
Rachel Kincaid
@racheljkincaid
Crim Prof @BaylorLawSchool. Writing on crim law & civil rights. Former civil rights lawyer & DOJ civil rights prosecutor, @EastmanSchool & @UVALaw alum.
ID: 1407389947640823815
https://www.baylor.edu/law/facultystaff/index.php?id=981476 22-06-2021 17:29:42
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Solutions to the carceral response to COVID-19: stop misinformation, include enforcement mechanisms, courts must listen to evidence on whether policies are being enforced, and include education programs for incarcerated people. Rachel Kincaid prof Baylor Law School

Incredibly powerful panel discussion today from Witness to Innocence hosted by Baylor ACS. If you're looking for a way to connect students (or any other group of people) to the real human side of wrongful convictions, check out Witness to Innocence!

Today in the symposium: Federal Failures to Protect Incarcerated People During Public Health Crises by Rachel Kincaid blog.petrieflom.law.harvard.edu/2022/09/30/fedâŚ

Thank you to Harvard Law School Petrie-Flom Center Chloe Reichel @BenjaminABarsky for including me in this symposium on Health Law and Policy in an Era of Mass Suffering. The fed govt has (once again) failed incarcerated people. But we can (and *must*) do better. blog.petrieflom.law.harvard.edu/2022/09/30/fedâŚ

At #AALS2023 and excited to learn and meet new people. Also feeling incredibly lucky to get to share these experiences with my sister and fellow law prof Jessica Kincaid.

Excited to announce my article encouraging hiring law profs w/public service experience (& recounting my path to academia w/o a VAP/PhD & urging schools to look beyond those traditional markers of success) is forthcoming in University of Richmond Law Review Comments welcome! papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfâŚ


Always a joy to get to attend the AALS annual conference with my sister Jessica Kincaid, who is now *also* my colleague Baylor Law School! #AALS2024


âNow is an urgent time to figure out how we can prepare and inspire our students to become changemakers in our communities.â Baylor Law School Prof. Rachel Kincaid presenting âHow Law Schools Can Help Bend the Arc of the Moral Universe Toward Justiceâ University of Richmond Law Review Symposium.



I'm late in posting this to SSRN, but thrilled that my article, "Excited Delirium" Training Encourages Law Enforcement Violence, found a home with Tulane Law Review. I'd welcome comments on the draft: papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfâŚ

Looking forward to presenting my excited delirium article (papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfâŚ) bright and early at 8am tomorrow morning LSA Conference 2024 alongside Evelyn Malave, Erin Eife, and Daniel Tagliarina--and then getting to spend the rest of the conference learning!

Professor Jamelia Morganâs work has been field-defining. Her scholarship has been crucial to my ( and so many othersâ) understanding of disability law and policing. Sheâs also a wonderful person. The academy is so lucky to have her. A true gem! I am so angry.

Writing is collaborative. Not only is Jamelia Morgan a brilliant scholar, but she is a generous scholar who supports those sheâs in community with and makes their work better. Sheâs creating pathways into the academy for junior scholars and practitioners. She is a changemaker.


My exploration of how one vague and contradictory term, deferred to by judges, demonstrates further erosion of reasonable suspicion for police intervention, has been published. Thank you to the incredibly helpful students California Law Review and colleagues for feedback.

Was a joy to talk about this article papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cf⌠at the Society of American Law Teachers Teaching Conference in Boston this weekend, & to talk more broadly about the importance of law profs w/social justice experience w/ @_sbrett_ & Michael Steinberg.


So honored to receive this award from Tulane Law Review law.baylor.edu/news/story/202⌠I'm so proud of this article and immensely grateful for the hard work of their members. Article available here: papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfâŚ