LARC Cardoso Law (Yeshida Univ)
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Seeking the Cayuse Five: Imagining Reparations and Reconciliation in Oregon
In the mid-1840s, American settlers flocked westward on the Oregon Trail, unknowingly bringing with them measles and other foreign diseases to which the Cayuse peoples along the trail had no immunity. Hundreds of Cayuse children were brought to Narcissa and Marcus Whitman at the Whitman Mission for treatment, but ultimately these children could not be saved. In 1847, members of the Cayuse Tribe, acting under Cayuse law to dispose of false doctors (medicine men, or tewat), participated in an attack on the Presbyterian Whitman Mission in Walla Walla Washington, killing the Whitmans and eleven others. After a two-year pursuit, the US Government demanded the Cayuse turn over five men to be punished in exchange for a short-lived peace. The five Cayuse men – despite considerable evidence that some or none of the men had participated in the attack – were found guilty, hanged, and buried in unmarked graves. Today, their burial site remains unknown.https://larc.cardozo.yu.edu/event-invitations-2025/1027/thumbnail.jp
State-Specific Secondary Sources
As legal research instructors, we regularly teach students that it’s a good idea to start their research with secondary sources. If the research issue falls under the law of a specific state, it’s especially helpful to consult a secondary source that discusses that law of that state. However, you might not find relevant state-specific secondary sources – they simply might not be available – and that poses a special set of challenges
Having Fun Is Not as Hard When You Have an Arbitration Clause: The Current Benefits and Possible Changes to the Arbitration Agreements of Amusement Parks and Recreational Resorts for Consumers
This Note will evaluate options that are more favorable for consumers to bring their injury claims against amusement parks and recreational resorts when the route for resolution is limited by an agreement. For instance, the option of an arbitration agreement would be more preferable when faced with only the option of a liability waiver. However, with possible future changes of consumer contracts from the FAIR Act, opt-in provision, or mandatory arbitration imposed on the corporations, the route for resolution can drastically change and improve the realm of possibility for consumers of amusement parks and recreational resorts
Al Assisted Inventing and its Impact on the Patent System
The note examines the challenges posed by AI-assisted inventing to the patent system, particularly focusing on the black box nature of AI, which obscures the inventive process and complicates patent requirements such as inventorship and disclosure
Dean Melanie Leslie’s Office Hours with Professor Peter Markowitz
Join Dean Leslie and Professor Peter Markowitz for the Dean\u27s Office Hours on November 12. They will discuss the shifting immigration landscape in the United States. The scale and nature of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (“ICE”) agency\u27s enforcement practices have been evolving rapidly in recent months. The shifts have had profound impacts on immigrants, their families, and the communities in which they live. The changes have also impacted the work of immigration lawyers, who are rapidly evolving their practices to meet the moment and best protect the immigrants they represent. The two will also answer questions raised by the student attendees.https://larc.cardozo.yu.edu/event-invitations-2025/1031/thumbnail.jp
Cardozo Law News Brief: November 21, 2025
Highlights from the November 21, 2025 Cardozo Law News Brief include:
CLIHHR and global partners published a report on the Mura people’s resistance to Canadian potash mining in Brazil’s Amazon.
Professor Jessica Roth appeared on PBS NewsHour and other outlets discussing Congress’s push to release Epstein-related DOJ files.
Professor Matt Wansley was quoted in The New York Times on safety concerns around Amazon’s Zoox robotaxi program.
Professor Rebecca Ingber spoke to The Intercept about the legality of U.S. drug boat strikes in the Caribbean.
Professor David Rudenstine wrote an op-ed in The Hill calling for judicial independence in pending Trump tariff cases.
Professor Jacob Noti-Victor co-authored a piece for ProMarket on fair use, antitrust, and AI licensing strategies.
Faculty news includes:
Ellen Drucker-Albert edited the latest edition of the Association of Jewish Libraries\u27 News and Reviews.
Professor Lindsay Nash’s article Inventing Deportation Arrests was cited by a district court in a case covered by The New York Times
DALSA GBM
General Body Meeting.https://larc.cardozo.yu.edu/flyers-2025-2026/1025/thumbnail.jp
From Both Sides of the Table: Careers in Labor & Employment
https://larc.cardozo.yu.edu/flyers-2025-2026/1027/thumbnail.jp
Making the Most of Limited Time
One of the biggest challenges I have encountered as an advanced legal research instructor is getting everything accomplished that I want to during a class session. The most time I have ever had to get through a class session is one hour and twenty minutes – and this includes lecturing, demonstrations, in-class exercises, and going over those exercises. In particular, it’s challenging to balance giving students enough time to complete their exercises with everything else that needs to be done
Cardozo Law News Brief: December 12, 2025
Highlights from the December 12, 2025, Cardozo Law News Brief include:
Professor Rebecca Ingber was quoted in TIME on the legality of Trump’s alleged order for lethal boat strikes in the Caribbean, and again on his pardoning of former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández.
Professor Wilfred Codrington III spoke to Reuters about the Supreme Court’s increasingly ideological pattern in overturning precedents.
Professor Matthew Wansley spoke to The New York Times about the limitations of autonomous driving systems after a Waymo vehicle ran over a family pet.
Professor David Rudenstine wrote an op-ed in Bloomberg Law criticizing the constitutional stakes of the Trump v. Slaughter case.
Professor Sam Weinstein discussed DOJ scrutiny of a potential Netflix–Warner Bros. merger in The Wall Street Journal.
Professor Kate Levine was quoted in the Austin-American Statesman on a Travis County police reform deal, calling it a failure of accountability.
Professor Gabor Rona published an op-ed in Just Security on the U.S. vote against a UN resolution condemning torture, urging a reaffirmation of international human rights commitments