“KISS” It and Disrupt Unfair Housing

Noah M. Kazis, Fair Housing, Unfair Housing, __ Wash. U. L. R. Online (forthcoming), available at SSRN.

Walking across the parking lot from my law school to the annex building where my office is temporarily relocated, I spotted a trusted and dear colleague. She and I hugged and soon started talking about a sore topic for me, how my 1L property course was coming along. This is the second year I have been relegated to teaching my once four credit course as a two credit course. Just another one of the tragic consequences of Covid, I guess.

Only having two credits has meant that the discussion of many property topics, including housing law, has been truncated. In frustration, I uttered the words, “I’m just going to KISS it.” Her eyes widened as she inquired, “KISS it, what is that?” I replied, “I’m Going to Keep It Simple Stupid.” We looked at one another knowingly, we both laughed, and continued on our separate ways to our offices.

Soon thereafter, I came across Noah Kazis’ article, Fair Housing, Unfair Housing, in which he makes an insightful contribution to the seemingly intractable problem of unfair housing practices. Kazis’ thesis confirmed my weeks earlier conversation with my colleague; sometimes the best solution is found in keeping it simple. Continue reading "“KISS” It and Disrupt Unfair Housing"

Shining a Light on Shadow Sanctions

Shalini Bhargava Ray, Immigration Law’s Arbitrariness Problem, 121 Colum. L. Rev. 2049 (2021).

In immigration law, where the apex penalty is deportation, proportionality is absent. We tend to think of proportionality in punishment as requiring that the severity of a penalty track the severity of the offense, minus mitigating circumstances. The coin of the realm in immigration law is immigration status, so mitigating circumstances would in theory focus on the noncitizen’s particular qualities, such as length of residence in and ties to the United States. In Immigration Law’s Arbitrariness Problem, published in the Columbia Law Review, Shalini Bhargava Ray argues for sanctions better tailored to these considerations.

I like this article (lots) because for one thing, it challenges my own scholarship advocating for proportionality in immigration law and centralizing deportation as the sole immigration penalty. (I’m not alone. Angela Banks, Mike Wishnie, Maureen Sweeney, and Jason Cade (and others) have also proposed proportionality in deportation, and they’re no slouches). The article’s first contribution is to challenge the notion that proportionality is a fix for deportation’s ills. Proportionality proponents tend to point to the criminal justice system’s employment of proportionality in sentencing but, as Bhargava Ray observes, criminal law is replete with “overpunishment and overcriminalization” and so not a model of proportionality as path to justice. Besides, courts tend to hate the proportionality argument, which is why it tends to fail. Continue reading "Shining a Light on Shadow Sanctions"

Lawyers Playing Tambourine

Scott Cummings’s new book, An Equal Place: Lawyers in the Struggle for Los Angeles, tells five different stories illustrating the role of law and lawyers in securing goods such as economic justice, environmental protection, and the rights of immigrants, in the city of Los Angeles in the years following the 1992 riots. The book is organized around chapters providing comprehensive histories of these campaigns: Reforming sweatshop labor in the garment industry; contesting anti-solicitation ordinances that restricted the ability of mostly Latino day laborers to obtain employment; ensuring living-wage jobs in the wake of gentrification and community redevelopment projects; blocking the development of a Wal-Mart supercenter that would have undermined unionization in the grocery industry; and improving labor and environmental conditions for truck drivers at the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach.

In his most recent Netflix special, all-time-great comedian Chris Rock observes: “[W]hen you’re in a band, you have roles that you play in the band. Sometimes, you sing lead. And sometimes, you’re on tambourine. And if you’re on tambourine, play it right. Play it right. Play it with a . . . smile, because no one wants to see a mad tambourine player.” Rock uses this as an extended metaphor for relationships, but at the risk of wrenching it too far out of context, the comparison can also apply to the role of public interest lawyers in social movements. Some lawyers may aspire to be the lead singer, but the interests of justice may be better served by lawyers playing a supporting role, and playing it well. Continue reading "Lawyers Playing Tambourine"

Contesting Birthright Citizenship: The Aftermath of Wong Kim Ark

When assessing a canonical Supreme Court case, legal scholars often emphasize the road to the case and its decision, and then move on. It is the issuing of the decision that ends the discussion. But there is much to lose if we do not take seriously the aftermath of a case and ask how that decision translated into actual legal practice. This is the important work that Amanda Frost does in her article on the canonical 1898 case United States v. Wong Kim Ark, which upheld the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of citizenship to those born on U.S. soil. The case is heralded as a moment of enlightenment amid a dark exclusionary era, but this article reveals a far more complicated legacy. Frost mines the archives to bring us the startling discovery that Wong Kim Ark’s citizenship was far from settled after the Court issued its decision, despite its unequivocal holding.

By Accident of Birth artfully weaves together multiple strands, including the legal history of birthright citizenship, the social history of Chinese Americans, and the family history of Wong Kim Ark, to shed new light on this landmark case. Wong Kim Ark’s personal and family history serve as the organizing frame for the article. Wong was born in San Francisco in 1870, just two years after Congress ratified the Fourteenth Amendment and twelve years before passing the first Chinese Exclusion Act. His parents lived in the U.S. legally for many years prior to his birth, but they – like other Chinese migrants and Chinese Americans—were commonly subjected to discriminatory state and local laws as well as vigilante violence. Continue reading "Contesting Birthright Citizenship: The Aftermath of Wong Kim Ark"

Interpretive Authority and the Kelsenian Quest for Legality

David Dyzenhaus, The Long Arc of Legality: Hobbes, Kelsen, Hart (2022).

David Dyzenhaus argued in the last paragraph of The Long Arc of Legality that, except for the rare cases where there is a need for a revolution, “our moral and legal lives are completely and utterly intertwined.” (P. 422.) But this apparently radical endorsement of natural law theory is nuanced because Dyzenhaus has only a pragmatic morality in mind. In agreement with Hart, he rejects the assumption that legal philosophers should choose between the metaethical positions of moral realism and emotivism (P. 370) and suggests, instead, that the law is a kind of “laboratory for the testing of moral ideals.” (P. 387.)

A distinctive and interesting part of Dyzenhaus’s contribution is his explanation of how that pragmatic morality relates to law. To understand the law’s authority, Dyzenhaus puts legal subjects, instead of officials, at the center of legal inquiry. Jurisprudence’s “first question” becomes the question that legal subjects are entitled to ask from the legal system’s internal point of view, that is, the question “But, how can that be the law for me?” (P. 2), which Bernard Williams described as the “Basic Legitimation Demand” of any political society.1 A modern state must satisfy that justificatory requirement because that is what shows that such state “wields authority, rather than sheer or unmediated coercive power, over those subject to its rule.” (P. 213.) Continue reading "Interpretive Authority and the Kelsenian Quest for Legality"

Erasure: The Conceptual Disappearance of Criminalized Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders

Raymond Magsaysay, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders and the Prison Industrial Complex, 26 Mich. J. Race & L. 443 (2021).

As teachers and scholars, we think a lot about how the world really works, what can be done to make it more equitable, and how to articulate coherent analyses that will be put to good use by others. For those of us who’ve been at it a while, it’s wonderful to hear from young scholars excited by something we wrote long ago—but it can be disheartening as well. After that initial relief that the piece hasn’t been swallowed by a black hole, the worry sets in. Why does decades-old work appear as fresh insight? Are we still circling the same old rock? Shouldn’t this intellectual project have evolved much further by now?

Then, along comes a gem like Raymond Magsaysay’s Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders and the Prison Industrial Complex. This somewhat prosaic title masks a beautifully written and artfully constructed exposé of the conceptual disappearance of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (“AAPIs”) in the criminal “justice” system. It is not, however, a “we, too, are oppressed” story. Rather, the brilliance of Magsaysay’s article lies in his use of critical race theory, Asian American jurisprudence, and the work of anti-colonial and indigenist scholars as well as prison abolitionists to highlight how the narratives of criminalized AAPI youth can undermine anti-Black racism and help us envision a future unconstrained by mass incarceration. Continue reading "Erasure: The Conceptual Disappearance of Criminalized Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders"

What Can Neuroscience Teach Us About Copyright?

Mark Bartholomew, Copyright and the Creative Process, 97 Notre Dame L. Rev. 357 (2021).

Mark Bartholomew of the University at Buffalo School of Law recently published an article in the Notre Dame Law Review, Copyright and the Creative Process, which offers a fresh perspective on a central question in copyright law—what is “creativity?” Creativity is the thing that copyright law is meant to encourage. Copyright, in other words, is justified as a way of incentivizing creativity. But copyright law’s understanding of creativity is notably spare. The U.S. Copyright Act states that a work must be “original” in order to be protected. But the Act does not define originality, or situate it within the broader concept of “creativity.” The Supreme Court in its decision in Feist Publ’ns, Inc. v. Rural Tel. Serv. Co. was only a bit more forthcoming. Originality, the Feist Court made clear, does not require the sort of novelty that eligibility for patent protection does. Rather, what is required is only independent creation (i.e., that the work originate with the author, rather than being wholly copied from another), and that is “possess[es] some creative spark, no matter how crude, humble or obvious is might be.” Id. at 345 (internal quotations omitted).

Feist makes it clear that the standard is not demanding. It does not make clear, however, how to assess in borderline cases whether a work meets that low threshold and is creative enough to be protected. Copyright’s reticence on this point is, at minimum, a bit strange. Some have reacted by suggesting that we drop or at least de-emphasize creativity as an entry condition for copyright protection.1 Others have gone in the opposite direction, suggesting that the creativity standard be raised.2 But it’s difficult to know what to do with copyright’s creativity requirement, if anything, until we understand the concept better. Continue reading "What Can Neuroscience Teach Us About Copyright?"

Challenging Home Court Advantage

John Coyle & Katherine Richardson, Enforcing Inbound Forum Selection Clauses in State Court, 53 Ariz. St. L.J. 65 (2021).

As national and international commerce move increasingly to online platforms – which themselves tie together nearly every corner of the globe – the problem of dispute resolution when business goes awry or products cause injury has moved to a central position for scholars of private law, both domestic and international.  In their careful and important work, Enforcing Inbound Forum Selection Clauses in State Court, John Coyle and Katherine Richardson address an important aspect of this problem: “inbound” forum selection clauses, i.e. those that require adjudication in the forum where the lawsuit is filed. Coyle and Richardson distinguish “inbound” forum selection clauses from “outbound” forum selection clauses – those that require adjudication in another forum. This distinction, they rightly note, is often missed by federal district courts and it is critical for analysis under Fed. R. Civ. P. 4(k), which in essence makes federal district court jurisdiction coextensive with the general law of personal jurisdiction of the state in which the federal district court sits (itself a quirk of political dynamics in the U.S. federal system).   This article is one I like a lot, and I hope others active in the study and shaping of private international law do as well.

In addition to the important distinction they highlight in the law governing forum selection clauses – inbound and outbound – Coyle and Richardson undertake a heroic effort to 1) map the legal terrain of state law governing inbound forum selection clauses (there are four general regimes, with a majority of states following the approach adopted by the U.S. Supreme Court in The Bremen v. Zapata Off-Shore Co. concluding forum selection clauses are broadly enforceable absent an extraordinary showing of unreasonableness or unfairness); 2) describe the unfairness that results from current treatment (they begin the article with Google’s standard terms that require adjudication in Santa Clara County, California); and 3) propose solutions based on the size and sophistication of the party disadvantaged by the inbound forum selection clause. Continue reading "Challenging Home Court Advantage"

Racism in the Valuation of Disease and the Distribution of Lifesaving Treatments

Matiangai Sirleaf, Racial Valuation of Diseases, 67 UCLA L. Rev. 1820 (2021).

The genomic age showed that race is not genetic; it is only a social construct. More specifically, the genome between humans is 99.5%-99.9% identical; the 0.1%-0.5% variation between any two unrelated individuals is greatest between individuals in the same local population; and there are no identifiable continental or racial genomic clusters. Thus, the connection of disease and race is not about science; rather it is a way to support a system of racial hierarchy that devalues the lives of racial and ethnic minority individuals.

The racialization of disease to support a racial hierarchy is not new, as Professor Matiangai Sirleaf discusses in her article, Racial Valuation of Diseases, and does not happen in a vacuum. The United States government and colonial forces have long used laws to limit the rights of racial and ethnic minority individuals based on the racialization of disease. As one example, Professor Sirleaf cites the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act, which “prevented Chinese laborers from immigrating to the United States in part based on biases and stereotypes that they were more likely to carry cholera and smallpox.” Similarly, Haitian people seeking refuge in the United States were linked to having HIV/AIDS and denied access in 2021. Continue reading "Racism in the Valuation of Disease and the Distribution of Lifesaving Treatments"

Let Kids be Kids

In the introduction to her book, Kristin Henning writes: “We live in a society that is uniquely afraid of Black children.” (P. xv.) The Rage of Innocence shows just what that means for Black children – and the rest of us.

In bleak chapters, Henning examines the criminalization of Black youth. A chapter contrasting the experiences of white and Black American adolescents sets the table. The next three chapters examine how “play,” clothing and hip-hop, and sexuality transform into markers of crime. A set of chapters examining policing-based activities follows, while the penultimate two chapters explore the “dehumanization” of Black children and Black families. Henning shows how the police and school “resource officers” treat the normal behaviors of childhood, when exhibited by Black children, as illegal activities while the same behaviors of white children are unnoticed – or rewarded. She starts almost every chapter with the story of a particular child or youth, and then embeds those stories in social science data and legal analysis that back up and illustrate her point. Continue reading "Let Kids be Kids"