The U.S. Supreme Court case Moore v. City of East Cleveland has long been celebrated as affirming constitutional rights related to family integrity. The Moore holding specifically confirmed the Court’s obligation to scrutinize housing ordinances that regulate a traditional family’s household composition. By comparison and extension, one might assume that alternative family formations would trigger similar scrutiny, but the Court has been loath to extend these protections. Apart from the Court’s failure to increase protections beyond traditional extended families, an interesting phenomenon has gone largely unexplored in this jurisprudential framework. In the wake of late twentieth-century mass incarceration, lawmakers and courts have failed ...
Family courts are not likely to disappear, as they currently constitute the largest proportion of tr...
This Article focuses upon two basic but under-explored questions: when does, and when should, the st...
My research is concerned with the effects of mass incarceration on American families, particularly o...
Part I of this Article briefly recounts the plurality decision in Moore before analyzing Justice Bre...
Forty years ago, Mrs. Inez Moore, a widowed black mother and grandmother of little means, secured a ...
This article was written as a contribution to the Fordham Law Review Symposium entitled Moore Kinshi...
Part I of this Article briefly recounts the plurality decision in Moore before analyzing Justice Bre...
Part I of this Article briefly explores the culture wars that have consumed American politics since ...
In the twenty years following Loving, the Supreme Court decided a number of cases dealing with the f...
This book answers two basic but under-appreciated questions: first, how does the American criminal j...
More than twenty-five states allow courts to consider parental incarceration or conviction of a crim...
This Note seeks to understand how people in prison may lose their parental rights as a result of the...
In its 2015 landmark civil rights decision in Obergefell v. Hodges, the Supreme Court finally held t...
Two interconnected social upheavals that occurred in the second half of the twentieth century underl...
In discussing the legal system\u27s response to alternative families seeking an extension of traditi...
Family courts are not likely to disappear, as they currently constitute the largest proportion of tr...
This Article focuses upon two basic but under-explored questions: when does, and when should, the st...
My research is concerned with the effects of mass incarceration on American families, particularly o...
Part I of this Article briefly recounts the plurality decision in Moore before analyzing Justice Bre...
Forty years ago, Mrs. Inez Moore, a widowed black mother and grandmother of little means, secured a ...
This article was written as a contribution to the Fordham Law Review Symposium entitled Moore Kinshi...
Part I of this Article briefly recounts the plurality decision in Moore before analyzing Justice Bre...
Part I of this Article briefly explores the culture wars that have consumed American politics since ...
In the twenty years following Loving, the Supreme Court decided a number of cases dealing with the f...
This book answers two basic but under-appreciated questions: first, how does the American criminal j...
More than twenty-five states allow courts to consider parental incarceration or conviction of a crim...
This Note seeks to understand how people in prison may lose their parental rights as a result of the...
In its 2015 landmark civil rights decision in Obergefell v. Hodges, the Supreme Court finally held t...
Two interconnected social upheavals that occurred in the second half of the twentieth century underl...
In discussing the legal system\u27s response to alternative families seeking an extension of traditi...
Family courts are not likely to disappear, as they currently constitute the largest proportion of tr...
This Article focuses upon two basic but under-explored questions: when does, and when should, the st...
My research is concerned with the effects of mass incarceration on American families, particularly o...