Health Justice Meets Reproductive Justice
Interim Dean Rebouche positions abortion access within a health justice framework and argues that it is key to advancing health equity in this post on Bill of Health.
Interim Dean Rebouche positions abortion access within a health justice framework and argues that it is key to advancing health equity in this post on Bill of Health.
Interim Dean Rachel Rebouche and co-authors write about America’s messy legal future if Roe is overturned, in which the only certainty is increased inequity. Read more at The Atlantic.
When people with substance abuse disorder are incarcerated, the medications they use to treat their addiction are often withheld. Prof. Scott Burris says that jails need to rethink their approach. Read more at Daily Magazine News.
Interim Dean Rachel Rebouche joined Dare to Listen on Texas Public Radio to discuss SB8 and the future of reproductive rights in America. Read more at TPR.
How best should cyber charter schools be regulated? The Regulatory Review includes work by Prof. Susan DeJarnatt in its discussion of this question. Read more at The Regulatory Review.
Interim Dean Rachel Rebouche talks about Texas’s abortion law, its real life impact, and its potential impact on the future of Roe v. Wade. Read more at KYW.
SCOTUS’s decision not to act on Texas’s extreme abortion ban has cast a spotlight on its so-called “shadow docket.” What is it, and what does it say about the Court? Prof. Laura Little explains on KYW’s InDepth podcast. Read more at KYW.
New work by Prof. Craig Green on the legal history of statehood is reviewed on Legal Theory Blog.
As lawsuits mount over Gov. Wolf’s mask mandate, Prof. Burris says the facts are not on their side – and that at least to courts, facts still matter. Read more at The Morning Call.
The DOJ has sued the state of Texas over its extreme abortion ban. But does the federal government have standing to do so? Interim Dean Rachel Rebouche isn’t so sure. Read more at Verywell Health.