“To Intervene or Not to Intervene” by Riada Akyol“To Intervene or Not to Intervene, that is the Question: Lessons from Bosnia and Herzegovina in Retrospect” by Riada Akyol is a postmortem…Dec 6, 2021Dec 6, 2021
Anarchy and JusticeWere an anarchist to hold his beliefs side-by-side with the reality of modern government, he would, in every case he examined, see the few…Dec 6, 2021Dec 6, 2021
Community Zero: A Relational Account of the Ethics of Sanitary CordonThe recently enforced “sanitary cordons” in some Italian and Chinese regions have brought the ethics of disease containment to the fore.Sep 2, 2021Sep 2, 2021
Applying Norman Daniels’ Theory of Justice for Health to the U.S. Healthcare SystemIn recent elections, the question of unequal access health care in the US and its implications on health equity and justice appears to have…Aug 25, 2021Aug 25, 2021
Sexism in Scholastic Speech CompetitionsA look at the negative attitudes that exist towards women in scholastic speech competitions.Jun 11, 2021Jun 11, 2021
Published inScholastic Legal BlogThe American Psychological Association Is Incorrect to Claim Credit for the Supreme Court’s…The depathologization of homosexuality by the psychiatric establishment did not coincide with either shifts in public or judicial opinion.Feb 18, 20211Feb 18, 20211
Ranked-Choice Voting: The Next Step Towards Fixing Our Democracy?Both sides of the political spectrum can safely agree it is time to reform our superannuated voting system by adopting ranked-choice…Feb 14, 2021Feb 14, 2021
Published inScholastic Legal BlogRemembering Massachusetts’ Denial of Justice to the Amirault FamilyAfter 36 years, Massachusetts is still waiting for Gerald and Cheryl Amirault to die before exonerating them.Aug 20, 20202Aug 20, 20202
Published inScholastic Legal BlogWoodrow Wilson, Living Constitutionalism, and Our Bloated Administrative StateWilson’s devised a system where bureaucratic experts led the country. There was just one obstacle: the Constitution.Aug 18, 20202Aug 18, 20202