Retaliation is deeply engrained in the correctional office subculture; it may well be in the normative response when an inmate files a grievance, a statutory precondition for filing a civil rights action. This Article, the first to address comprehensively the sociological and constitutional aspects of retaliation, argues for protecting grievants through safeguards much like those accorded whistleblowers. Part I of the Article provides a socio-legal primer on correctional officer retaliation by addressing the frequency of retaliation, its causes, and its constitutional taxonomy. Part II describes the elements of a prima facie case of unconstitutional retaliation under § 1983. Part III examines the controversy over determining damages, with a...
This Article asserts that judicial activism occurs when a court goes beyond the plain meaning of the...
This Note examines Walton v. Dawson, a recent Eighth Circuit decision that considers whether jail of...
Inmates confined to correctional facilities have necessarily forfeited many of their civil rights. B...
Retaliation is deeply engrained in the correctional office subculture; it may well be in the normati...
Prisons in the United States house approximately 220,000 felons,\u2795 percent of whom will eventual...
The New York City Legal Aid Society, through its Prisoners’ Rights Project (PRP), has fought since P...
This Article takes a comprehensive look at retaliation and its place in discrimination law. The Arti...
This Article examines one part of the legal regime administering mass incarceration that has not b...
In July 2020, the New York Times published an article on a Department of Justice report detailing th...
Incarceration is a trying time for inmates as they are punished for crimes they committed while free...
This Essay focuses on the insidious pattern or practice of prison staffs’ unlawful use of force that...
As American incarcerated populations grew starting in the 1970s, so too did court oversight of priso...
In addition to a lack of interest by the courts, prison officials received little direction from sta...
Revocation of community supervision is a defining feature of American criminal law. Nearly 4.5 milli...
In Bridges v. Gilbert, the Seventh Circuit considered the question of whether prisoners\u27 free spe...
This Article asserts that judicial activism occurs when a court goes beyond the plain meaning of the...
This Note examines Walton v. Dawson, a recent Eighth Circuit decision that considers whether jail of...
Inmates confined to correctional facilities have necessarily forfeited many of their civil rights. B...
Retaliation is deeply engrained in the correctional office subculture; it may well be in the normati...
Prisons in the United States house approximately 220,000 felons,\u2795 percent of whom will eventual...
The New York City Legal Aid Society, through its Prisoners’ Rights Project (PRP), has fought since P...
This Article takes a comprehensive look at retaliation and its place in discrimination law. The Arti...
This Article examines one part of the legal regime administering mass incarceration that has not b...
In July 2020, the New York Times published an article on a Department of Justice report detailing th...
Incarceration is a trying time for inmates as they are punished for crimes they committed while free...
This Essay focuses on the insidious pattern or practice of prison staffs’ unlawful use of force that...
As American incarcerated populations grew starting in the 1970s, so too did court oversight of priso...
In addition to a lack of interest by the courts, prison officials received little direction from sta...
Revocation of community supervision is a defining feature of American criminal law. Nearly 4.5 milli...
In Bridges v. Gilbert, the Seventh Circuit considered the question of whether prisoners\u27 free spe...
This Article asserts that judicial activism occurs when a court goes beyond the plain meaning of the...
This Note examines Walton v. Dawson, a recent Eighth Circuit decision that considers whether jail of...
Inmates confined to correctional facilities have necessarily forfeited many of their civil rights. B...