The Yale Law Journal


RECENT


Collection

Reimagining and Empowering the Contemporary Workforce

This Collection explores how to better protect workers against the harms of an expanding gig economy and an increasingly automated workplace. It offers three distinct and interconnected perspectives on the legal, regulatory, and policy interventions that could empower workers to navigate the shifting landscape with flexibility, security, and dignity.

31 Jan 2025
Labor and Employment Law

Forum

Copyright, Meet Antitrust: The Supreme Court’s Warhol Decision and the Rise of Competition Analysis in Fair Use

In 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. 

 

17 Jan 2025
Antitrust LawCopyright Law

Forum

A Legislative Response to 303 Creative

States 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.

 

14 Jan 2025
Antidiscrimination LawCivil-Rights LawContractsFirst Amendment

Forum

The Politics and Perverse Effects of the Fight Against Online Medical Misinformation

Platforms’ 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.

13 Jan 2025
First AmendmentHealth Law

Article

The Invention of Immigration Exceptionalism

Everyone 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.

30 Nov 2024
Immigration LawConstitutional LawAdministrative LawAntidiscrimination LawFederal Courts

Article

Externalist Statutory Interpretation

This Article introduces a new, historically grounded “externalist” perspective for understanding the possibilities and limits of statutory interpretation as a tool for democratic participation and collective power building.

 

30 Nov 2024
Statutory InterpretationLegal HistoryLegislation


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