Comment: Prosecutors Can Free the Innocent They Put in Prison
If Washington is to address mass incarceration, freeing the innocent is a good place to start, writes Professor Daniel Medwed in a co-authored op-ed for The Everett Herald.
If Washington is to address mass incarceration, freeing the innocent is a good place to start, writes Professor Daniel Medwed in a co-authored op-ed for The Everett Herald.
Listen back: Professor Daniel Medwed joined GBH’s Morning Edition to talk about US intellectual property law and at least one effort underway to get companies to share their vaccine formulas.
We’re going to see the same cycle again, Professor Brook Baker ’76, senior policy analyst for Health GAP, tells VOA.”The rich countries will run to the front of the line for the new variant vaccines. And countries will be left behind again as petri dishes for new variants to develop.”
Elizabeth Ennen ’08, director of Northeastern Law’s Program on Human Rights and the Global Economy (PHRGE),is one of the leaders of the Massachusetts Access to Justice Commission’s COVID-19 Task Force Pro Bono Committee. The Committee has just launched a new online tool connecting attorneys and law students to pandemic-related pro bono opportunities that serve low-income residents of the Commonwealth.