The disproportionate vulnerability of Black, Brown, and low-income communities given climate-caused relocation is the topic of "Relocating Justice." In this article, Professor Nagra explores two problems that point to opposite solutions and argues that the resulting "justice paradox" can only be solved by system-level remedies. Read our final article from Issue 2 here: https://lnkd.in/gJN49GBf
Duke Law Journal
律师事务所
The Duke Law Journal is a student-run law review published at Duke University School of Law.
关于我们
The Duke Law Journal is a student-run law review published at Duke University School of Law. The journal publishes general-interest articles and student notes in eight issues each year.
- 网站
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https://dlj.law.duke.edu/
Duke Law Journal的外部链接
- 所属行业
- 律师事务所
- 规模
- 501-1,000 人
- 类型
- 教育机构
Duke Law Journal员工
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Michael DeLuca
J.D. Candidate at Duke University School of Law | Schwarzman Scholar
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Gabriela Nagle Alverio
Editor-in-Chief at Duke Law Journal | J.D. - Ph.D. Candidate in Environmental Policy (UPEP) at Duke University
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Jack Dippolito
J.D. Candidate at Duke University School of Law
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Emma Cline
J.D. Candidate at Duke University School of Law
动态
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MEMBER SPOTLIGHT: Meet our stellar Senior Notes Editor, Chandler. Her note is featured in Volume 74's first issue, but she's no stranger to being published. Just a few days ago, she was published in Newsweek! https://lnkd.in/gSJh27BG
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In "Antitrust Without Competition," Professor Daniel Francis argues that it is time to let go of competition as an orienting value in antitrust law. He explains that other measures like “harm-centric antitrust” would better protect against welfare harms while avoiding the indeterminacy, utopianism, and bluntness of “competition.” Read on: https://lnkd.in/gJN49GBf
Duke Law Journal
scholarship.law.duke.edu
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MEMBER SPOTLIGHT: Meet, Molly, an exceptional Research Editor on our staff! REs do very important work, both helping authors improve their research below the line and supporting staff editors in their new role on the journal.
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DLJ's Managing Editor James Mullen proposes a two-phase framework to constrain permissible digital searches in "(CTRL + F)ourth Amendment Searches of Digital Storage Devices: A Novel Framework." Analogies to physical precedents have not sufficiently protected digital spaces, but this Note's proposed framework would?protect devices from oversearching. Read it here: https://lnkd.in/gJN49GBf
Duke Law Journal
scholarship.law.duke.edu
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MEMBER SPOTLIGHT: Volume 74 has not one, but two fantastic Senior Research Editors! Katie Grace and Timothy work tirelessly to ensure our pieces are substantiated. We're so thankful for their hard work and attention to detail!
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To start off Issue 2, Duke Law's Professor Greene collaborates with Professors Kiviat and Yoon on "Getting to Home: Understanding the Collateral Consequences of Negative Records in the Rental Housing Market." Drawing on dozens of interviews, this article explores how personal records factor into landlords’ decision-making and how landlords may fairly and legally use them. Read more: https://lnkd.in/gJN49GBf
Duke Law Journal
scholarship.law.duke.edu
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We are thrilled to publish Issue 2! This issue features three articles and one student note, on topics ranging from antitrust to climate justice. Read it now: https://lnkd.in/gJN49GBf
Duke Law Journal
scholarship.law.duke.edu
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Member Spotlight: Membership Editor Natalie Leon helps the best part of DLJ, its people, thrive! From game nights to potlucks-turned-cooking-competitions, we're grateful for her efforts to help our team bond.
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A little-studied antitrust statute is brought to light in DLJ Articles Editor Jacob Cunningham's "The Limits of the Bank Service Company Act." His Note explores the Act's outer limits to recommend statutory revisions that will improve agency action.? ? Dive in at:?https://lnkd.in/g9yZgJg8
Duke Law Journal | Vol 74 | No. 1
scholarship.law.duke.edu