Georgetown University law professor Rosa Brooks blamed the Highland Park mass shooting on Americans being "slaves" to the Constitution, "written more than 230 years ago by a tiny group of white ...
Rosa Brooks is a law professor at Georgetown, a former senior Defense Department official, and the author of How Everything Became War and the Military Became Everything. I Helped Run “War Games” on ...
For four years, Rosa Brooks carried a badge and a gun and worked a minimum of 24 hours a month for the D.C. police — all on a voluntary basis.... To Understand Police Reform, Law Professor Volunteered ...
Katy Tur is joined for a discussion by Georgetown Law Professor, Rosa Brooks. She is the Organizer of the Transition Integrity Project, which brought together a bipartisan group of experts over the ...
The last U.S. soldier has left Afghanistan, but a war in Afghanistan goes on. President Biden says the U.S. military will hunt down terrorists who plot attacks like the one last week at Kabul's ...
A decade ago, Sudhir Venkatesh, a Columbia University professor of sociology, made quite a splash with his book Gang Leader for a Day: A Rogue Sociologist Takes to the Streets. His research consisted ...
An error has occurred. Please try again. With a The Portland Press Herald subscription, you can gift 5 articles each month. It looks like you do not have any active ...
Judy Woodruff discusses the history and trends of policing in America — and what reform should look like — with DeRay Mckesson, co-founder of Campaign Zero, Margaret Huang, president and CEO of the ...
On the C-SPAN Networks: Rosa Ehrenreich Brooks is a Professor for the Georgetown University Law Center with 10 videos in the C-SPAN Video Library; the first appearance was a 2008 Forum. The year with ...
NPR's Scott Simon speaks to law professor Rosa Brooks about the legal and ethical challenges posed by the U.S. military's use of drone strikes following its withdrawal from Afghanistan. The last U.S.
Law professor and human rights activist Rosa Brooks wanted to better understand police violence and the racial disparities in America's criminal justice system, so she decided to join the police force ...