UC Law professor’s article named a Dukeminier Award recipient
Congratulations to Professor Ryan Thoreson, whose law review article “Discriminalization”: Sexuality, Human Rights, and the Carceral Turn in Antidiscrimination Law", 110 Cal. L. Rev. 432 (2022) was named a 2023 Dukeminier Awards winner for the best scholarship on sexual orientation and gender identity.
In his article Professor Thoreson discussed states’ turn toward carceral punishment as a means of sanctioning discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity, particularly as LGBTQ rights grow across the globe. The carceral turn has been scrutinized in racial justice and feminist literature, but few LGBTQ scholars have contended with the growing use of incarceration globally to punish offenses like discrimination, degrading or insulting speech, or conversion practices. The use of carceral punishment to deter and punish these offenses—what Professor Thoreson calls discriminalization—raises questions about whether or when incarceration is appropriate to address affronts to equal dignity.
The Dukeminier Awards were initiated by The Williams Institute and students at the University of California, Los Angeles School of Law to acknowledge and distribute the best published law review articles concerning various aspects of sexual orientation and gender identity law. Recipients of the award will have their article republished in the Dukeminier Awards Journal of Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Law. The goals of the journal and its awards are to encourage scholars to begin or continue writing about sexual orientation and gender identity law and public policy; provide valuable recognition and support for scholars, law students, and lawyers who write in this area; and provide easy access to each year’s best scholarly materials for those outside of legal academia, including lawyers, judges, other legal actors, and policy makers.
Lead photo: istockphoto.com
Latest UC News
- Enquirer: Salacious testimony of 1929 murder at UC rare books libraryThe Cincinnati Enquirer highlights a rare book found in a University of Cincinnati library that chronicled a high-profile murder trial in 1929.
- UC Law celebrates the graduating class of 2024Information about the UC college of Law graduating class of 2024
- Center for Business Analytics to offer generative AI course in JuneThe University of Cincinnati Center for Business Analytics is offering “Generative AI in Business: Applications, Challenges, Ethics and Governance,” a first-of-its-kind course, June 3 and 5.
- WLWT: UC students experience realities of life in prison as part of a college courseOne day a week, eight UC students travel to the institution as part of the Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program, where they and eight incarcerated individuals discuss criminal justice topics such as sentencing, parole, life after prison and recidivism in a classroom setting. The program is part of a class taught by J.Z. Bennett, an assistant professor of criminal justice.
- UC Blue Ash recognizes students for exceptional academic achievement and leadershipThe University of Cincinnati Blue Ash College recently hosted a special event that recognized students for exceptional achievements during the 2023-24 academic year. The honorees included academic award winners, student organization leaders and the 2024 Honor Student of the Year.
- Civil engineering professor honored with Titan of Industry awardRichard Miller, University of Cincinnati College of Engineering and Applied Science professor, was recently celebrated with the Titan of the Industry award by the Prestressed/Precast Concrete Institute, a technical institute and industry trade association.