Clinical Associate Professor of Law, Yale University
Miriam Gohara is Clinical Associate Professor of Law at Yale Law School. Professor Gohara teaches and writes about capital and non-capital sentencing, incarceration, and the historical and social forces implicated in culpability and punishment. Before joining the Yale Law School faculty, Professor Gohara spent sixteen years representing death-sentenced clients in post-conviction litigation, first as assistant counsel at the NAACP Legal Defense Fund (LDF) and then as a specially designated federal public defender Professor Gohara has litigated cases in state and federal courts around the United States, including the United States Supreme Court.
A prison program in Connecticut seeks to find out what happens when prisoners are treated as victims
Mar 09, 2019 06:06 am UTC| Insights & Views Health
Prisons are full of people who were once victims of violence and abuse. As many as 75 percent of people who are in prison have experienced violence or childhood neglect, according to data from the Department of...
There’s an extra $1 billion on the table for NT schools. This could change lives if spent well
Political donations rules are finally in the spotlight – here’s what the government should do