Cortney Lollar

Cortney E. Lollar is the James and Mary Lassiter Associate Professor of Law at the University of Kentucky. She focuses on criminal law and criminal procedure, with particular attention to the intersections of criminal law, remedies, race, gender, sexuality, and social science. She publishes on the mistreatment of impoverished women and women-of-color by the court systems.[1]

Cortney Lollar
OccupationJames and Mary Lassiter Associate Professor of Law
Academic background
EducationBrown University
Alma materNew York University
Academic work
DisciplineCriminal Law
Sub-disciplineWomen's and Gender Studies
InstitutionsUniversity of Kentucky

In 1997, Lollar graduated magna cum laude at Brown University and earned her Juris Doctor degree from New York University in 2002.[2]

In March 2013, Lollar testified before the Department of Defense's Judicial Proceedings Panel in Washington, D.C to review and assess the judicial proceedings conducted under the Uniform Code of Military Justice involving adult sexual assault and related offenses.[3] Lollar is against relying on the criminal system to award money for damages of certain, broad crimes, as she believes it will hurt the poorest convicted people.[4][5]

Lollar has pushed the state of Kentucky to pass laws and acts to help parents provide better care for their children.[6]

External sources

gollark: https://media.discordapp.net/attachments/277889706178641931/767039003379367946/20201017_165709.jpg?width=562&height=422
gollark: Correction, *Minecraft* as init.
gollark: I saw someone somehow use java as their init, but I think that was some kind of convoluted joke.
gollark: > play of the game 2020`punch tree`?
gollark: But the external DNS server is much less hassle to deal with.

References

  1. Lollar, Cortney (Summer 2017). "Criminalizing Pregnancy". Law School Scholarly Articles. 614: 947–1005.
  2. "Cortney E. Lollar | UK College of Law". law.uky.edu. Retrieved 2019-03-02.
  3. "UK's Lollar Testifies Before Department of Defense Panel | UK College of Law". law.uky.edu. Retrieved 2019-03-02.
  4. "OPINION: Who should pay for the traumatic effects of child pornography?". america.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 2019-03-02.
  5. Lollar, Cortney (Spring 2013). "Child Pornography and the Restitution Revolution". Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology. 103 (2): 343–406.
  6. WKYT. "Lexington mom to push for better child care policies at 'Strolling Thunder' in D.C." www.wkyt.com. Retrieved 2019-03-02.


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