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On Remand
On Remand
Author: Online Editor
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Welcome to On Remand: the official podcast of the New England Law Review--a student-run organization that produces the flagship publication of New England Law | Boston in Massachusetts. Featuring forthcoming authors, alumni, and in-field professionals, On Remand provides student-oriented insight on the legal realm and its real world implications.
42 Episodes
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On this episode of "On Remand," Madison Adler '24 takes us through her Note titled "The Protection Paradox: Negative Impacts of the Anti-Trafficking Legislation and the Criminalization of Sex Work on Women in the United States," which addresses how the legislature has fallen short in protecting sex workers and victims of human trafficking.
On this episode of “On Remand,” Kristie Kargus ’24 takes us through her Note titled “Fairways and Bunkers: The LIV Golf-PGA Tour Quarrel Through the Tenets of Antitrust and Contract Law,” which breaks down the legal drama between the two competing golf leagues and analyzes antitrust law in the context of professional sports.
On this episode of “On Remand,” Arianna Fisher ’24 takes us through her Comment titled “Got Pain? It’s Just You, Your Doctor, and the DEA: The Third-Party Doctrine and Warrantless Access to Prescription Drug Data,” which addresses the shift in the right to privacy in relation to warrantless access to prescription drug data.
Listen to New England Law Review's Fall Symposium to learn more about Barred: Why the Innocent Can’t Get Out of Prison. Author and scholar Daniel S. Medwed led our symposium discussing how the United States’ current justice system keeps people in prison rather than crimes. Professor Medwed identifies how the procedural rules within the justice system often lead to the punishment of innocent people. He is joined by panelists Aliza Hochman-Bloom, Cynthia Godsoe, Justin Murray, and Elizabeth Webster.
On this episode of “On Remand,” Brooklyn Law School Professor, Cynthia Godsoe, who is also a panelist for the NELR’s Fall Symposium, sits down with Online Editor, Alex Lebowitz. Professor Godsoe discusses her response to Daniel Medwed’s book, “Barred: Why the Innocent Can’t Get Out of Prison,” which focuses on prosecutorial involvement and misconduct as it relates to investigating young adults and minors.
Join Jane Osick '23 to discuss her upcoming publication on animal law, ethical farming, and the legalism behind veganism.
Jane's Note, Animal Victims and the Law: How Massachusetts Can Revise the Courtroom Animal Advocate Program to Better Protect Victims and Defendants, is pending publication. Click here for more information about animal advocacy and ways to get involved.
Join On Remand's Online Editor, Blythe Bull, for a scholarship speedrun on intellectual property & leveling up video game law.
Blythe's Note, From Arcane to Arkham: Assessing Video Game IP Through Comic Book Characters and Case Law Comparisons, is pending publication. Click here to listen to the video game music featured in this episode.
Join our Editor-in-Chief, Julia McClure, to discuss our Fall '22 Symposium topic: Social Media, Privacy, & the future of Information Warfare.
This Symposium featured David Sloss to discuss his recent publication, Tyrants on Twitter: Protecting Democracies from Information Warfare. Click here to learn more.
Introducing the New England Law Review, Volume 57: Our tenth season in production. ON REMAND has delivered student-curated interviews on upcoming scholarship since its release in 2013.
Attorney Joel Berger is the latest guest on the New England Law Review Podcast where he discusses his latest article, published on The Forum.
"We are leaving far too much on the table when the stakes are measured in lives and freedom. This is not a time for brutal timidity, and it never was." Join New England Law Boston's Professor Osler for a discussion on Criminal Law, The First Step Act, and the path towards progress.
Join Professor Kent Schenkel discussing the challenges that face probate law and potential solutions to those problems.
Can social media use cause problems for the courts? Join Professor Jordan Singer as he answers this question.
This podcast discusses Professor Mohamed Arafa's forthcoming article, Dreams without Illusions: The Bureaucratic Cholesterol, Administrative Corruption and the Future of a Real Democratic Middle East.
Professor Mohamed Arafa is an Assistant Professor of Criminal Law at Alexandria University Faculty of Law in Egypt; Adjunct Professor of Law at Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law at Indianapolis; Visiting Professor of Law at the University of Brasília School of Law (Brazil); and recently a Visiting Scholar and Adjunct Professor of Law at Cornell University School of Law via the Clark Initiative for Law and Development in the Middle East in Ithaca, New York. He has authored several law articles and book chapters in U.S., European, Brazilian, and Arab peer-reviews journals on numerous topics.
The New England Law Review's 2019 Fall Symposium discussing the role of corporations in American society and their claims to constitutional rights. Featuring Boston College Professor Kent Greenfield and his book, Corporations Are People Too (And They Should Act Like It).
Is ending corporate personhood the solution? Professor Greenfield’s book is the centerpiece of the forthcoming Volume 54, Issue 1 of the New England Law Review print edition. This issue will contain response articles on Professor Greenfield’s book from Professor Adam Winkler, Professor of Law at UCLA Law; Aisha Saad, Research Fellow at Yale Law; Daniel Greenwood, Professor of Law at Hofstra Law; and Natasha Varyani, Professor of Law at New England Law | Boston.
Join us for an interview with Elizabeth Vulaj, a Segal McCambridge Singer & Mahoney Associate in New York, about her pending publications in the New England Law Review and the New York Bar Association Journal on the College Admissions Scandal.
An interview with Professor Manus of New England Law | Boston exploring the Supreme Court's Kisor v. Wilkie decision and their review of reasonable regulations.
Join Nicholas Babaian from the New England Law Review and Professor Nicole Noel of New England Law | Boston discussing the death penalty in America.
Should educational access be more than just a numbers game? Join Attorney Genevieve Torres of the Educational Opportunities Project for this discussion.
Genevieve Torres, Esq., is Counsel for the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.
Join Professor P.J. Blount to discuss his article: Outer Space and International Geography: Article II and the Shape of Global Order.
Professor Blount is currently a Postdoctoral Researcher at the University of Luxembourg and an adjunct L.L.M, Air & Space Law professor at the University of Mississippi School of Law. Professor Blount holds a Juris Doctorate from the University of Mississippi School of Law, an L.L.M. from King’s College London, and a Masters degree and Ph.D. in Global Affairs from Rutgers University.


















