Our contemporary moment of reckoning presents an opportunity to evaluate racial subordination and structural inequality throughout our three-tiered domestic, transnational, and international criminal law system. In particular, this Essay exposes a pernicious racial dynamic in contemporary U.S. global criminal justice policy, which I call othering across borders. First, this othering may occur when race emboldens political and prosecutorial actors to prosecute foreign defendants. Second, racial animus may undermine U.S. engagement with international criminal legal institutions, specifically the International Criminal Court. This Essay concludes with measures to mitigate such othering
Contemporary global crime and cross-border law enforcement cooperation have multiplied “foreign affa...
This Essay presents the concept of “existential crime.” It argues that our notion of crime has confl...
Several months ago, there was a heated discussion on CrimProf, the listserv for criminal law profess...
Our contemporary moment of reckoning presents an opportunity to evaluate racial subordination and st...
Overcriminalization has rightly generated national condemnation among policymakers, scholars, and pr...
Given the disproportionate representation of minorities in various stages of the American criminal j...
Part I of this Article considers parallel developments in the law that contribute to what can be cha...
This article contends that international law, like national law, is captive to the racial biases and...
This article explores the racial dimensions of the various collateral consequences that attach to cr...
The criminalization of migration is heavily patterned by race. By placing race at the centre of its ...
Statistics tend to show Black people commit most of the crime in the United States. Those statistics...
This Article argues that issues of race and identity have so far been underemphasized, understudied,...
Scholars, social activists, and policy makers often regard the United States\u27 foreign policy as i...
Despite international criminal law’s historically contingent doctrines and embedded biases,ThirdWor...
What does race have to do with international law? This course will delve into historical and contemp...
Contemporary global crime and cross-border law enforcement cooperation have multiplied “foreign affa...
This Essay presents the concept of “existential crime.” It argues that our notion of crime has confl...
Several months ago, there was a heated discussion on CrimProf, the listserv for criminal law profess...
Our contemporary moment of reckoning presents an opportunity to evaluate racial subordination and st...
Overcriminalization has rightly generated national condemnation among policymakers, scholars, and pr...
Given the disproportionate representation of minorities in various stages of the American criminal j...
Part I of this Article considers parallel developments in the law that contribute to what can be cha...
This article contends that international law, like national law, is captive to the racial biases and...
This article explores the racial dimensions of the various collateral consequences that attach to cr...
The criminalization of migration is heavily patterned by race. By placing race at the centre of its ...
Statistics tend to show Black people commit most of the crime in the United States. Those statistics...
This Article argues that issues of race and identity have so far been underemphasized, understudied,...
Scholars, social activists, and policy makers often regard the United States\u27 foreign policy as i...
Despite international criminal law’s historically contingent doctrines and embedded biases,ThirdWor...
What does race have to do with international law? This course will delve into historical and contemp...
Contemporary global crime and cross-border law enforcement cooperation have multiplied “foreign affa...
This Essay presents the concept of “existential crime.” It argues that our notion of crime has confl...
Several months ago, there was a heated discussion on CrimProf, the listserv for criminal law profess...