Sessions Information

  • January 4, 2018
    1:30 pm - 3:15 pm
    Session Type: AALS Hot Topic Programs
    Session Capacity: N/A
    Location: N/A
    Room: Marina Ballroom E
    Floor: South Tower/3rd Floor

    With over 100 victims daily and untold human and economic costs, the overdose crisis is one of the most formidable societal challenges of our time. In contrast to prior drug-related crises, this opioid “epidemic” has elicited a response many have characterized by health-oriented, rather than punitive, approaches. It was not until recently that additional attention has been leveled against increasing reliance on criminal law, law enforcement, and coercive tools now being mounted to combat this public health challenge. This panel brings together a group of diverse scholars, all of whom research criminal and other legal strategies to address health challenges. Drawing on brand new empirical analyses, political developments, and recent judicial decisions, the panel will provide interdisciplinary insights and critiques of emerging “hot” trends in legal landscapes, prosecutorial strategies, surveillance programs, and policing interventions increasingly deployed to tackle the overdose crisis. Issues covered will include data privacy in view of expanding government surveillance, reliance on harsh sentencing, empirical analysis of legal immunity statutes, and the use of discretion in innovative law enforcement programs. A discussion of implications for better calibrated legal tools and policing strategies in addressing the crisis will conclude the panel.

Session Speakers
Northeastern University School of Law
Moderator and Speaker

Thomas Jefferson School of Law
Speaker

West Virginia University College of Law
Speaker

Columbia Law School
Speaker

Session Fees
  • [4295] AALS Hot Topic Program - Using the Law and Its Enforcement to Address the Overdose Crisis: Emerging Trends and Implications : $0.00