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Volume 110 — 2024
Editing Classic Books: A Threat to the Public Domain?
Over the past few years, there has been a growing trend in the publishing industry of hiring sensitivity readers to review books for offensive tropes or racial, gender, or sexual stereotypes. In February 2023, for instance, reports that Puffin Books …
One Year Post-Bruen: An Empirical Assessment
In the year after New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, a steady stream of highly publicized opinions struck down a wide range of previously upheld gun restrictions. Courts declared unconstitutional policies ranging from assault weapon …
Cyber Vulnerabilities as Trade Secrets
Can a cybersecurity vulnerability—like a bug in code or a backdoor into a system—be a trade secret? Claiming a flaw as a trade secret may sound strange. Usually, talk of trade secrets conjures up images of scientists in laboratories or complex …
20/20 Hindsight and Looking Ahead: The Vision of the Five Eyes and What’s Next in the “Going Dark” Debate
The so-called “encryption debate” made national headlines in 2016 after Apple Inc. (“Apple”) declined to enable the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI” or “the Bureau”) to unlock an iPhone recovered from one of the shooters involved in a …
Standing Shoulder Pad to Shoulder Pad: Collective Bargaining in College Athletics
Responding to the professionalization of their billion-dollar industry, college athletes have embraced collective bargaining as an avenue for addressing their grievances with universities and the National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA). The …
Expanding Democracy: The Case for Enfranchising Noncitizens in Local Elections
In the wake of recent state-led movements to restrict voting rights in the United States, New York City passed a law expanding local voting rights. Intro 1867-A defines municipal elections as the “designation, nomination[,] and election process for …
How to Think About the Removal Power
In an earlier article titled The Executive Power of Removal, we contended that Article II gives the President a constitutional power to remove executive officers, at least those who are presidentially appointed. In this Essay, we expand on, and …
Consent and Compensation: Resolving Generative AI’s Copyright Crisis
Generative artificial intelligence (AI) has the potential to augment and democratize creativity. However, it is undermining the knowledge ecosystem that now sustains it. Generative AI may unfairly compete with authors, journalists, and other …
In Tribute: Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson III
On the occasion of Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson’s fortieth year on the bench, these Essays honor his contributions to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, to American law, and to the lives of his clerks and colleagues..
Foreword: Two Kinds of Participatory Legal Scholarship
Cross-pollination tends to improve legal writing. Examine an issue of a law review from fifty years ago and you will be struck at the stilted, inward-looking, formalistic, heavily-footnoted writing encapsulated in articles discussing other articles …
Participatory Law Scholarship as Demosprudence
Through participatory law scholarship (“PLS”)—legal scholarship written in collaboration with those without formal legal training but expertise in law’s injustice through lived experience—Kempis Songster and Rachel López seek to dismantle the walls …
Youth Participatory Law Scholarship
This Essay joins a formally trained legal scholar-practitioner with a grassroots youth activist and advocate to introduce the emerging subgenre of Youth Participatory Law Scholarship (“YPLS”). YPLS expands on the movement for Participatory Law …
Reconstructing Citizenship
In our republican democracy, voting is a central right of citizenship. Yet millions of voters are routinely disenfranchised as a result of convictions or because their carceral status creates barriers to voting. In the past decade, academic …
Volume 109 — 2023
Foreword: We Have Only Begun to Fight
This story begins with one parent who took his demands for equal educational opportunity for his children all the way to the highest court of our land. Demetrio Rodriguez served our nation in World War II and the Korean War. Yet, back in Texas, his …
The Road to Rodriguez: Presidential Politics, Judicial Appointments, and the Contingent Nature of Constitutional Law
If nothing else, the recent decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization should remind us that the evolution of constitutional doctrine will often be shaped by forces that have little or no connection to the merits of the abstract legal …
The Federal Role in School Funding Equity
Fifty years after the San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez decision, the fundamental reality of school finance inequity remains a central feature of American public schools. Local school funding is still based primarily on local …
Addressing the School-to-Prison Pipeline Through Three Nontraditional Pathways
Analogous to Nathaniel Hawthorne’s critique of his leaders’ decision to use punishment as a sign of public accountability, and his adoption of the phrase “the black flower of civilized society” to describe the prison, our leaders in the White House, …
Deep in the Shadows?: The Facts About the Emergency Docket
The past few years have witnessed a particular accusation leveled repeatedly and loudly at the U.S. Supreme Court’s conservative supermajority: that they are using the Court’s emergency (or pejoratively, “shadow”) docket to issue highly …
The Animal Crushing Offense Loophole
The Preventing Animal Cruelty and Torture (“PACT”) Act of 2019 established the first federal criminal penalties targeting the most extreme forms of animal abuse. Hailed by humane groups as a watershed moment in the development of animal welfare law, …
Chronic Nuisance Ordinances, Impossible Choices, and State Constitutions
When Lakisha Briggs’s partner attacked her in April 2012, her daughter called the police. Their response ensured that neither Ms. Briggs nor her daughter would ever take that risk again. Once officers arrived at Ms. Briggs’s home, they told her …
Catalyzing Judicial Federalism
In response to a U.S. Supreme Court that is retrenching many important civil rights, some advocates are turning to state courts and constitutions as alternative means of protection. The Court’s regression follows a recent ideological change, a …
Noncitizens, Mental Health, and Immigration Adjudication
When a noncitizen commits a crime in the United States, they become vulnerable to the possibility of the government instigating removal proceedings against them. According to the Immigration and Nationality Act, the noncitizen can argue in their …
The Zero-Sum Argument, Legacy Preferences, and the Erosion of the Distinction Between Disparate Treatment and Disparate Impact
In a complaint recently filed with the Department of Education, a group of civil rights organizations allege that Harvard University’s legacy preference unlawfully discriminates against minority applicants in violation of Title VI of the Civil …
Volume 108 — 2022
Civil Rights, Employment Law
Not the Standard You’re Looking For: But-For Causation in Anti-Discrimination Law
In the summer of 2020, the Supreme Court decided the blockbuster case Bostock v. Clayton County, holding that Title VII prohibits employment discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation and gender identity. The opinion, authored by Justice Neil …
Foreword
This symposium about the future of legal pedagogy could not be more timely. Its four thought-provoking papers raise a constellation of questions about how law schools educate lawyers and toward what purposes. These papers describe and assess the …
Gender Differences in Law School Classroom Participation: The Key Role of Social Context
Even though women make up roughly half of the students enrolled in law school today, they do not take up roughly half of the speaking time in law school classes. “Speak Up” and similar studies that have been conducted at several law schools …
The Gender Participation Gap and the Politics of Pedagogy
“Speak Up” and similar studies documented something that many thought they already knew about large law school classes: Male students talk a heck of a lot more than female students do. A recent study of the University of Virginia School of Law adds …
The Contextual Case Method: Moving Beyond Opinions to Spark Students’ Legal Imaginations
A new student arrives at law school for her 1L year. She knows it sounds corny, but she’s here to make the world a better place. She’s seen injustice and tragedy (George Floyd, Parkland, climate change). She’s protested with Black Lives Matter and …
Feminist Legal History and Legal Pedagogy
Women are mere trace elements in the traditional law school curriculum. They exist only on the margins of the canonical cases. Built on masculine norms, traditional modes of legal pedagogy involve appellate cases that overwhelmingly involve men as …
Lawmaking in the Legitimacy Gap: A Short History of the Supreme Court’s Interpretive Finality
Despite bestowing an epic name upon the nation’s highest tribunal, the Constitution says precious little about the weight that we must accord to its constitutional decisions. That silence has spawned serious division among jurists and scholars. Some …
Standing and Student Loan Cancellation
As the public policy debate over broad student loan cancellation continues, many have questioned whether the Executive Branch has the legal authority to waive the federal government’s claim to up to $1.6 trillion in debt. Some have argued that loan …
Reevaluating School Policing
School police, often referred to as school resource officers (“SROs”), contribute to a pattern called the school-to-prison pipeline, through which Black and brown children are diverted from classrooms and into the criminal justice system. In schools …
Antideference: COVID, Climate, and the Rise of the Major Questions Canon
Skepticism on the Supreme Court toward administrative authority has evolved into open hostility over the course of the past year in two cases related to the COVID-19 pandemic. The legal vehicle was not, as widely expected, rejection of Chevron’s …
A Corpus Linguistic Analysis of “Foreign Tribunal”
In March, the United States Supreme Court heard a case involving the issue of whether a private arbitration panel in another country is covered by the statutory phrase “foreign or international tribunal.” The statutory language, enacted in 1964, …
On Lenity: What Justice Gorsuch Didn’t Say
Facially neutral doctrines create racially disparate outcomes. Increasingly, legal academia and mainstream commentators recognize that this is by design. The rise of this colorblind racism in Supreme Court jurisprudence parallels the rise of the War …
On Rawlsian Contractualism and the Private Law
Shifts in academic paradigms are rare. Still, it was not long ago that the values taken to govern the private law were thought to be distinct from the values governing taxation and transfer. This was thought to be true, although for different …
Expedient Imprisonment: How Federal Supervised Release Sentences Violate the Constitution
Each year, more than ten thousand people are imprisoned by federal courts without being charged with a crime, indicted by a grand jury, or found guilty beyond a reasonable doubt by a jury of their peers. Those results are authorized by federal …
A Silver Lining to Russia’s Sanctions-Busting Clause?
In 2018, Russia began inserting an unusual clause into euro and dollar sovereign bonds, seemingly designed to circumvent future Western sanctions. The clause worked by letting the government pay in roubles if sanctions cut off access to dollar and …
The Small and Diversifying Network of Legal Scholars: A Study of Co-Authorship from 1980–2020
This Essay reports the first comprehensive network analysis of legal scholars connected through co-authorship. If legal scholarship was ever a solitary activity, it certainly is not any longer. Co-authorship has become increasingly common over time, …
State Abortion Bans: Pregnancy as a New Form of Coverture
In June, when the Supreme Court issued its decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization holding that there was no constitutional right to an abortion, the Court was hasty to disavow any likely political consequences. “We do not pretend …
Volume 107 — 2021
Foreword
If a foreword were to be limited to one word, and one word only, this foreword’s one word would be joy. It is a joy to introduce to you a diverse group of authors and their writings on the past, present, and future of a social justice movement that …
A Dangerous Imbalance: Pauli Murray’s Equal Rights Amendment and the Path to Equal Power
In January 2020, Virginia became the thirty-eighth and final state needed to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment (“ERA”). Because Virginia’s ratification—and those of Nevada and Illinois —occurred four decades after Congress’s ratification deadline, …
Shaping Our Freedom Dreams: Reclaiming Intersectionality Through Black Feminist Legal Theory
Black feminist legal theory has offered the tool of intersectionality to modern feminist movements to help combat interlocking systems of oppression. Despite this tremendous offering, intersectionality has become wholly divorced from its Black …
Termites in the Master’s House: Abortion Rap and Florynce Kennedy’s Contributions to Racial and Gender Justice
Contemporaries recognized Kennedy as “an outspoken activist for the rights of African Americans, women, sex workers, and members of the LGBT community.” In this way, Kennedy united social movements with divergent agendas. She believed that only …
Bostock’s Inclusive Queer Frame
Bostock v. Clayton County is the Supreme Court’s first major decision on gay rights written since Justice Kennedy’s retirement. It is a victory for the LGBT community—a momentous one. But this Essay argues that Bostock is even more momentous than …
Mail-In Ballots and Constraints on Federal Power Under the Electors Clause
Crisis often begets crisis, and the COVID-19 pandemic has proven to be no exception. With rising concerns over crowding at the polls, many states during the 2020 elections opted to allow voters to use mail-in ballots to vote in the general election. …
Remedying Police Brutality Through Sentencing Reduction
Police brutality is a widespread problem that causes significant physical and psychological trauma, undermines faith in the law, and disproportionately impacts communities of color. Existing remedies to police brutality—including civil suits for …
Why BIPOC Fails
Racial tensions have been endemic to the U.S. since its founding. In 2020, this racial conflict bubbled over into the streets as those supporting Black Lives Matter and opposing a long history of racist police violence congregated to demand justice. …
A Prelude to a Critical Race Theoretical Account of Civil Procedure
In this Essay, I examine the lack of scholarly attention given to the role of civil procedure in racial subordination. I posit that a dearth of critical thought interrogating the connections between procedure and the subjugation of marginalized …
Caught on Tape: Establishing the Right of Third-Party Bystanders to Secretly Record the Police
Throughout the thirty years between the televised beating of Rodney King and the videotaped murder of George Floyd, recordings of police misconduct have given a face to the perpetrators and victims of police brutality. Given the accessibility of …
Race, Ramos, and the Second Amendment Standard of Review
Gun control in the United States has a racist history. Nevertheless, federal courts and academics have invoked Southern gun restrictions enacted after the Civil War to suggest that history supports stringent regulation of the right to bear arms. We …
Government Speech and First Amendment Capture
Alarm regarding government speech is not new. In earlier decades, scholars worried that the government’s speech might monopolize a marketplace and drown out opposing viewpoints. But today, using a move I term “First Amendment capture,” the …
From Carrie Buck to Britney Spears: Strategies for Disrupting the Ongoing Reproductive Oppression of Disabled People
In June 2021, Britney Spears made headlines when she testified to a judge that she was being prevented from having children because her conservator would not allow her to stop using contraception. Britney Spears’s dreadful experiences are a glaring …
Black Women’s Hair and Natural Hairstyles in the Workplace: Expanding the Definition of Race Under Title VII
interpretation of Title VII as including cultural characteristics often associated with race or ethnicity, Black women have not successfully litigated the freedom to wear their hair in natural hairstyles in the workplace. Courts have held that …
Universal Injunctions: Why Not Follow the Rule?
Over the last several years, a debate has flared up over universal injunctions, court orders that purport to benefit individuals across the nation, including vast numbers of people not party to the litigation from which the injunction issues. …
Some Notes on Courts and Courtesy
This Essay is a short reflection on misgendering by judges, told through a critical assessment of three cases from the Fifth and Eighth Circuits: Gibson v. Collier, United States v. Varner, and United States v. Thomason. In the trio, judges refused …
Volume 106 — 2020
Bound Electors
In a decision hailed as “a masterpiece of historical analysis and originalist reasoning,” the Tenth Circuit recently held that the Constitution prevents a state from binding its presidential electors to vote for the winner of the state’s popular …
Self-Portrait in a Complex Mirror: Reflections on The Making of a Justice: Reflections on My First 94 Years by John Paul Stevens
Immediately after his death last year, Justice John Paul Stevens received a number of moving eulogies, several by former law clerks published in the Harvard Law Review, along with a tribute from Chief Justice Roberts..
Education, Racial Legal Theory
Restoring Honor: Ending Racial Disparities in University Honor Systems
In student-led academic honor systems, students establish policies governing lying, cheating, or stealing (referred to as “academic misconduct”); adjudicate reports of academic misconduct among their peers; and determine appropriate sanctions..
Pandemics, Risks, and Remedies
The coronavirus (“COVID”) pandemic exposed America’s brittle reliance on incarceration as means of promoting justice and social welfare. For each criminal detention site, a single prisoner infection ultimately threatened the entire institutional …
Essentially Elective: The Law and Ideology of Restricting Abortion During the COVID-19 Pandemic
The COVID-19 pandemic has put on full display the physical and doctrinal isolation of abortion from health care more generally. In early 2020, several states proclaimed that abortions had to be stopped or delayed for lengthy or indefinitely.
Blackness as Fighting Words
Where I grew up, the wrong words could turn an innocent sparring match of playground taunts and after-school gibes into a full-out asphalt brawl. Naïve boys enacting popular tropes of Black hypermasculinity, we would often form a circle around the …
Volume 105 — 2019
Foreword: Facebook Unbound?
Facebook’s Alternative Facts
Criminal-Justice Apps: A Modest Step Toward Democratizing the Criminal Process
Law Enforcement’s Pairing of Facial Recognition Technology with Body-Worn Cameras Escalates Privacy Concerns
Hacking the Right to Vote
Commuting to Mars: A Response to Professors Abraham and Rabin
The Future is Almost Here: Inaction is Actually Mistaken Action
Self-Policing: Dissemination and Adoption of Police Eyewitness Policies in Virginia
Paved in Good Intentions: The Venerable Aims and Unique Vulnerabilities of Purportedly Independent Committees
Constructing Originalism or: Why Professors Baude and Sachs Should Learn to Stop Worrying and Love Ronald Dworkin
Letter to the Editor: Remembering Charlottesville 2017 and Engaging Black-Jewish Alliances
Foreword: Tinker at 50
The Great Unfulfilled Promise of Tinker
Fill in the Blank: Compelling Student Speech on Religion
Walking Out the Schoolhouse Gates
The Miseducation of Free Speech
Volume 104 — 2018
Foreword
Rethinking the Heckler’s Veto After Charlottesville
Your ‘Little Friend’ Doesn’t Say ‘Hello’: Putting the First Amendment Before the Second in Public Protests
Payne v. City of Charlottesville and the Dillon’s Rule Rationale for Removal
When White Supremacists Invade a City
The Living Anti-Injunction Act
Underwrites, Overrides, and Recovered Precedents
Regulation and Deregulation: The Baseline Challenge
Antitrust’s Unconventional Politics
Agency Design and the Zero-Sum Argument
Volume 103 — 2017
Common Law vs. Statutory Bases of Patent Exhaustion
Reorganizing Organizational Standing
Copyright Owners’ Putative Interests in Privacy, Reputation, and Control: A Reply to Goold
Presidents Lack the Authority to Abolish or Diminish National Monuments
The Rule of Recognition in Reconstruction: A Review of Secession on Trial: The Treason Prosecution of Jefferson Davis, By Cynthia Nicoletti
Act-Sampling Bias and the Shrouding of Repeat Offending
Volume 102 — 2016
A Modest Proposal for Justice Scalia’s Seat
The Interaction of Exhaustion and the General Law: A Reply to Duffy and Hynes
Patent Exhaustion and Federalism: A Historical Note
One Last Word on the Blackstone Principle
Changing the Face of Urban America: Assessing the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit
Pragmatism and Principle: Intelligence Agencies and International Law
Discrimination is a Comparative Injustice: A Reply to Hellman
Data Privacy and Inmate Recidivism
Defending Two Concepts of Discrimination: A Reply to Simons
What’s Wrong with Sentencing Equality? Sentencing Legality: A Response to Professors Bierschbach & Bibas
RJR Nabisco and the Runaway Canon
Retooling the Amicus Machine
Crowdfunding and the Not-So-Safe SAFE
Volume 101 — 2015
Bad Actors and the Evolution of Patent Law
Historically high levels of abusive patent enforcement fuel an ongoing debate on the need for legislative and judicial reforms designed to deter bad faith conduct by patent holders. To date, this debate has focused intently on the direct monetary …