This article addresses the unconstitutionality of New York Mayor Rudolph Guiliani’s Administration’s parade and rally permit application procedures, which Judge Leonard B. Sand of the Southern District of New York held to be in violation of the First Amendment on November 16, 1998. The author initially noted the two major factors that won Guiliani the 1993 mayoral election, New Yorker’s belief that he could (1) reduce crime and (2) cool racial tensions, and then “curiously” observed that the groups that faced the greatest bias in their applications were those that applied for parade or rally permits to protest or make speeches about either law enforcement or racism. Having considered “the pattern of bias,” the author then discussed two of...
The Law Review’s 2017 symposium, “Perspectives on Racial Justice in the Era of #BlackLivesMatter,” a...
Comments on police and other government officials attempts to control protest activities by limiting...
This article challenges the conventional view of the pervasiveness of American-style judicial review...
The matter of police and municipal courts as revenue producers became increasingly prominent followi...
The purpose of this Article is to alleviate the confusion that so frequently surrounds the law of pu...
In fall 2015, a unique class-action lawsuit was filed against the City of New York for unconstitutio...
In its landmark decision in City Council v. Taxpayers for Vincent, the United States Supreme Court u...
This Article examines an important but little-noticed moment in the intellectual history of the Equa...
Defendant addressed a crowd of people, white and Negro, on a public sidewalk for the purpose of urgi...
Recently, a federal judge decided that the stop-and-frisk practices carried out by the New York Poli...
In this transcript, Nicole A. Gordon, Executive Director of the New York City Campaign Finance Board...
This essay, a short book review of Ronald Krotoszynski Jr.\u27s book, Reclaiming the Petition Clause...
This thesis explores Handschu v. Special Services Division, an ongoing federal class-action suit bro...
Parts I-III of this Article outline the evolution of federal review of municipal boundary changes un...
Federal, state, and local governments have attempted to prevent abuses that often accompany lavishly...
The Law Review’s 2017 symposium, “Perspectives on Racial Justice in the Era of #BlackLivesMatter,” a...
Comments on police and other government officials attempts to control protest activities by limiting...
This article challenges the conventional view of the pervasiveness of American-style judicial review...
The matter of police and municipal courts as revenue producers became increasingly prominent followi...
The purpose of this Article is to alleviate the confusion that so frequently surrounds the law of pu...
In fall 2015, a unique class-action lawsuit was filed against the City of New York for unconstitutio...
In its landmark decision in City Council v. Taxpayers for Vincent, the United States Supreme Court u...
This Article examines an important but little-noticed moment in the intellectual history of the Equa...
Defendant addressed a crowd of people, white and Negro, on a public sidewalk for the purpose of urgi...
Recently, a federal judge decided that the stop-and-frisk practices carried out by the New York Poli...
In this transcript, Nicole A. Gordon, Executive Director of the New York City Campaign Finance Board...
This essay, a short book review of Ronald Krotoszynski Jr.\u27s book, Reclaiming the Petition Clause...
This thesis explores Handschu v. Special Services Division, an ongoing federal class-action suit bro...
Parts I-III of this Article outline the evolution of federal review of municipal boundary changes un...
Federal, state, and local governments have attempted to prevent abuses that often accompany lavishly...
The Law Review’s 2017 symposium, “Perspectives on Racial Justice in the Era of #BlackLivesMatter,” a...
Comments on police and other government officials attempts to control protest activities by limiting...
This article challenges the conventional view of the pervasiveness of American-style judicial review...