Data Privacy in Carceral Settings: The Digital Panopticon Returns to Its Roots, 119 Nw. U.L. Rev. Online 73 (2024).
The Company Store and the Literally Captive Market: Consumer Law in Prisons and Jails, 17 Hastings Race & Poverty L.J. 3 (2020).
“Phoning Home: Prison Telecommunications in a Deregulatory Age,” chapter in Prison Privatization: The Many Facets of a Controversial Industry (Praeger Press, 2012).
The Business of Punishing: Impediments to Accountability in the Private Corrections Industry, 13 Richmond J. of Law & the Public Interest 209 (2010).
“Judicial Review of Legislative Procedure: Determining Who Determines the Rules of Proceedings,” presented at Midwest Political Science Association Spring Conference (Chicago: Apr. 2009).
“Insufficient funds: How prison and jail ‘release cards’ perpetuate the cycle of poverty,” Prison Policy Initiative Blog (May 2022).
“Show me the money: Tracking the companies that have a lock on sending funds to incarcerated people,” Prison Policy Initiative Blog (Nov. 2021) (co-authored with Tiana Herring).
“Captive Consumers: How government agencies and private companies trap and profit off incarcerated people and their loved ones,” Inquest (Harvard Law Institute to End Mass Incarceration, Mar. 19, 2022) (co-authored with Ariel Nelson).
“Prison Retail,” chapter in Commercialized (In)Justice Litigation Guide: Applying Consumer Laws to Commercial Bail, Prison Retail, and Private Debt Collection (Nat’l Consumer Law Ctr, Jun. 2020).
“When is a Postmaster Like the Man in the Moon? The Tumultuous Presidential Election of 1876,” Oregon Benchmarks (winter 2017).
“Neither Snow Nor Rain Nor Graft: Oregon’s Supporting Role in the Star Route Scandals,” Oregon Benchmarks (fall 2016).
“Interpreting Initiatives and Referenda,” chapter in Interpreting Oregon Law (Oregon State Bar, 2009) (co-authored with Steven J. Johansen).