Brennan Center for Justice
The Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law is a non-partisan public policy and law institute that focuses on fundamental issues of democracy and justice. Our work ranges from voting rights to redistricting reform, from access to the courts to presidential power in the fight against terrorism. Postings under this heading represent our institutional voice.
Blog Posts
- In Honor of Larry Hansen (11/16/10)
- “There’s always a ‘theater aspect’ to these Supreme Court confirmation battles….” (05/10/10)
- Civil right to counsel proposed for New York State (05/03/10)
- Congress Considers Law to Narrow the Justice Gap (04/30/10)
- Congress Calls for Examination of the Nation’s Criminal Justice System (04/27/10)
- Letters to Congress in Support of the Shareholder Protection Act (04/12/10)
- Correcting a Centuries-Old Injustice (04/11/10)
- Indefensible: Michigan’s Faltering Public Defender System (03/29/10)
- Brennan Decision Resonates, Four Decades Later (03/22/10)
- DOJ Commits to Access to Justice (03/01/10)
- Showing 10 most recent blog posts, show all
- Citizens United Discussion at the National Press Club (02/26/10)
- Can Research and Reporting be Considered Criminal? (02/23/10)
- Citizens United v. FEC: What Happens Next? (02/22/10)
- DOJ Symposium on Indigent Defense (02/18/10)
- Obama Administration Pushes for Full Voting Rights (02/10/10)
- Citizens United discussion at Bill Moyers Journal (02/01/10)
- Making Sausages: How NY Laws are Made (01/06/10)
- Alan Alda Reads from “My First Vote” (01/01/10)
- Panel Discussion, October 27, 2009, on Needed Reforms in Albany (10/28/09)
- In Honor of Jack Kemp (05/06/09)
