Skip to main content
logo Harvard Law Review
Primary Menu
  • Publications
    • Print
    • Forum
    • Blog
  • Explore
    • Explore By Author
    • Explore By Topic
    • Explore By Volume & Issue
  • Student Writing
    • Notes
    • Recent Cases & More
    • Developments In The Law
  • Supreme Court
    • Forewords
    • Case Comments
    • Student Case Comments
    • Crosswords
    • Statistics & Visualizations
  • Fellowship
    • About
    • Fellowship Essay
    • Current & Past Fellows
    • Apply
  • About
    • Organization & History
    • Board Of Editors
    • Writing Competition
    • Submit
Harvard Law Review Authors
Author

Leah Litman

Leah Litman is an assistant professor of law at University of California, Irvine School of Law, where she teaches and writes on federalism and federal post-conviction review.

Criminal Justice Blog Essay

Vague Criminality and Mass Incarceration: Will Dimaya End the Insanity?

April 17, 2018 Today, the Supreme Court decided Sessions v. Dimaya and struck down the federal definition of “crime of violence” as unconstitutionally vague.  The statute, section...
  • Leah Litman

Archives

  • Print
  • Forum
  • Blog
  • Subscribe

Fellowship

  • About
  • Fellowship Essays
  • Meet the Fellows
  • Apply

About

  • Organization & History
  • Board Of Editors
  • Writing Competition
  • Submit

Copyright © 1887-2023 Harvard Law Review. All Rights Reserved. Accessibility