Volume 84, Issue 3 Apr 18 Written By Maryland Law Review Featured Volume 84, Issue 3 Volume 84, Issue 2 Volume 84, Issue 1 Volume 83, Issue 4 Volume 83, Issue 3 Volume 83, Issue 2 Volume 83, Issue 1 Volume 82, Issue 4 Volume 82, Issue 3 Volume 82, Issue 2 Articles Featured Representing Animals Matthew Liebman The Secret History of the Carceral State Laura I Appleman The Corruption of Blood As Metaphor Nicholas Serafin Notes and Comments Featured Three’s Company: The Supreme Court of Maryland Elevates Victims to Quasi-Party Status and Invites Them to Participate in the Merits of the State’s Motion to Vacate a Faulty Conviction in Syed v. Lee Mark Reichart The Great Writ Revived: A Contemporary Reimagining of the Master’s Tools How 28 U.S.C. § 2241 Provides a Pathway to Relief for Vulnerable Classes Facing Inhumane Conditions of Confinement Corinne Noonan The Maryland Freedom to Read Act: Recognizing a New Right to Prevent School Library Book Exclusions in the Era of Polarized School Boards Rianna C. Mukherjee Maryland Law Review
Volume 84, Issue 3 Apr 18 Written By Maryland Law Review Featured Volume 84, Issue 3 Volume 84, Issue 2 Volume 84, Issue 1 Volume 83, Issue 4 Volume 83, Issue 3 Volume 83, Issue 2 Volume 83, Issue 1 Volume 82, Issue 4 Volume 82, Issue 3 Volume 82, Issue 2 Articles Featured Representing Animals Matthew Liebman The Secret History of the Carceral State Laura I Appleman The Corruption of Blood As Metaphor Nicholas Serafin Notes and Comments Featured Three’s Company: The Supreme Court of Maryland Elevates Victims to Quasi-Party Status and Invites Them to Participate in the Merits of the State’s Motion to Vacate a Faulty Conviction in Syed v. Lee Mark Reichart The Great Writ Revived: A Contemporary Reimagining of the Master’s Tools How 28 U.S.C. § 2241 Provides a Pathway to Relief for Vulnerable Classes Facing Inhumane Conditions of Confinement Corinne Noonan The Maryland Freedom to Read Act: Recognizing a New Right to Prevent School Library Book Exclusions in the Era of Polarized School Boards Rianna C. Mukherjee Maryland Law Review