Boston Pastor Says Chauvin Guilty Verdict ‘Restores Hope’
“For us to get the guilty verdict, I believe it restores hope,” The Reverend Willie Bodrick II ‘20 tells CBS Boston. “It lets people know that their protest, their voices have been heard.”
“For us to get the guilty verdict, I believe it restores hope,” The Reverend Willie Bodrick II ‘20 tells CBS Boston. “It lets people know that their protest, their voices have been heard.”
Professors Martha Davis and Dan Urman share their thoughts on the confirmation of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court.
In an opinion piece for CommonWealth>, Professor Carol Steinberg ’80 makes the case for two bills pending in the Mass. House and Senate that would enforce accessibility in workplaces when the buildings in which they are located are new or substantially renovated.
Abortion medications are available by mail and offer an FDA-approved option for those hoping to terminate an early pregnancy. If Roe is overturned, could the pills be criminalized? Professor Wendy Parmet weighs in.
“Time and connection have brought us to a moment where we have a real opportunity to pass the Equality Act to update our civil rights laws for the modern era,” writes Mary Bonauto ’87, civil rights project director at GLAD, in an op-ed for USA Today.
The major questions doctrine has gone from something the Supreme Court used once every five years to a “Swiss Army knife” for courts to limit agency power, Professor Wendy Parmet, director of Northeastern Law’s Center for Health Policy and Law, tells Bloomberg Law.
“Rich countries are trying to garner geopolitical benefits from bilateral dose-sharing,” says Professor Brook Baker ’76, senior policy analyst for Health GAP.
“The ad is correct," Professor Deborah Ramirez, founder of Northeastern Law's Criminal Justice Task Force, tells 7News Boston. "It is a good recruiting tool to say to anyone in that job, ‘No matter what you do, whether you commit a crime, put your knee on someone’s neck for nine minutes, you will not be held financially liable."
Betty Francisco ’98, general counsel at Compass Working Capital and co-founder of Amplify Latinx, has been named to the Most Influential 100 Latinas of 2021 list by
New Article Alert: Professor Beth Simone Noveck's article, “Randomistas vs. Contestistas,” an excerpt from her new book, Solving Public Problems, has been published by the Stanford Social Innovation Review .