Connecticut Prisoners With COVID-19 Sent To Facility Critics Call ‘Instrument Of Torture’
Executive director of the Orville H. Schell, Jr. Center for International Human Rights Hope Metcalf spoke to WSHU on conditions at a Connecticut correctional institution where prisoners with symptoms of COVID-19 are being housed.
High Court Rules on $12 Billion in Obamacare Payments
Professor of Law and Faculty Director of the Solomon Center for Health Law and Policy Abbe R. Gluck ’00 was the guest for a Bloomberg podcast where she discussed the Supreme Court ruling that federal government must pay insurers $12 billion to cover some of the losses they incurred providing risky policies under Obamacare.
Protecting Incarcerated People In The Face Of COVID-19: A Commentary by Leanne Gale ’20, Faith Barksdale ’20, Megan Hauptman ’21, et al.
Leanne Gale is a member of the Yale Law School class of 2020. Faith Barksdale is a member of the Yale Law School class of 2020. Megan Hauptman is a member of the Yale Law School class of 2021. Donald M. Berwick is the former administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services; president emeritus and senior fellow, Institute for Healthcare Improvement.
Coronavirus pandemic calls for safe releases from jails, prisons — A Commentary by Issa Kohler-Hausmann ’08 et al.
Issa Kohler-Hausmann ’08 is Professor of Law at Yale Law School and Associate Professor of Sociology at Yale. Maureen Busalacchi is co-chair of the Wisconsin Public Health Association's public affairs committee. Lily Hu is a Ph.D. candidate in math and philosophy at Harvard University.
Federal Court Rules Detroit Students Were Denied Constitutional Right to Basic Education
Professor of Law Justin Driver appeared on the public radio show The Takeaway to discuss a decision by a federal court that declared American public school students have a constitutional right to an adequate education.