Slavery, Jim Crow, and Mass Incarceration: Could the Thirteenth Amendment Hold the Key to Racial Equity in Criminal Justice?
S. Thomas Perry · December 2020 88 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. Arguendo 225 The United States incarcerates people at a higher rate... Read More
Funding Indigent Defense: A Judicial Solution to a Legislative Failure
Abigail Hollinger · November 2020 88 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. Arguendo 195 Every defendant in the United States is entitled to effective... Read More
What’s the Buzz about Standing?
Justin W. Aimonetti & Christian Talley · September 2020 88 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. Arguendo 175 Is the receipt of a single... Read More
Unmasking Demeanor
Professor Julia Simon-Kerr · September 2020 88 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. Arguendo 158 Demeanor is seen as a critical tool for assessing... Read More
Eckhardt v. Des Moines: The Apex of Student Rights
Sean M. Sherman · August 2020 88 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. Arguendo 115 Fifty-five years ago, Christopher Eckhardt embarked on a journey... Read More
Clerking for a Retired Supreme Court Justice—My Experience of Being “Shared” Among Five Justices in One Term
Professor Rory K. Little · July 2020 88 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. Arguendo 83 In 1932, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. retired... Read More
Law Clerks: A Jurisprudential Lens
Professor Perry Dane · July 2020 88 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. Arguendo 54 2019 was the putative hundredth anniversary of the formal... Read More
Supreme Court Clerks and the Death Penalty
Professor Matthew Tokson · July 2020 88 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. Arguendo 48 My first weeks as a Supreme Court clerk were,... Read More
The Concession that Dooms Originalism: A Response to Professor Lawrence Solum
Professor Eric J. Segall · April 2020 88 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. Arguendo 33 This essay responds to a recent article by Professor... Read More