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George Mason University
Civil Rights Law Journal

 

Welcome to the George Mason University Civil Rights Law Journal!

Founded in 1990, the Civil Rights Law Journal is published three times a year by a Board of Editors comprised of select students at George Mason University School of Law in Arlington, Virginia. The Board's goal is to provide informative and innovative commentary on a wide variety of issues pertaining to civil rights that contribute to the legal community. The Civil Rights Law Journal serves as a forum for thought-provoking scholarly articles written by leading academics and experienced practitioners on current legal developments. The articles selected for publication each year promote a greater understanding of civil rights laws and precedent, serve as a catalyst for legal change and development, and provide a source of legal authority and analysis to the legal community.

Current Issue - Fall 2009

Articles

Good Enough for Government Work:
The Court's Dangerous Decision in Herring v. United States , To Limit The Exclusionary Rule to Only the Most Culpable Police Behavior

George M. Dery

Wartime America and the Wire:
A Response to Posner's Post-9/11 Constitutional Framework

Dawinder S. Sidhu

Notes

Artful Dodging:
How Hall v. Nalco Avoids the Conflict Between Assisted Reproductive Technologies and Absenteeism Under the Pregnancy Discrimination Act

Karen L. Herlihy

Cerqueira v. American Airlines :
What are the Appropriate Limits of An Air Carrier's Permissive Refusal Power?

Patrick J. McDonald