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Santa Clara Law Review
Volume 65, Issue 1
PROCESSES THAT PRODUCE RACIAL DISPARITIES IN CALIFORNIA DEATH SENTENCES: A REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE
Abstract: A robust and extensive body of empirical research, and a rich historical record, documents a recurring and pervasive influence of race in the application of California’s death penalty. This article reviews the legal and social science research to document multiple paths through which institutions and processes produce these racial disparities over many decisions in many cases across four decades. The article reviews relevant literature by decision, institution, or a
Catherine M. Grosso; Michael Laurence; Jeffery Fagan
MODELING MEANING: CAUSAL INFERENCE UNDER THE CALIFORNIA RACIAL JUSTICE ACT
Abstract: In order to evaluate claims arising under the California Racial Justice Act (RJA), judges and attorneys need to learn how to draw inferences about racial disparity from data—and, equally importantly, to learn how to avoid drawing inaccurate inferences from data. The key questions in many RJA claims are, first, how to determine what constitutes “defendant[s] who have engaged in similar conduct and are similarly situated” and, second, what might supply race-neutral re
W. David Ball
THE DISPARITY IN LITIGATING RACIAL DISPARITY CLAIMS: THE NEED FOR CALIFORNIA COURTS TO ARTICULATE A FRAMEWORK FOR ASSESSING RACIAL JUSTICE ACT CHALLENGES TO CHARGING, CONVICTION, AND SENTENCING
Abstract: Under California’s Racial Justice Act (RJA)—codified in Penal Code section 745—the state may not seek or obtain a criminal conviction or sentence on the basis of race, ethnicity, or national origin. There are four pathways to establishing an RJA violation. Two of the pathways proscribe discriminatory or biased conduct or language inside or outside the courtroom by specified criminal legal system actors, including judges, attorneys, law enforcement officers, and expe
Lisa M. Romo
COLLABORATIVE EFFORTS TO COMBAT RACISM: ACADEMICS AND CRIMINAL DEFENSE LAWYERS IN THE PURSUIT OF RACIAL JUSTICE IN CALIFORNIA
Abstract: Lawyers and academics frequently cooperate to shape public policy and outcomes in specific cases, including in the area of racial justice. However, too frequently, lawyers and academics operate in silos—working towards the same goal of racial justice, but in different arenas. Lawyers are bound to their clients, foremost, and to advocacy before the court—often so much so that they might lose sight of broader challenges, achievements, and theories in racial justice. B
Karina Alvarez; Dr. Rita Cameron-Wedding
EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS OF RACIAL DISPARITIES IN POLICING
Abstract: Racial disparities within the criminal justice system continue to be a pressing issue, especially after the recent passage of California’s Racial Justice Act, which allows for a broader set of legal challenges based on racially disparate treatment. In this article, we analyze data for almost four million stops by California’s fifteen largest law enforcement agencies in 2019, examining the extent to which people of color experience searches, enforcement, intrusivenes
Deepak Premkumar; Magnus Lofstrom; Joseph Hayes; Brandon Martin; Sean Cremin
GROUND RULES: GIVING MEANING AND EFFECT TO KEY CONTESTED TERMS IN THE CALIFORNIA RACIAL JUSTICE ACT
Abstract: The California Racial Justice Act (RJA), which applies to all pretrial, trial, and post-conviction defendants, prohibits any state actor from relying upon racial bias to seek or obtain a conviction or sentence against a defendant. In a state where racial disparities in incarceration have been growing for decades, the law, which became retroactive in 2024, has the power to create a sea of change across California criminal institutions. Using the power of state consti
Lara Bazelon; Dr. Beth Redbird; Belle Yan
ART AS THE PROSECUTOR’S WEAPON: THE USE OF RAP LYRICS EVIDENCE AT TRIAL
Abstract: Are rap lyrics worthy of the same protections that other forms of creative expression enjoy, or is there something inherent to rap lyrics that renders them autobiographical, confessional, and reflective of the author’s true intentions and desires? This Article will attempt to answer that question. In doing so, the authors will take the reader on a voyage through a history that is not widely known among the attorneys, judges, expert witnesses, and jurors who are freq
Mikah K. Thompson; Sierra Raheem
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