Essays from Harvard Law Review Symposium Published
We're excited to share the essays from the Guns, Violence, and Democracy symposium that the Center co-hosted with the Harvard Law Review on March 25, 2022, which are now published in the Harvard Law Review Forum. The symposium addressed the ways that violence shapes U.S. democracy with an emphasis on the intersection between firearms and issues such as voting, public protest, policing, race and privilege. The law review was terrific to work with—for both the symposium itself and during the editing process. Below are the essay titles, with links to the full pieces:
- Joseph Blocher & Reva B. Siegel - Race and Guns, Courts and Democracy
- Aziz Huq, Caitlin Loftus & Robert Vargas - Governing Through Gun Crime: How Chicago Funded Police After the 2020 BLM Protests
- Darrell A.H. Miller & Jacob D. Charles - Violence and Nondelegation
- Bertrall L. Ross II - Inequality, Anti-Republicanism, and Our Unique Second Amendment
- Eric Ruben - Public Carry and Criminal Law after Bruen
- Leila Nadya Sadat - Torture in Our Schools?
- Franita Tolson - Parchment Rights
- Adam Winkler - Racist Gun Laws and the Second Amendment