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Resurrecting the Trinity of Legislative Constitutionalism The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-30
Beau J. BaumannFrom 1919 to 1969, the Offices of the Legislative Counsel in the Senate and House drafted precedential opinions to advise lawmakers on constitutional and subconstitutional questions. This Article lifts the curtain on this institution, revealing a hidden system that worked to reify congressional power and stymie a rising juristocracy.
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Antiracist Expert Evidence The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-30
Jasmine B. Gonzales Rose, Asees Bhasin, Spencer PistonThis Article introduces “antiracist expert evidence,” an underutilized tool to prove racism in court. Based on a nationwide survey of defense attorneys, it explores the evidence’s utility, identifies barriers to use, and offers strategies to overcome them, aiming to begin to level the evidentiary playing field for criminal defendants.
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Congressional Intervention in Agency Adjudication: The Case of Veterans’ Appeals The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-30
Lindsey Gailmard, Daniel E. Ho, Mark S. KrassPrevailing constitutional interpretation sees Congress’s role as legislative, but members of Congress frequently exert nonlegislative influence on agencies by intervening directly on individual claimants’ behalf. This Feature provides an empirical portrait of congressional intervention in veterans’ appeals through internal administrative data and discusses its implications for constitutional and administrative
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To Be Given to God: Contemporary Civil Forfeiture as a Taking The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-30
Richard J.S. PeayCivil asset forfeiture was once a law-enforcement tool. Today, however, police and prosecutors use forfeiture to fundraise, not to fight crime. This Note challenges the constitutionality of these profit-motivated government confiscations. It argues that these “contemporary civil forfeitures” are not forfeitures at all—they are compensable takings.
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Disestablishment at Work The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-04-30
James D. NelsonAfter several decades, the Supreme Court has revised its interpretation of employment-discrimination law requiring religious accommodations, creating waves of new litigation. Latent in the doctrine, principles of nondisparagement, reciprocity, and proportionality can guide courts in resolving these claims while also anchoring nonjudicial strategies to protect employees’ basic rights.
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The Lost English Roots of Notice-and-Comment Rulemaking The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-04-30
Rephael G. SternUsing new archival research, this Article argues that notice-and-comment rulemaking emerged from a series of American transplantations of English rulemaking procedures. Yet, as this Article emphasizes, during the 1930s and 1940s Americans only partially adopted the English framework. The rejection of laying procedures implicates the legitimacy of our rulemaking system.
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Does Pharma Need Patents? The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-04-30
Talha SyedThis Feature revisits the widely held assumption that pharma needs patents to sustain innovation. By analyzing the information goods underlying drugs, this Feature demonstrates that innovation in this sector can proceed without patents. Replacing patents with a tailored form of regulatory exclusivity would reap large gains in social welfare.
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A Textualist Response to Two Texts: Positive-Law Codification and Interpreting Section 1983 The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-04-30
Grace SullivanTextualists have yet to explain how to interpret codified positive-law text, which is revised by bureaucrats then enacted by Congress, where it differs from original text. This Note’s proposed solution is the “two texts canon.” When applied to Section 1983, the two texts canon demands that qualified immunity be abolished.
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Turning Square Corners: Regents and Arbitrary-and-Capricious Review’s Distributional Stakes The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-04-30
William VesterAfter the Supreme Court’s decision in Regents, courts have intensified their scrutiny of agency reversals that upset the expectations of regulatory beneficiaries. This Note defends that development and situates it within an underexplored history of courts calibrating the stringency of their review of agency action to distributional concerns.
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Democracy’s Distrust: The Supreme Court’s Anti-Voter Decisions as a Threat to Democracy The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-04-14
Gilda R. Daniels“Democracy’s Distrust” explores how the Supreme Court has eroded voting rights and weakened democracy. It argues that the Court prioritizes candidates and legislatures over voters, fostering public distrust. The Essay examines historical and contemporary cases, highlighting the need for legislative reforms and civic action to protect democracy.
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Decriminalizing Cannabis The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-03-28
Jennifer D. OlivaThe United States has criminalized cannabis since 1970. In response to pleas for reform and widespread state cannabis legalization, the federal government recently initiated rulemaking to reschedule cannabis. This Essay argues that the federal government should abandon its legally problematic rescheduling proposal and, instead, decriminalize and deregulate cannabis.
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Fragile Gains, Persistent Setbacks: The Muddled Arc of American Drug-Law Reform The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-03-28
Ifetayo HarveyIfetayo Harvey explores the foremost drug reform issues by giving a broad overview of the Essays in this Collection. Harvey uses Oregon’s Measure 110 as an example of drug reform’s challenges when implemented on a state level. The piece concludes with guidance on how advocates can improve future drug reforms.
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Separation of Drug Scheduling Powers The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-03-28
Mason MarksCongress split drug scheduling authority between the Department of Health and Human Services and the Drug Enforcement Administration. However, this statutory separation of powers has collapsed, producing unscientific outcomes that undermine the CSA text, purpose, and history. Congress, courts, agencies, and the President can shift drug scheduling back on track.
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Deinstitutionalizing Family Separation in Cases of Parental Drug Use The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-03-28
Taleed El-Sabawi, Sarah KatzThrough an institutional theory lens, this Essay examines how the family policing system’s historical emphasis on punishment and surveillance resists even well-intentioned legislative changes. Despite the inclusion of family-centered services in recent legislation, implementation barriers and institutional inertia within family policing agencies perpetuate default practices of policing and removal
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Interoperable Legal AI for Access to Justice The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-03-14
Drew SimshawThis Essay argues that technological and procedural legal interoperability—that is, widespread consistency in legal technology design and related processes—can help stakeholders effectively leverage artificial intelligence to maximize access to legal services and fairness of outcomes through self-help options, with traditional legal services, and in the courts.
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The Duty to Respond to Rulemaking Comments The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-03-14
Ronald M. LevinThis Essay examines the legal basis for the requirement that agencies must respond to significant comments they receive during a rulemaking proceeding, the pros and cons of that requirement, and how the requirement fits together with other principles of administrative law, including procedural fairness and standing to sue.
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Legal Deserts and Spatial Injustice: A Study of Criminal Legal Systems in Rural Washington The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-03-14
Lisa R. Pruitt, Jennifer Sherman, Jennifer SchwartzThis Essay uses a mixed-methods study to sketch operation of criminal legal systems in several rural counties in central and eastern Washington. The study reveals how an attorney shortage, along with reliance on local funding of justice system functions, is leaving defendants vulnerable to delays and ineffective assistance of counsel.
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Lawyers’ Monopoly and the Promises of AI The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-03-14
Stephanos BibasAccess to justice in American civil courts won’t come through free or pro bono lawyers. To drive down costs, we need to loosen bar regulation and streamline procedures. And we should embrace technology and AI responsibly to give more people the legal help they need but can’t afford.
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Race, the Academy, and The Constitution of the War on Drugs The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-03-01
Bennett Capers, Jeffrey BellinDavid Pozen’s new book chronicles the constitutional arguments that American litigants once deployed to protect a “right” to use drugs. This Review supplements and critiques Pozen’s important contribution, situating his findings within a broad backdrop of race, crime, and the judiciary’s eagerness to just say “yes” to the drug war.
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Self-Protection in World Society: Reformulating the Protective Principle in International Law The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-03-01
Alyssa ResarAggressive applications of extraterritoriality under the protective principle in international law pose serious threats to states and individuals. This Note tracks the rise of protective-principle jurisdiction around the world. It then provides a reformulation of the principle to better cabin it within foundational doctrines of international law.
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Guaranteeing Honesty: Rewiring Honest Services Fraud Under the Guarantee Clause The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-27
Brian LiuHonest services fraud is a vital anticorruption statute used by federal prosecutors to police state and local corruption. However, the statute’s undefined terms and perceived intrusions on federalism have invited scrutiny from the Supreme Court. To redress these concerns, courts should interpret the statute to require a predicate state-law violation.
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Equal Standards for Equal Protection: Revisiting Race Discrimination in Jury Selection After SFFA The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-27
Avital FriedIn its decision in Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard, the Supreme Court appeared to take a new approach to what constitutes a Fourteenth Amendment violation. This Essay argues that the new standard should be applied to reduce race discrimination in jury selection.
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Scalia and the King: The Ancient Writ of Habeas Corpus and the Missing Legitimacy Core of Modern Habeas Law The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-27
Adam HornThis Essay argues for reconceiving habeas corpus as a meaningful avenue for judicial power to push back against arbitrary executive power, and proposes a surprising source for this revival: Justice Scalia’s attack on the Sentencing Guidelines. Texas’s capital murder statute is proposed as ripe for such reinvigorated habeas review.
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From Gods to Google The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-27
Rebecca Aviel, Margot E. Kaminski, Toni M. Massaro, Andrew Keane WoodsThe First Amendment is a well-known barrier to sensible technology regulation. While scholars blame the Court’s libertarian turn, we offer another explanation: the Court’s solicitude for religious speakers. Religious-speech cases have given firms a powerful suite of deregulatory tools. This Feature draws the through line from gods to Google.
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Should Tort Law Care About Police Officers? The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-28
Ellen M. Bublick, Jane R. BambauerProfessors Ellen Bublick and Jane Bambauer argue that the common law has expanded, and should continue to expand, the civil legal rights of wrongfully injured people, including police. There is value in using civil enforcement to hold both civilians and officers accountable for the unjustified harms that they cause.
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Comstockery: How Government Censorship Gave Birth to the Law of Sexual and Reproductive Freedom, and May Again Threaten It The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-28
Reva B. Siegel, Mary ZieglerThis Article offers the first legal history of the Comstock Act from its enactment to its post-Dobbs reinvention. From conflicts over Comstock’s enforcement emerged popular claims on democracy, liberty, and equality in which we can recognize roots of modern free-speech law and the law of sexual and reproductive liberty.
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The Plaintiff Police The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-28
Sarah L. SwanIn civil litigation, police most commonly appear as defendants. But police also act as plaintiffs, suing the individuals they police. This Article argues that these plaintiff police claims cause significant democratic harms and should be limited. Compensation and deterrence can be achieved through other, less politically corrosive mechanisms.
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Disenrollment as Citizenship Revocation: Promoting Tribal Sovereignty by Embracing International Norms The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-28
John K. CrawfordThis Note argues that Indian tribes can best address disenrollment by viewing the problem through the lens of international norms regarding citizenship revocation. In choosing to embrace these norms, tribes can restrict disenrollment in a manner that does not simply invoke tribal sovereignty but instead promotes it.
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The Church’s Treaties: How the Holy See Makes and Shapes International Law The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-28
Gabriel KlapholzThe Catholic Church has concluded close to two hundred treaties in the last sixty years with nations across the globe. Many of these agreements integrate Church doctrine into state legal systems at the expense of LGBTQ rights. This Note unearths this vast treaty regime—and suggests ways to challenge it.
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On the Perpetuation of Our Constitution and Civic Charity The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-25
Thomas B. GriffithWe live in perilous times, where acrimony and contempt poison our republic. But as others have long recognized—from Washington to Lincoln to current observers—there is an antidote: civic charity. It has helped heal our nation in some of our most difficult times; it can do so again.
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A New “Plan for Transformation”: Improving Living Conditions in Chicago’s Public Housing The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-21
Psalm BrownPublic housing suffers from disinvestment, and, today, many residents live in substandard conditions. By combining the literature on public-housing history and tenant-rights law with the lived experiences of public-housing residents, this Essay uses Chicago as a case study to explore litigation and other advocacy strategies for systematically improving public-housing quality.
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New Technologies, Old Rights: Litigating Public-Benefits Modernization The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-21
Susannah HoweThis Essay explores public-benefits agencies’ increasing reliance on technology and remote services and its impact on welfare-rights litigation. The Essay argues that the lack of direct regulation of these practices threatens benefits access. However, creative impact litigation is still a powerful tool for enforcing benefits recipients’ rights.
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The Law of the Territories: Should It Exist? The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-10
James T. Campbell“The Law of the Territories” is an emerging academic heading for legal scholarship on the status of U.S. territories. This Essay argues that the current momentum of this narrow “emerging field” presents an obstacle rather than a pathway to meaningful scholarly engagement, sidelining broader perspectives and more consequential inquiry.
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A Legacy of Discrimination: A Brief History of U.S. Territories in the American Bar Association The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-10
Anthony M. CiolliThe American Bar Association (ABA) has done much to remedy its history of racial discrimination. However, to this day, the ABA systematically discriminates against lawyers in four overwhelmingly nonwhite U.S. territories. This Essay examines the history of this discrimination and proposes a potential way forward to remedy it.
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Intersectional Imperial Legacies in the U.S. Territories The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-10
Susan K. SerranoWomen in the U.S. territories experience particularized harms often rooted in U.S. colonization and the territories’ political relationship with the United States. This Essay describes how traditional legal frameworks can sharply constrict available remedies and sketches the contours of a rational-basis-with-bite framework for assessing intersectional harms and legacies.
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The Origins of U.S. Territorial Taxation and the Insular Cases The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-10
Alex ZhangThis Essay examines Congress’s design of territorial revenue systems during 1898-1900. Eager to protect the federal fisc, lawmakers instituted tariffs between Puerto Rico and the mainland. Their choices segregated the territories from the federal fiscal apparatus, prompted the Insular Cases, and created the territories’ distinct tax status as foreign countries.
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Gig-Economy Myths and Missteps The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-31
Sarah M. LevineThis Essay disputes the myth that employment, unlike independent contracting, is inherently inflexible. It traces the roots of this widely shared belief to corporate propaganda and rejects “third-category” legislation based on this fiction. Finally, the Essay cautions labor enforcers to avoid the third-category sham in negotiated misclassification settlements.
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AI and Captured Capital The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-31
Ifeoma AjunwaAn AI arms race and a laissez-faire approach to globalization enable a borderless labor market without labor protections and the capture of workers’ capital. Proposed redress includes: (1) workers’ data as stake capital, (2) a data-licensing regime, and (3) a guaranteed income fund organized by the International Labor Organization.
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Data Laws at Work The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-31
Veena DubalRecognizing harms arising from the growing use of automated systems for labor control, the European Union (EU) has passed an array of digital-rights protections for workers. This Essay argues that the EU framework fails to account for the formal subordination of workers and proscribe the harms of algorithmic labor control.
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The Three Lives of Mamengwaa: Toward an Indigenous Canon of Construction The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-30
Matthew L.M. FletcherMany of the intractable political disputes that plague tribal nations can be traced to the reliance on legal principles that are poor fits in Indigenous contexts. I suggest the acknowledgment of an Indigenous canon of construction of tribal laws by tribal judiciaries that will benefit legal development in tribal nations.
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Refining Constitutional Torts The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-30
E. Garrett WestConstitutional torts allow victims of governmental misconduct to seek redress. But the doctrinal regime is in disarray because it vacillates between two conceptions of constitutional rights: rights that “nullify” changes to subconstitutional law and rights that impose “duties” on officers. The Feature defends a regime that embraces constitutional duties.
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The Credit Markets Go Dark The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-30
Jared A. Ellias, Elisabeth de FontenayMirroring the recent paradigm shift in corporate equity, corporate debt is now increasingly private and concentrated in the hands of investment funds. This Article chronicles the rise of private credit—loans originated by investment funds, rather than banks—and discusses its implications, including the potential loss of information and liquidity.
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Against the Work-Study Boundary: Synthesizing Title VII and Title IX Protections for Student-Employees The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-30
Alexandra R. JohnsonCourts routinely deny student-employees facing sex discrimination the expansive Title VII protections they deserve, and student-employees often fail to bring Title IX claims that more fulsomely capture this discrimination. Looking forward, courts should synthesize Title VII’s protections with Title IX’s coverage by considering education-based evidence when evaluating Title VII claims.
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The New Standing Doctrine, Judicial Federalism, and the Problem of Forumless Claims The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-30
Adam Flaherty, Isaiah W. OgrenThe Supreme Court’s new standing cases have further narrowed the class of claims justiciable in federal court. Some state courts have followed suit, leaving valid federal claims without any viable forum. We argue that the Supremacy Clause requires state courts to vindicate federal rights by hearing some of these claims.
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Copyright, Meet Antitrust: The Supreme Court’s Warhol Decision and the Rise of Competition Analysis in Fair Use The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-17
Christopher Jon SprigmanIn its recent decision in Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. v. Goldsmith, the Supreme Court noted that whether defendant’s work competes with plaintiff’s is a key element of the fair-use analysis. This Essay argues that antitrust law offers valuable guidance for assessing competition in copyright law.
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A Legislative Response to 303 Creative The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-14
Ian Ayres, Jennifer Gerarda BrownStates should respond to the U.S. Supreme Court’s 303 Creative decision by enacting implied warranties of nondiscrimination. Making nondiscrimination a publicly disclaimable default would facilitate informed consumer choice and mitigate the dignitary harms of point-of-sale discrimination.
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The Politics and Perverse Effects of the Fight Against Online Medical Misinformation The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-13
Evelyn DouekPlatforms’ content moderation of medical misinformation has become one of this era’s biggest political controversies. This Essay traces how platforms’ choices during the COVID-19 pandemic became so politicized, and how the category “medical misinformation” cannot be used to skirt important questions about the legitimacy of platform power over public discourse.
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The Invention of Immigration Exceptionalism The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2024-11-30
Adam B. CoxEveryone believes that immigration law has been exceptional since its late nineteenth-century birth—insulated from judicial review by the Court’s creation of the “plenary power doctrine.” But early immigration law was actually ordinary public law. Recovering this reality has profound implications for scholars of immigration and public law alike.
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Time and Punishment The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2024-11-30
S. Lisa WashingtonThe legal system’s ability to control people’s time is a form of dominion that exacerbates the structural disadvantages that marginalized families already face. Constriction, stretching, and indeterminacy are important aspects of temporal marginalization in the family regulation system. Considering the experience of time is one step towards understanding its impacts.
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Supply-Chain Wage Theft as Unfair Method of Competition The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2024-11-30
Eamon CoburnThis Note argues that wage theft in the fissured economy is a competition problem, not just a labor problem. It first recovers a historical understanding of substandard wages as an unfair method of competition. It then proposes FTC action against supply-chain wage theft using Section 5 of the FTC Act.
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AI and the Sound of Music The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2024-11-22
Edward LeeToday, AI enables people to create music simply by using words—fulfilling the belief that music is a universal language. This Essay analyzes how courts and Congress should respond to AI’s seismic disruptions to the music industry based on the principles of technology neutrality, expansive authorship, and rebalancing of copyright.
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Bind Us Together: Coalitional Public Policy Advocacy in Medical-Legal Partnerships The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2024-11-14
James Bhandary-Alexander, Dina ShekThe Medical-Legal Partnership (MLP) model promotes direct services and public policy advocacy by lawyers incorporated into medical teams. Drawing on personal experiences, this Essay proposes that to accomplish policy change, MLP practitioners organize and be organized into community coalitions built and maintained around a robust vision of health justice.
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The Second Amendment’s Second Sex The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2024-11-12
Michael R. UlrichThis Essay explores how the Supreme Court’s Second Amendment doctrine perpetuates gender hierarchies and a male monopoly on lethal self-defense. It critiques the narrow “true man” framing that ignores women’s experiences and advocates for a justice-centered framework that incorporates power and privilege into the gun-rights discourse.
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The Water District and the State The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2024-10-31
Dave OwenIn much of the American West, local special districts with undemocratic governance structures and archaic boundaries dominate water governance. In some places, they are expanding their reach into new policy realms. This Article explains how these governance systems evolved, why they are problematic, and how state governments can respond.
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Reconstructing Critical Legal Studies The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2024-10-31
Samuel MoynHad the critical legal studies movement never existed, it would have to be invented today. That movement framed law as a forceful instrument of domination but one compatible with both functional and interpretative underdeterminacy. Its discoveries are indispensable to any successor venture, including the current law-and-political-economy movement.
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Auto Clubs and the Lost Origins of the Access-to-Justice Crisis The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2024-10-31
Nora Freeman Engstrom, James StoneA century ago, auto clubs offered an astonishing array of legal services, representing members in civil and criminal cases, on both sides of the proverbial “v.” But in the 1930s, bar associations decimated these clubs, alongside other group-legal-service providers—and, we argue, sowed the seeds of the current access-to-justice crisis.
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The Political Economy of Arbitration Law The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2024-10-31
Gustavo BerrizbeitiaThe prevalent academic critique of arbitration, the access-to-justice critique, fails to account for arbitration’s influence on how firms organize themselves. This Note offers a new critique of arbitration from a political economy perspective, arguing that today’s highly restrictive arbitration law greatly benefits firms organized as gig platforms.
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Against Ventriloquizing Children: How Students’ Rights Disguise Adult Culture Wars The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2024-10-28
Rita KoganzonThis Essay argues against the pursuit of students’ rights, which function mainly as a smokescreen behind which adults have advanced their own partisan agendas in our culture wars. Independent rights for students are both theoretically untenable and politically damaging to our liberal democracy.
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“Safety, in a Republican Sense”: Trump v. United States, Democracy, and an Antisubordination Theory of the Criminal Law The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2024-10-25
Jacob AbolafiaDemocratic governance requires holding the powerful to account. This Essay therefore proposes a broad antisubordination theory of the criminal law which grapples directly with disparities in power, rather than obscuring them under the guise of formal equality. Neither formal equality nor its alternative, prison abolitionism, can adequately protect democracy.
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The Effects of 401(k) Vesting Schedules—in Numbers The Yale Law Journal (IF 5.2) Pub Date : 2024-09-27
Samantha J. Prince, Timothy G. Azizkhan, Cassidy R. Prince, Luke GormanIn 2022, over 1.87 million Americans ceased employment before satisfying their employer’s 401(k) plan vesting schedule, causing them to forfeit nonvested employer contributions. This Essay uses data to demonstrate the effects of using vesting schedules and highlights companies who had the most affected workers or amassed significant forfeitures in 2022.