Quantcast
Channel: Faculty Scholarship Archives - Voices at Temple
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 31

Faculty in the Media

$
0
0

In the wake of a leaked Supreme Court draft opinion indicating that the historic Roe v. Wade ruling could be overturned, Temple Law faculty and staff lend their expertise to national media conversations surrounding this unprecedented development.


  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | Rolling Stone | If the leaked opinion overturning Roe becomes law, it “will have bent the moral arc of the universe backward,” writes interim Dean Rachel Rebouché and co-authors David S. Cohen and Greer Donley in Rolling Stone. Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | Bloomberg Law | Justice Alito’s draft opinion in Dobbs would subject laws regulating abortion to rational basis review. Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché explains what that means and how it might apply. Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | Washington Examiner | Returning abortion regulation to the states will invite laws that disrupt longstanding interstate cooperation, says interim Dean Rachel Rebouché. Click to read.
  • Professor Craig Green | The Philadelphia Inquirer | Justice Alito’s draft opinion in Dobbs may have roots in his very first opinion, a dissent in Planned Parenthood v. Casey. Prof. Craig Green says it’s an aggressive opinion that casts a shadow over many other rights, including marriage equality and contraception. Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | KYW Newsradio’s The Jawncast | Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché joins KYW’s The Jawncast to discuss four big questions about Justice Alito’s draft opinion overturning Roe. Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | CBS Philadelphia | What might happen in PA if Roe is overturned? Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché doesn’t foresee a rush to ban abortion, but doesn’t see one to protect it, either. Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | The Christian Science Monitor | The availability of medication abortion will prevent a return to pre-Roe America if Justice Alito’s draft opinion becomes law, but interim Dean Rachel Rebouché says it will also raise a whole host of new constitutional questions. Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | WHYY | Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché joins Kathryn Kolbert LAW ’77, who argued Planned Parenthood v. Casey, on Radio Times to discuss Justice Alito’s draft opinion overturning Roe. Click to read.
  • Professor Craig Green | NBC Philadelphia | The leak of Justice Alito’s draft opinion overturning Roe poses a real threat to the Supreme Court as an institution, says Prof. Craig Green. Click to read.
  • Professor Craig Green | CBS Philadelphia | Prof. Craig Green says that Justice Alito’s draft opinion would create the “biggest reduction in privacy rights in 50 years” and prove “exceptionally troubling well outside abortion law.” Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | Al Jazeera | Tech and access to medication abortion may be game-changers in a post-Roe world, says interim Dean Rachel Rebouché. Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | KPCC | Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché joined FSU Professor Mary Ziegler on KPCC’s AirTalk to discuss the impact of overturning Roe v. Wade. Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rebouché, Professor Green, Professor Little; Professor Skuster, and Adrienne Ghorashi | The Temple News | Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché, Professor Craig Green, Professor Laura Little; Professor Patty Skuster, the Phyllis W. Beck Chair in Law; and Adrienne Ghorashi, program manager of the Center for Public Health Law Research shared their expertise with the Temple News. Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | Canada Express News | Overturning Roe could produce interstate conflict not seen since the Civil War, says interim Dean Rachel Rebouché. It could even create tension with Canada as people seek abortion care across the border. Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | Politico | Overturning Roe will give rise to battles among states and between states and the federal government that could strain our federalist system, writes interim Dean Rachel Rebouché with David S. Cohen and Greer Donley in Politico. Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | USA Today | As abortion-related travel seems more likely, states like Connecticut are working to protect care providers from penalty if they treat patients from more restrictive states like Missouri, says interim Dean Rachel Rebouché. Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | Boston Globe | While the need to travel to obtain abortion care presents obstacles for many people, abortion pills remain a game-changer in making such care accessible, says interim Dean Rachel Rebouché. Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | Washington Post | Abortion medication sent through the mail is hard to police, says interim Dean Rachel Rebouché. But that won’t stop some states from trying. Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | The Wall Street Journal | As more companies cover abortion-related travel costs for their employees, they risk running afoul of laws like Texas’s SB8. Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché says it’s difficult to know where future lines will be drawn, and that such laws might even be struck down. Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | NBC News | As Louisiana considers a bill declaring abortion homicide and Senate Democrats move to protect abortion access under federal law, interim Dean Rachel Rebouché says that overturning Roe will not mean the end of battles over abortion. Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | Marketplace | Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché tells Marketplace.org that certain businesses may also face risks if the Supreme Court overturns Roe. Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | US News & World Report | The likelihood that Roe will be overturned has renewed enthusiasm for recognition of “fetal personhood,” says interim Dean Rachel Rebouché, which in turn has given rise to legislation criminalizing abortion as homicide. Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | Mother Jones | If (or when) Roe falls, what options does the Biden administration have to protect access to abortion care? Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché walks through several possibilities with Mother Jones magazine. Click to read
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | The Philadelphia Tribune | Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché offers insight into how SCOTUS opinions are written as well as what could happen if Justice Alito’s draft opinion in Dobbs becomes law. Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | Reuters | In his leaked draft opinion overturning Roe, Justice Alito argues that returning abortion regulation to the states will simplify the law and reduce interstate conflict. Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché doesn’t see that future. Click to read.
  • Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché | CNN | Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer is suing to prevent a 1931 anti-abortion law from taking effect if Roe is overturned. Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché, noting that there is “no court order sitting on” the law, says its resurrection is a real possibility. Click to read
  • Professor Craig Green | WHYY Radio Times | As public trust in SCOTUS continues to erode, Prof. Craig Green joins Radio Times to discuss the reasons why. Click to read.

The post Faculty in the Media appeared first on Voices at Temple.


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 31

Latest Images

Trending Articles





Latest Images