Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Connecticut Law Tribune Editorial Board | August 15, 2022
One does not have to subscribe to biblical principles to recognize that human beings, who established the courts and the laws applied in them, have a unique place in the law.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Connecticut Law Tribune Editorial Board | August 5, 2022
Connecticut's failure fully to include farmworkers in its basic labor protections tracks similar exclusions at the federal level. These exclusions, however, are rooted in racial prejudice and have no place in our modern laws.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Connecticut Law Tribune Editorial Board | August 3, 2022
The net outcome of P.A. 22-24, "An Act Protecting Employee Freedom of Speech and Conscience," is a disaster.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Joette Katz | July 28, 2022
When sentencing convicted defendants to what probably seemed like life sentences to younger defendants, the opportunity for redemption factored prominently. The Board of Pardons and Parole helped me to sleep at night.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Connecticut Law Tribune Editorial Board | July 14, 2022
Even those who believe abortion is murder must acknowledge that it is shocking and overwhelming for a woman to be told that from the moment another organism comes into existence, she no longer has the right to decide what happens to her body.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Connecticut Law Tribune Editorial Board | July 14, 2022
Permitting Connecticut's cities and towns to decide for themselves whether to allow noncitizens who pay taxes to vote in their elections respects principles of local democracy.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Connecticut Law Tribune Editorial Board | July 7, 2022
Upholding the purposes of the Freedom of Information Act with the Connecticut State Police was a governmental action in the public interest and not a self-serving, unconstitutional impairment of contract.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Joette Katz | July 7, 2022
The danger may not be that more individual rights will be overturned, but that there will be more tolerance of things that interfere with or hinder access to those rights.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Connecticut Law Tribune Editorial Board | June 30, 2022
Building on the foundation laid in District of Columbia v. Heller and McDonald v. Chicago, the U.S. Supreme Court has 'Lochner-ed' gun rights.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Mark Dubois | June 29, 2022
The Nonhuman Rights Project has not yet been able to convince courts to extend the protection the law provides animals from paternalistic anti-cruelty statutes and regulations to legal rights protectable by judicial remedy such as habeas corpus.
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