The majority of U.S. states disenfranchise formerly incarcerated individuals because of their poverty by conditioning re-enfranchisement on the full payment of legal financial obligations. This Note discusses the practice of wealth-based criminal disenfranchisement where the inability to pay legal financial obligations, including fines, fees, restitution, interest payments, court debts, and other economic penalties, prohibits low-income, formerly incarcerated individuals from voting. This Note argues this issue has not been adequately addressed due to unsuccessful legislative reforms and failed legal challenges. An examination of state policies, federal and state legislative reforms, and litigation shows that a more drastic state legislativ...
Debtors’ prisons should no longer exist. While imprisonment for debt was common in colonial times in...
As the number of incarcerated pupils has increased in the United States, so has the number of pupils...
This Note coordinates the Eighth Amendment Excessive Fines Clause with the Fourteenth Amendment weal...
This Article offers the first comprehensive examination of the way in which the inability to pay eco...
Felony disenfranchisement has remained a longstanding practice in the United States, utilized by nea...
The current cash bail system works in a way that punishes poverty. In Robinson v. California, the Su...
The current cash bail system works in a way that punishes poverty. In Robinson v. California, the Su...
Cash-starved municipalities regularly impose criminal justice debt on individuals too poor to pay. L...
Fines and fees that result from contact with the criminal legal system serve as a suffocating debt f...
This Note aims to show how the current test of proportionality is insufficient in combatting excessi...
There is a democracy deficit at the intersection of crime, race, and poverty. The causes and consequ...
Debtors’ prisons should no longer exist. While imprisonment for debt was common in colonial times in...
Individuals convicted of a felony lose the right to vote at least temporarily in most states, and ex...
One of the core tenets of our criminal justice system is the presumption of innocence until proven g...
Debtors’ prisons should no longer exist. While imprisonment for debt was common in colonial times in...
Debtors’ prisons should no longer exist. While imprisonment for debt was common in colonial times in...
As the number of incarcerated pupils has increased in the United States, so has the number of pupils...
This Note coordinates the Eighth Amendment Excessive Fines Clause with the Fourteenth Amendment weal...
This Article offers the first comprehensive examination of the way in which the inability to pay eco...
Felony disenfranchisement has remained a longstanding practice in the United States, utilized by nea...
The current cash bail system works in a way that punishes poverty. In Robinson v. California, the Su...
The current cash bail system works in a way that punishes poverty. In Robinson v. California, the Su...
Cash-starved municipalities regularly impose criminal justice debt on individuals too poor to pay. L...
Fines and fees that result from contact with the criminal legal system serve as a suffocating debt f...
This Note aims to show how the current test of proportionality is insufficient in combatting excessi...
There is a democracy deficit at the intersection of crime, race, and poverty. The causes and consequ...
Debtors’ prisons should no longer exist. While imprisonment for debt was common in colonial times in...
Individuals convicted of a felony lose the right to vote at least temporarily in most states, and ex...
One of the core tenets of our criminal justice system is the presumption of innocence until proven g...
Debtors’ prisons should no longer exist. While imprisonment for debt was common in colonial times in...
Debtors’ prisons should no longer exist. While imprisonment for debt was common in colonial times in...
As the number of incarcerated pupils has increased in the United States, so has the number of pupils...
This Note coordinates the Eighth Amendment Excessive Fines Clause with the Fourteenth Amendment weal...