceral turn has been scrutinized in racial justice and feminist literature, but few queer scholars have grappled with the growing use…

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Note, Podcast, Volume 110, April 2022, Isabel Tahir California Law Review Note, Podcast, Volume 110, April 2022, Isabel Tahir California Law Review

Addressing the United States Climate Crisis and Climate Displacement

In the United States, climate change discourse often focuses on international communities, island nations, and poor global citizens. While the focus on international communities is important, it places the impact of climate change in remote and distant locations. This Note argues that associating climate change with people outside the United States creates an “otherization” of climate change…

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Article, Volume 110, April 2022, Shirin Sinnar California Law Review Article, Volume 110, April 2022, Shirin Sinnar California Law Review

Hate Crimes, Terrorism, and the Framing of White Supremacist Violence

Even before the assault on the Capitol on January 6, 2021, a rising chorus of policymakers and pundits had called for treating White supremacist violence as “terrorism.” After multiple mass shootings motivated by White supremacist ideology, commentators argued that the “hate crime” label failed to convey the political nature of the violence or assign it…

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Article, Volume 110, April 2022, Darren Lenard Hutchinson California Law Review Article, Volume 110, April 2022, Darren Lenard Hutchinson California Law Review

“With All the Majesty of the Law”: Systemic Racism, Punitive Sentiment, and Equal Protection

United States criminal justice policies have played a central role in the subjugation of persons of color. Under slavery, criminal law explicitly provided a means to ensure White dominion over Blacks and require Black submission to White authority. During Reconstruction, anticrime policies served to maintain White supremacy and re-enslave Blacks, both through explicit…

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Article, Podcast, Volume 110, April 2022, Khiara M. Bridges California Law Review Article, Podcast, Volume 110, April 2022, Khiara M. Bridges California Law Review

The Dysgenic State: Environmental Injustice and Disability-Selective Abortion Bans

Disability-selective abortion bans are laws that prohibit individuals from terminating a pregnancy because the fetus has been diagnosed with a health impairment. Many environmental toxins—to which low-income people and people of color disproportionately are exposed—are known to cause impairments in fetuses. When the fact of environmental injustice is read together with disability…

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Note, Podcast, Volume 110, February 2022, Sean Kolkey California Law Review Note, Podcast, Volume 110, February 2022, Sean Kolkey California Law Review

People over Profit: The Case for Abolishing the Prison Financial System

The term “mass incarceration” is used to describe a crisis that, to many, is both abstract and distant. But for Black, Latinx, Indigenous, low-income, and other communities whose lives are disproportionately affected by the criminal legal system, the reality of carceral exploitation is as unavoidable as it is harmful. Incarceration has always had economic ramifications, but the…

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Note, Podcast, Volume 110, February 2022, Yeji Kim California Law Review Note, Podcast, Volume 110, February 2022, Yeji Kim California Law Review

Virtual Reality Data and Its Privacy Regulatory Challenges: A Call to Move Beyond Text-Based Informed Consent

Oculus, a virtual reality company, recently announced that it will require all its users to have a personal Facebook account to access its full service. The announcement infuriated users around the world, who feared increased privacy risks from virtual reality, a computer-generated technology that creates a simulated world. The goal of virtual reality is to offer an immersive experience that appears…

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Article, Podcast, Volume 110, February 2022, Brandon M. Weiss California Law Review Article, Podcast, Volume 110, February 2022, Brandon M. Weiss California Law Review

Opportunity Zones, 1031 Exchanges, and Universal Housing Vouchers

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 contained former President Trump’s signature economic development initiative: the Opportunity Zone program. Allowing a deferral of capital gains tax for certain qualifying investments in low-income areas, the Opportunity Zone program aims to spur economic development by steering capital into economically distressed neighborhoods. The program is…

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Article, Podcast, Volume 110, February 2022, Matthew Clair, Amanda Woog California Law Review Article, Podcast, Volume 110, February 2022, Matthew Clair, Amanda Woog California Law Review

Courts and the Abolition Movement

This Article theorizes and reimagines the place of courts in the contemporary struggle for the abolition of racialized punitive systems of legal control and exploitation. In the spring and summer of 2020, the killings of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and many other Black and Indigenous people sparked continuous protests against racist police violence and other forms of oppression. Meanwhile…

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Viral Injustice

The COVID-19 pandemic blighted all aspects of American life, but people in jails, prisons, and other detention sites experienced singular harm and neglect. Housing vulnerable detainee populations with elevated medical needs, these facilities were ticking time bombs. They were overcrowded, underfunded, unsanitary, insufficiently ventilated, and failed to meet even minimum…

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