Author Archives: F. E. Guerra-Pujol
Cuban street art and the rule of law
The street artist we have featured in our last few posts, Yulier P. (@yuliergraffiticuba), was detained by the Cuban police in August of 2017 under an obscure urban planning decree that makes it illegal to build without a permit or … Continue reading
#npoc19
If you are in DC this weekend, we will be presenting our analysis of Cuban Decrees 272 and 349 and the criminalization of street art in Cuba at the 4th National People of Color Legal Scholarship Conference this afternoon (23 … Continue reading
“Regalo”
In response to the criminalization of his unauthorized public murals, Cuban graffiti artist Yulier P. found this ingenious and defiant micro-street art solution:
In praise of Yulier P. (part 2)
The murals of Yulier Rodriguez Perez (@yuliergraffiticuba) began to appear on the streets of Havana in 2014. In the words of Deni Ellis Béchard, “He soon established himself as one of the most prolific street artists in Havana, signing his … Continue reading
Havana street art
As if existing levels of repression and economic hardship were not enough, the Cuban government has now begun to criminalize street art under a recently-enacted dystopian decree. We will be blogging about the criminalization of Cuban street art in the … Continue reading
Debating the Accountable Capitalism Act
Originally posted on prior probability:
We will be blogging somewhat sporadically, if at all, this week and next as we will be spending our spring break visiting family and friends in wintry New York City and then in sunny Jamaica.…
When does cheating pay?
Answer: When the probability of getting caught, let alone punished, is small. Consider violent crime, by way of example. Our friend and colleague Alex Tabarrok does the probabilistic math here: “In 2017 … victims reported 2,000,990 serious violent crimes [e.g. rape, robbery, … Continue reading
Sentence diagrams of the opening lines of three famous novels
Check out the sentence diagrams of many more famous novels’ opening lines here, via Popular Science.
Spring Break Reading
There is only one item on our spring break reading list: David Foster Wallace‘s Infinite Jest. We picked up a paperback copy of this massive tome for $1 two Fridays ago at our university bookstore and finally cracked open DFW’s … Continue reading

