Volume 105, Issue 4

Contents

Symposium

Law and Expertise

Editors’ Foreword

Editors’ Foreword
Crystal Hsu & Karen Yao

Contributions

(Un)Common Knowledge & Experience
Jasmine E. Harris
Page 1113

Proving the Future in Criminal Cases
Christopher Slobogin
Page 1151

Abolition, Expertise, and the Law
Jocelyn Simonson
Page 1175

Experiential Expertise in Law: What Lived Experience Can Teach
Rachel López
Page 1189

Bureaucracy and Democracy as Complements
Rachel E. Barkow
Page 1203

Evolving Expertise: Structural Inequality and Bureaucratic Judgment
K. Sabeel Rahman
Page 1219

Epistemic Appropriation, Critical Defanging, and Lessons for a Responsive New Reconstruction
Yvette Butler
Page 1239

Do Bans on Conversion Therapy Impose a Governmental “Orthodoxy” About Sex and Gender?
Linda C. McClain
Page 1263

Evidence and Expertise in Trans Health Law
Joanna Wuest
Page 1295

Essay

More than Equity Is Required: The Enhanced Impact of Racism on Women of Color in the Legal Profession
Paulette Brown
Page 1321

Notes

False Narratives, Real Threats: Defending Contraceptive Access
Camille Cummings
Page 1343

As Near as Possible: Returning Class Action Cy Pres to Its Roots in Trust Law
Kevin Gauch
Page 1381