"The Criminal Procedure Revolution," Inside the Classroom with Professor Risa Goluboff

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  • Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
  • University of Virginia School of Law Professor Risa Goluboff, an expert on the history of civil rights, discusses crime control methods in the 1960s versus today in a lecture titled "The Criminal Procedure Revolution."
    Inside the Classroom is a video series that offers a look inside the classrooms of some of the great lecturers at Virginia Law. For more on Professor Goluboff, go to: www.law.virgini...
    For more on Virginia Law, go to www.law.virginia.edu or uvalaw.

Комментарии • 63

  • @DonYutuc
    @DonYutuc 6 месяцев назад +6

    Who's watching in 2024? Professor Risa Globuloff is the first female Dean of the University of Virginia law school. This is one of the reasons why ... ❤

  • @chaseofori-atta2225
    @chaseofori-atta2225 3 года назад +7

    The vibrant energy, the presentation of lecture, & the sense of collegial exchange all make it worth the price of admission! Thanks, @UVALAW!

  • @duiattorneyphoenix
    @duiattorneyphoenix 11 лет назад +7

    I suppose that the role of the lawyer varies significantly across legal jurisdictions, and so it can be treated here in only the most general terms. Great Video!

  • @thomassblaquelourde4386
    @thomassblaquelourde4386 3 года назад +1

    Much said does not address certain underlying paradigms. The Constitution stands for the twin principles that liberty is a right which ALL governments compulsively seek to suppress, deny, take., supplant or rephrase as if that government was GENEROUSLY giving up its innate ",right" to ... imprison or kill you on a whim. The idea this government is different is ... an Unconstitutional assumption

  • @hammieinvestigations5392
    @hammieinvestigations5392 8 лет назад +10

    The viewer is missing so much because we can't hear the student comments.

  • @kevindevore7171
    @kevindevore7171 11 лет назад +9

    It's interesting to hear the timeline of the criminal procedure over time, but it would be nice to know what text they are speaking from and what the students are asking?

  • @JCResDoc94
    @JCResDoc94 7 лет назад +3

    23:00 Peace Justices as court officers paid to convict, & the importance of wearing a collared shirt

  • @cmatrix4761
    @cmatrix4761 5 лет назад +9

    lol - I love her passion for the Law and its history.

  • @TwisNinja
    @TwisNinja Месяц назад

    (248 5 selection of subjects) at a visual discretion on how someone or something looks,... this is a blatant discriminatory violation of the 14th amendments equal protection clause

  • @pillbox1240
    @pillbox1240 6 лет назад +5

    Students need louder microphones.

    • @JamesSmith-lj6mz
      @JamesSmith-lj6mz 3 года назад

      Yes. That side of the discussion would add a whole 'nuther dimension.

  • @1thedarox
    @1thedarox 2 года назад +1

    You should check out what's taking place in Missouri Family Courts. Pay is still at play.

    • @kristiblack1428
      @kristiblack1428 2 года назад

      And so is legalized Human and Child Trafficking for Crown Clowns Court Profit-Seas! Now, I fully overstand why two specific religions over represent the deeply peverted "legal" profession. Making that which is morally and lawfully repugnant to Natural Law, legally acceptable for Secret Societies. 😉

  • @howardclegg6497
    @howardclegg6497 Месяц назад

    Just ending Qualified Immunity for Law Enforcement and espe ially the Judi iary would do much to restore confidence in the eyes of the people. I have little faith that the government will do anything other than expanding their power. We have well surpassed the limits that inspired Jefferson to write the Declaration of Independence.

  • @nikkobriteramos314
    @nikkobriteramos314 Год назад +1

    #nikkobriteramos #y2klmk #usa #jewishwelfarepublicity

  • @mdaktaruljamanakter-b8l
    @mdaktaruljamanakter-b8l 26 дней назад

    Wilson Jose Hernandez Margaret Jackson Thomas

  • @marcojacinto1841
    @marcojacinto1841 3 года назад +1

    i was your average attention seeking student. once i discovered criminal justice. i remembered why as a kid i use to read news papers. i use to skip classes n manage to pass because u always use juggle memory theory by me. but once i took criminal justice after working enough jobs. i decided to try. i love con law, i am like snail... slow but i will get there. with proper arguments

  • @reginaldcharles1133
    @reginaldcharles1133 3 года назад +5

    Love Professor Goluboff Iam not even a UVA student but she's absolutely amazing

  • @ganibazar1458
    @ganibazar1458 3 года назад +3

    Thank you for delivering lectures by Risa G, it is very useful for me

  • @니모-b6w
    @니모-b6w Месяц назад

    Brown Brenda Hernandez Sharon Miller Betty

  • @theodorevegh6030
    @theodorevegh6030 2 года назад +1

    Red Flag Laws? We are now back to that? - TAV ♥️🇺🇸🌎👍

  • @ДмитрийДепутатов
    @ДмитрийДепутатов 18 дней назад

    Martinez Larry Taylor Patricia Hernandez Laura

  • @ДмитрийВербицкий-у7д

    Hernandez Eric Jones Brenda Rodriguez Helen

  • @martinarango9528
    @martinarango9528 2 года назад +1

    Un gran acierto publicar la transcripción de la clase, para los hispanoparlantes es de gran ayuda. Ahora solo queda por mejorar el audio de los estudiantes. Mil gracias

  • @renemcintyre3653
    @renemcintyre3653 4 года назад +1

    I CAN`T HEAR THE STUDENTS TALK. SOME PEOPLE MUMBLE-

  • @AntiMasonic93
    @AntiMasonic93 5 лет назад +4

    The professor is very smart. It would have been helpful if she expanded on the warrant exceptions and the exclusionary rule. Illegal evidence is inadmissible in the prosecution's case-in-chief.

  • @empirebuildingcompany
    @empirebuildingcompany Год назад

    Yellow stone. Park original story

  • @kaozyk4839
    @kaozyk4839 8 лет назад +1

    eric r binford Mr innovator U TUBE SEEKING

  • @Rayhuntter
    @Rayhuntter 5 месяцев назад

    get women out of criminal law!!!

  • @rashmiroshini8312
    @rashmiroshini8312 11 лет назад +2

    superb.

  • @young6710
    @young6710 8 лет назад +2

    I like it

  • @charleytuna9567
    @charleytuna9567 5 лет назад +3

    I would like to pose a thought. When mentioning "1960's" era and a "criminal revolution". My fist insights directed me to find correlations with the invention of Television and when Televised broadcasting became standardised... Just a thought tho. Couldn't help but think if the media had a role to play in this idea of needing to change how the courts conducts their business.

  • @cheraz713
    @cheraz713 Год назад

    I love her lectures, but it is frustrating that students answers aren’t audible because it really does lose significant content / context.

  • @Stardusk.
    @Stardusk. Год назад

    Just found the historic narative necessary for the entire male gaming culture to know what type of man is their truest enemy if you were around by two thousand thirteen, and too present with in a radicalising movement to create extreme male personai.

  • @TheColorField
    @TheColorField Год назад

    One possibility of understanding criminal procedure in the past would be to examine scholarly documents produced at that time that describe their view of their position in relation to their past e.g. reflections, legal theory, research, etc. that describes how criminal procedure might have changed between some inflections point (WW1, WW2, turn of the century, etc) and 1960

  • @tentanghukumkita6381
    @tentanghukumkita6381 2 года назад

    Very good explanation Professor Risa Goluboff
    "The Criminal Procedure Revolution,"
    I think this is very important to obtain the real truth
    Thank you, Good luck always.

  • @yvettebeckwith3309
    @yvettebeckwith3309 2 года назад

    Halo Madam Professor how are you. Great as usual I have a strange case that needs to be settled soon it's a matter of peace of mind⭐

  • @basketballmarco
    @basketballmarco 12 лет назад +1

    very interesting!

  • @korombokamara3708
    @korombokamara3708 2 года назад

    This lecture helps me but the lecturer is too fast

  • @korombokamara3708
    @korombokamara3708 2 года назад

    The lecturer is clear enough in her presentation

  • @felipefelix6535
    @felipefelix6535 3 года назад

    Great officer !!!

  • @LinwoodGallop
    @LinwoodGallop Год назад

    Great class!

  • @badrisaljooghi1948
    @badrisaljooghi1948 7 лет назад +2

    True as one viewer said, much is missing due to not hearing the comments.

    • @nirv
      @nirv 3 года назад

      I'm listening to this lecture on earbuds at work and I can kind of hear the students speaking. If I were at home, I think you could actually crank the volume up and hear them clearly.
      I think the data is there if anyone wants to put this video in Adobe Premiere and boost the audio in those portions or even add captions.

  • @reginaldcharles1133
    @reginaldcharles1133 4 года назад +3

    Love this professor

  • @terraincognita4151
    @terraincognita4151 4 года назад +2

    Sorry, but never appreciated the way of teaching when students are asked to give their thoughts on questions to be presented during the lesson. Because, I have that hateful habit to keep in memory the first words heard on subject. And God is witness, many answers from students I heard before the correct version spoken out by professor were WRONG. I prefer the professors who present the material during a session and then give practice classes where students discuss and give their visions, mistaken or right on the matter. Again sorry, if I am redundant in putting my point of view...