Widely recognized for its intellectual diversity and originality, the faculty at Colorado Law encompasses an array of prominent legal scholars who are widely cited, both in academia and throughout the national media landscape. We invite you to catch up on the latest faculty publications and media mentions with this weekly round up, provided by the extraordinary .
Brad Bernthal, Kristelia Garcia, Dean Lolita Buckner Inniss, Blake Reid, & SFC Distinguished Advisor JP de Vries, (Silicon Flatirons Conference, Feb. 5-6, 2023).
Violeta Chapin, Debbie Kelley, , The Gazette, Feb. 5, 2023.
[Casey Fiesler, SFC affiliate faculty], Clarissa-Jan Lim, , Buzzfeed News, Feb. 8, 2023.
[Markus Funk, Colorado Law adjunct], , Washington Post, Jan. 10, 2023
Markus Funk, Bill Hutchinson, , ABC News, Jan. 18, 2023.
Markus Funk, , Dan Abrams Live (NewsNation), January 11, 2023 (appearance begins around 3:19).
Pratheepan Gulasekaram, Blake Reid, & Kyle Velte, Three New Faculty to Join Colorado Law, Feb. 10 2023.
Benjamin Levin, , Slate, Feb. 7, 2023.
Mark Loewenstein, , SSRN.com, Feb. 6, 2023 (SSRN login required).
Doug Spencer, , Mini Law School, Feb. 8, 2023.
Doug Spencer, Kate Riga, , Talking Points Memo, Feb. 9, 2023.
Ahmed White, (Feb. 7, 2023).
Ahmed White, (upcoming, March 1, 2023).
Silicon Flatirons conference Cristiano Lima, , Washington Post, Feb. 5, 2023.
Silicon Flatirons conference, , TR Daily, Feb. 6, 2023 (Lexis login required).
Silicon Flatirons conference, Andrea Grajeda, , Daily Camera, Feb. 5, 2023.
[Colorado Law], , TaxProf Blog, Feb. 9, 2023.
[Colorado Law], , TaxProf Blog, Feb. 9, 2023.
[Colorado Law], , TaxProf Blog, Feb. 9, 2023.
Widely recognized for its intellectual diversity and originality, the faculty at Colorado Law encompasses an array of prominent legal scholars who are widely cited, both in academia and throughout the national media landscape. We invite you to catch up on the latest faculty publications and media mentions with this weekly round up, provided by the extraordinary .
Aamir Abdullah, , 51 Colo. Law. 8 (2022).
Margot Kaminski, , SSRN.com, Aug. 23, 2022 (forthcoming, 103 Boston U. L. Rev. (2023)) (recently listed on SSRN's Top Ten download list for: Artificial Intelligence - Law, Policy, & Ethics eJournal, Consumer Law eJournal, Data Science & Analytics eJournal, InfoSciRN: Artificial Intelligence (Topic), InfoSciRN: Data Protection (Topic), InfoSciRN: Information Control (Topic), InfoSciRN: Information Privacy (Topic), InfoSciRN: Other Artificial Intelligence (Sub-Topic), Information Policy & Ethics eJournal, Information Privacy Law eJournal, Information Use eJournal, LSN: Consumer Privacy (Sub-Topic), LSN: Online Privacy (Sub-Topic), LSN: Regulation of Information & Privacy Issues Involving Consumers (Topic) and Libraries & Information Technology eJournal).
Aya Gruber, , Denver 9 News, Aug. 19, 2022.
Aya Gruber, Kevin Cole, , CrimProf Blog, Aug. 21, 2022 (Sex Exceptionalism in Criminal Law #2).
Dale Hatfield, Silicon Flatirons Center, John Eggerton, , NextTv.com, Aug. 24, 2022.
Margot Kaminski, Lawrence Solum, , Legal Theory Blog, Aug. 26, 2022.
Ben Levin, , University of Virginia, Aug. 26, 2022.
Douglas Spencer, Harry Stevens, Artur Galocha & Adrian Blanco, , The Washington Post, Aug. 22, 2022.
Mark Squillace, S&P Global Commodity Insights, Aug. 19, 2022.
Mark Squillace, Conrad Swanson, , Denver Post, Aug. 20, 2022.
Mark Squillace, Sam Metz & Felicia Fonseca, , Associated Press, Aug. 15, 2022 (reprints include the Washington Post).
Mark Squillace, Heather Richards, E&E News Energywire, Aug. 24, 2022 (VPN logon required).
Mark Squillace, Bobby Magill, , Bloomberg Law News, Aug. 24, 2022 (VPN logon or Bloomberg logon required).
If you have any problems accessing any of these articles, contact: lawfacultyservices@colorado.edu
Catch up on the latest faculty publications and media mentions with this weekly round up, provided by the extraordinary Wise Law Library.
Associate Professor studies criminal law and policy. Here he discusses the relationship between the coronavirus pandemic and criminal justice reform, police unions and their role in policymaking, and mass incarceration in the United States. His latest articles, 鈥�" and "," are forthcoming in the Columbia Law Review and Minnesota Law Review, respectively.
After law school, I worked at a firm representing victims of police misconduct. In our cases, police unions operated as stand-ins for "bad policing," serving as obstacles to reform and accountability. That view of police unions has predominated in the academic literature and in policy conversations I鈥檝e been a part of. At the same time, I come from a pro-labor background, and I have written about historical hostility toward unions. So, I arrive at my study of police unions from a place of ambivalence: I worry about the role they have played in upholding the injustices of our criminal system. But I also worry about the ways in which criticism of them can cut more broadly and support attacks on organized labor.
What has the death of George Floyd and others at the hands of the police revealed about the state of police unions, and what reform is necessary?
I see them as revealing more about policing than police unions. The video of Officer Derek Chauvin killing George Floyd drives home the violence inherent in policing and the ways that violence implicates inequality along lines of race, class, and social marginalization. Unions become an easy target for outrage because they have taken a hard line in support of officers accused of misconduct. It鈥檚 important to recognize the role of unions in setting policy. (I鈥檓 actually a part of a nationwide working group on state labor law and policing.) But the focus on unions risks letting others off the hook. Elected officials have failed to rein in police and have signed off on contracts that stymie oversight. Lawmakers, judges, and voters have continued to expand the criminal system and empower police. Putting the blame on unions obscures that complicity and, I worry, plays into a broader narrative about public-sector unions (rather than policing) as the real problem.
How has the coronavirus pandemic exposed structural flaws of the U.S. criminal system during "normal" times?
Over 2 million people are locked up, and millions more are under some form of state supervision. For those who are directly affected by the system, the brutality of its "normal" operations is unavoidable. The pandemic has shone a light on and exacerbated many aspects of the system that often escape the broader public鈥檚 attention. For example, people charged with crimes are often held in jail awaiting trial because they can鈥檛 afford bail. Despite being presumptively innocent, they can be locked up for days, weeks, or months. That dynamic has led to constitutional challenges and legislative efforts in Colorado and elsewhere to enact "bail reform." During the pandemic, the injustices of incarcerating people because they are too poor to pay has become even clearer: Jails are petri dishes for disease, so leaving someone locked up could mean death or serious illness.
What opportunities and challenges does the coronavirus present for criminal justice reform?
The pandemic has thrown many societal flaws into stark relief. Economic inequality appears even more glaring as some of us are able to work from home, while others lose jobs and housing. Similarly, the criminal system鈥檚 harshness has become clearer to many people who otherwise wouldn鈥檛 be aware. The pandemic helps bring urgency to discussions about reform: Jails and prisons are the sources of many of the nation鈥檚 largest clusters of cases, so addressing mass incarceration has become a pressing public health concern. The worry, though, is that folks might view the problems identified this summer as "exceptional" and see emergency fixes as long-term solutions, rather than stopgap measures to address longstanding injustice.
What advice do you have for law students interested in a career in criminal justice reform?
Don鈥檛 get discouraged! I am thrilled by how many CU grads go into criminal practice, and it鈥檚 an exciting moment to be working in the field because there is so much interest in reform. But that doesn鈥檛 mean there are easy answers. The policy questions are hard, and the politics are complicated. Mass incarceration didn鈥檛 happen overnight, and neither will a transformation of the system.
Associate Professor Benjamin Levin discusses the relationship between the coronavirus pandemic and criminal justice reform, police unions and their role in policymaking, and mass incarceration in the United States.