Evaluating Police Use of Force
Some states are using regulatory approaches to ensure the accountability of law enforcement officials.
Move Criminal Justice Forward
The Trump Administration’s ill-advised “law and order” approach to policing should be eschewed in favor of procedural justice.
Disability and Policing
Existing rules can help ensure police use best practices for interacting with those who have special needs.
Reporting Police Force in the Digital Age
Technology can help address the dearth of data surrounding police use of force.
Closing the Courthouse Door to Victims of Police Abuse
A number of Supreme Court doctrines make it difficult for citizens to sue police officers and their government employers.
How Transportation Safety Review Can Play a Role in Regulating Law Enforcement
An agency modeled after the federal transportation safety board could promote safety for the public and police.
Reviewing Police Use of Force Through Root Cause Analysis
More agencies are embracing a new kind of review focused on preventing future errors, rather than placing blame.
Regulating the Reasonableness of Police Violence
The legal standard governing police force provides inadequate guidance to police officers and the courts.
Regulating Police Use of Force
Scholars, activists, and other criminal justice experts address possible legal responses to excessive police force.
The Department of Education’s Power to Cancel Student Debt
Despite the breadth of the Department of Educations’s debt-cancellation powers, it has failed to employ its powers to their fullest extent.
Regulatory Series: 2016 in Review
The Regulatory Review celebrates the end of 2016 by recapping our series from the past year.
Artificial Intelligence and the Administrative State
No rubric exists to decide how to navigate the use of automation in the administrative state, but society can make informed choices.