Why the Kansas Ballot Question on Abortion Matters
“For those concerned about preserving reproductive justice, targeting state-level reform will reap rewards,” writes Professor Daniel Medwed in a co-authored opinion piece for CommonWealth magazine.
“For those concerned about preserving reproductive justice, targeting state-level reform will reap rewards,” writes Professor Daniel Medwed in a co-authored opinion piece for CommonWealth magazine.
Calling Brittney Griner wrongfully detained “opens up options for engagement in her case, including potential diplomatic options,” says Professor Xander Meise.
Professor Margaret Woo tells News@Northeastern that instances of violence against Asian Americans remain troublingly pervasive: “So often, these issues fall away, not because they have been resolved, but because readers’ attention span is short.”
“The First Amendment assumes an equality between speakers that really doesn’t reflect the reality that exists between doctors and patients concerning medical matters, and doesn’t protect the interests of laypeople in getting sound information,” Professor Claudia Haupt tells Bloomberg News.
In his latest contribution to the Health GAP blog, Professor Brook Baker provides an analysis of the Global Fund’s target for its upcoming replenishment cycle.
A unique settlement that pays $73 million to the families of Sandy Hook school shooting victims is influencing the way guns are marketed in the United States—and may inspire lawsuits in other industries, including social media, according to Professor Richard Daynard, president of Northeastern Law's Public Health Advocacy Institute.
“For me, being alive means learning, it means being involved,” says Professor Richard Daynard, president of Northeastern Law’s Public Health Advocacy Institute, who recently celebrated 52 years of teaching at the school of law.
Professor Beth Noveck, director of The Burnes Family Center for Social Change and Innovation at Northeastern University and its partner project, The GovLab, has been named to Apolitical’s list of the 100 Most Influential Academics in Government.
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 .
“We are at the first stage of a tsunami of litigation,” Professor Wendy Parmet tells Bloomberg Law as Georgia's abortion law adds to an ongoing fight over the boundaries between states and the federal government.