Katy Tu '13: Ten Things that Scare Me

“When I'm feeling stressed about something it makes me feel calm when I take an inventory of the things that I own and I can see it in my head,” says Kathy Tu ’13, co-host of a WYNC podcast called the 10 Things That Scare Me. 

Army Unveils Memorial to a Black Soldier Lynched on Military Base 80 Years Ago

On August 4, the army unveiled a historic marker honoring the life of Private Felix Hall, who was found hanging from a tree on a segregated Army base in Georgia in 1941. Northeastern Law's Civil Rights and Restorative Justice Project (CRRJ) was first to unearth the FBI file on Hall, the only known victim of a lynching on a US military installation.

Should You Sell Your Palm Print to Amazon

“Biometric information is permanent,” cautions Professor Waldman, director of NUSL's Center for Law, Information and Creativity (CLIC). "And once you give a company your #BiometricData, it could track you forever with that information.”

Fifty Years On, Title IX’s Legacy Includes Its Durability

Professor Libby Adler tells The New York Times that Title IX could be open to interpretation on the issue of transgender athletes and other classes not explicitly defined in the language: “It’s that elasticity or indeterminacy that makes it unlikely to be struck down, but much more likely to be interpreted in ways that are consistent with the politics of the judges we have.”

Webinar: COVID Vaccines for the Few

On July 14, 2021, Professors Brook Baker and Martha Davis joined a panel of experts to discuss the COVID-19 pandemic, inequality and vaccinations. The webinar was sponsored by Northeastern Law’s Program on Human Rights and the Global Economy, The Raoul Wallenberg Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law and University of Minnesota Law School Human Rights Center.