CUNY Law Review’s Brett Dolin Quoted in The Gothamist

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Notes & Comments author and Cunity Conversations discussion leader Brett Dolin was quoted in The Gothamist about his research on BIDs:

Brett Dolin, a law student at CUNY who has been researching the legal history of BIDs in New York City, argues that the determination of whether a BID should be established in the first place has drifted away from the original intention. According to the 1989 BID Act, a BID can be formed in a neighborhood that is in a “deteriorated condition.”

“But a lot of times the BID Act has been used to to fund totally different kinds of initiatives that have nothing to do with improving the quality of life or the commercial environment,” Dolin said. His research has focused on how a variation on a BID was being used to attempt to fund Hudson River Park in Manhattan by having a specific district of residents and business owners pay a fee for a park everyone in the city can use.

“Not only is this unfair for residents of the area, but the governing structure of a BID doesn’t lend itself to democracy,” Dolin says. “Property owners, by law, must hold a majority on a BID committee, and if they’re governing a public space, isn’t that a violation of the equal protection clause?”

Check out the rest of the article here!

Vol. 17.1

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Explore the digital version of our most recent print edition, Volume 17.1.

Public Interest Practitioners Section (PIPS)

Natural Disasters, Access to Justice, and Legal Services by Jordan Ballard, Julia Howard-Gibbon, Brenda Munoz Furnish, Staff Attorneys in NYLAG’s Storm Response Unit., and Aaron Scheinwald, Staff Attorney in New York Legal Assistance Group (NYLAG)’s Mobile Legal Help Center.

Fighting for Educational Stability in the Face of Family Turmoil by Michael R. Mastrangelo, SSES Project Coordinating Attorney, The Children’s Law Center. J.D., Brooklyn Law School.

 Executive Articles

“He Got in My Face So I Shot Him”: How Defendant’s Language Impairments Impair Attorney-Client Relationships by Michele LaVigne, Clinical Professor of Law, University of Wisconsin Law School, and Gregory Van Rybroek, Director/CEO, Mendota Mental Health Institute, Madison, Wisconsin.

Single-Room Occupancy Housing in New York City: The Origins and Dimensions of a Crisis by Brian J. Sullivan, Senior Staff Attorney, MFY Legal Services, Inc., SRO Law Project. J.D., Georgetown University Law Center, and Jonathan Burke, Staff Attorney, Community Legal Aid. J.D., New York University School of Law.

Fostering the Human Rights of Youth in Foster Care: Defining Reasonable Efforts to Improve Consequences of Aging Out by Ramesh Kasarabada

Considering the Individualized Educational Program: A Call for Applying Contract Theory to an Essential Legal Document by Bonnie Spiro Schinagle, J.D., LL.M., Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law.

Notes & Comments 

Male Asylum Applicants Who Fear Becoming the Victims of Honor Killings: The Case for Gender Equality by Caitlin Steinke, J.D. 2013, Hofstra University School of Law.

If I Marry a Man in New York, Could I Marry a Woman in Kentucky?: The Problem of the Fundamental Right to (Straight) Marriage by Philip R. Hsiao, Graduate Fellow, J.D. Candidate 2014, CUNY School of Law.

 

 

New Board Members Announced

Congratulations to the 2014-2015 CUNY Law Review Board!

Violeta Arciniega & Chelsea Breakstone
Digital Articles Editors

Catalina Delohoz & James King
Executive Articles Editors

Rebecca Arian & Li Litombe
Notes & Comments Editors

Emily Farrell & Tana Forrester
Public Interest Practitioner Section Editors

Rachel Nager & Syeda Tasnim
Special Events Editors

Julie Pennington
Managing Articles Editor

Nabila Taj & Patrick Tyrell
Managing Editors

Elizabeth Koo
Editor-in-Chief

Spring 2014 New Staff Members

Special thanks to our new staff members for contributing to a solid start this semester:

Sara Bovill
Jean Fischman
John Paul Guyette
Sana Khashang
Rachel Nager
Brendan Rush
Steve Succop

EVENT: Thurs., 11/7: Social Justice Through Private Practice*

Social Justice through private practice

 

Panel will feature the following guests, who bring experience in diverse areas of the law such as tenants’ rights, labor and employment, First Amendment, prisoners’ rights, civil rights, police brutality, and government misconduct:

  • Daniel Alterman (Alterman & Boop LLP)
  • Eric Hecker (Cuti Hecker Wang LLP)
  • Margaret Sandercock (Goodfarb & Sandercock LLP)
  • Naomi Sunshine (Outten Golden)
  • Roger Wareham (human rights attorney)

Join us in the 3rd floor Faculty Lounge at 6 p.m. for a food and wine reception. Panel will begin at 6:30 p.m.

*please note the name change

Call for Submissions

The City University of New York Law Review is seeking submissions for its Summer 2014 issue, which will continue the journal’s tradition of advancing legal scholarship highlighting the touchstones of our publication’s work—including civil rights, progressive legal reform, the impact of the law on minorities and marginalized communities, international human rights, and attorneys’ insights on how recent developments in the law have affected their public-interest practices in New York and beyond.

We are interested in one-page abstracts or finished manuscripts you may have for consideration by our editorial board. Submissions should be remitted to cunylr@law.cuny.edu. Abstracts will be considered through December. Finished manuscripts for approved abstracts have a deadline of December 31, 2013. Offers to publish and final decisions on all submissions will be made on a rolling basis and will be finalized by mid-January 2014.

In addition, the journal is seeking shorter, more time-sensitive contributions—such as comments on recent federal or state case law, critiques of legislative proposals, and legally relevant analyses of current events—for inclusion in our evolving digital platform at the City University of New York Law Review website at www.cunylawreview.org. Submissions for digital consideration should be sent directly to our Digital Articles Editor at ldavis@mail.law.cuny.edu.

Our upcoming Winter 2014 issue includes scholarly works on a range of public interest legal issues, with an emphasis on practical application. Some examples include articles about the hurdles of providing on-the-ground legal assistance after natural disasters such as Hurricane Sandy; the impact of family instability on access to education for children with disabilities; gender inequality in granting asylum requests; how language impairments impact attorney-client relationships; applying a human rights framework in determining services for youth aging out of foster care; policy arguments in favor of stronger single-room occupancy regulations aimed at solving the housing crisis in New York City; and applying contract law to strengthen Individual Education Plans.

We look forward to reading and discussing your manuscript for possible publication, and kindly invite you to forward this letter to other social-justice scholars and practitioners who may be interested in publishing with us.

With our warm regards,

Tatenda, Caitlin, Kate & Cristian
On behalf of the City University of New York Law Review Editorial Board

Save the Date: November 7th at 6 pm

CUNY Law Review will be hosting a panel with the theme “How to Keep Your Soul in the For-Profit World” on November 7th in the Faculty Lounge. Reception at 6 pm, Panel at 6:30 pm.

Details to follow.

EVENT: Judiciary Night

Judiciary Night Poster

Poster Courtesy of the Special Events Editors

CUNY Law Review invites you to the 2013 Judiciary Night on September 26, 2013 from 5:30 to 9:00 p.m.

The CUNY Law Review Board is orchestrating a diverse panel of judges from New York and will facilitate what we hope will be an engaging dialogue.

The following judges will be in attendance:

Hon. Denny Chin
Judge, Second Circuit Court of Appeals

Hon. Carol Jordan
Support Magistrate, New Rochelle Family Court

Hon. Andrea Masley
Judge, Civil Court of the City of New York

Hon. Margaret McManus
Immigration Judge, EOIR Immigration Court, New York City

Hon. Diccia Pineda-Kirwan
Judge, Supreme Court of the State of New York, Queens County

The panel will be followed by a wine and dinner reception
around 8pm (Vietnamese food with vegetarian, vegan, and
gluten-free options). We hope to see you there!

UPDATE: We are pleased to announce that the event will be
moderated by Prof. Donna Hae Kyun Lee. It will take place
in the auditorium on the second second floor. Directions to CUNY
School of Law can be found here.

Event: Tribute to Justice

Final Horman Tribute FlierTribute to Justice:
Creating Accountability for Human Rights Crimes and The Future of Universal Jurisdiction
By: The Charles Horman Truth Foundation

Monday, September 9th, 2pm–5pm
583 Park Avenue (at 63rd St.)

On the 40th Anniversary of the September 11th Coup D’Etat in Chile, justice champions who brought coup leader Augusto Pinochet to account for crimes against humanity gather to discuss the legal doctrines their efforts brought into being, and the worldwide attention brought to the doctrine of Universal Jurisdiction.

Judge Baltazar Garzon,
Spanish Judge whose arrest warrant led to Pinochet’s detention in UK

Sir Geoffrey Bindman, QC,
British attorney whose efforts led to UK detaining Pinochet

Joan Garces,
Spanish human rights attorney who paved path for Universal Jurisdiction

Reed Brody,
Human Rights Watch attorney active in efforts to detain Pinochet

Peter Weiss,
CCR Vice President, attorney in Filartiga and Horman v. Kissinger

Almudena Bernabeu,
Director of CJA’s Transitional Justice Program

Judge Juan Guzman Tapia,
prosecuted Pinochet in Chile

Jennifer Harbury,
human rights attorney, activist, author

Peter Kornbluh,
National Security Archive

Welcoming Remarks by Cynthia Soohoo, Director,
CUNY Law International Women’s Human Rights Clinic

To register for the FREE educational panel, go to http://www.hormantruth.org/ht/ 
For CLE information, contact franklin.siegel@law.cuny.edu

Co-sponsored by the CUNY School of Law, the Center for Constitutional Rights, the Institute for Policy Studies and the North American Congress on Latin America, with support from the Ford Foundation

Vol. 16.1: A Celebration OF CUNY School of Law Scholarship

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Explore the digital version of our most recent print edition, Volume 16.1, which celebrates legal scholarship at CUNY School of Law.

Introduction by Andrea McArdle, Professor of Law, faculty advisor to the Law Review, and director of the writing curriculum at the City University of New York School of Law

Remarks

Fixing New York’s Broken Bail System by Justine Olderman, Managing Attorney of the Criminal Defense Practice at Bronx Defenders

Articles

Structured Discrete Task Representation to Bridge the Justice Gap: CUNY Law School’s Launchpad for Justice in Partnership with Courts and Communities by Natalie Gomez-Velez, Professor of Law at City University of New York School of Law

“Hallowed By History, But Not By Reason”: Judge Rakoff’s Critique of the Securities and Exchange Commission’s Consent Judgment Practice by Michael C. Macchiarola, Distinguished Lecturer at City University of New York and Adjunct Professor at City University of New York School of Law

Notes

Wage Theft in New York: The Wage Theft Prevention Act as a Counter to an Endemic Problem by Lauren K. Dasse, Staff Attorney at the Florence Immigrant and Refugee Rights Project, City University of New York School of Law Class of 2012, and Editor-in-Chief of CUNY Law Review 2011–2012

Evaluation as the Proper Function of the Parole Board: An Analysis of New York State’s Proposed Safe Parole Act by Amy Robinson-Oost, City University of New York School of Law Class of 2013, and Managing Editor of CUNY Law Review 2012–2013

Public Interest Practitioner Section (PIPS)

Common Law’s Lawyering Model: Transforming Individual Crises Into Opportunities for Community Organizing by Karen Gargamelli and Jay Kim, City University of New York School of Law Class of 2007 and Common Law co-founders and staff attorneys