The Yale Law Journal


RECENT


Forum

AI and the Sound of Music

Today, 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.

 

22 Nov 2024
Artificial IntelligenceCopyright Law

Forum

Bind Us Together: Coalitional Public Policy Advocacy in Medical-Legal Partnerships

The 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. 

 

14 Nov 2024
Health Law

Collection

United States v. Rahimi: Race, Gender, and an Evolving Second Amendment

In this Exchange, Daniel S. Harawa and Michael R. Ulrich examine the implications of United States v. Rahimi for the future of Second Amendment rights. Together, these pieces reveal how Rahimi exposes deep tensions and inconsistencies within the Roberts Court’s Second Amendment jurisprudence.

12 Nov 2024
Constitutional LawSecond Amendment

Article

The Water District and the State

In 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.

31 Oct 2024
Environmental LawState & Local Government LawEnergy & Natural Resources Law

Essay

Reconstructing Critical Legal Studies

Had 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.

31 Oct 2024
Critical Legal StudiesLegal HistoryLegal Philosophy

Feature

Auto Clubs and the Lost Origins of the Access-to-Justice Crisis

A 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.

 

31 Oct 2024
Access to JusticeLegal HistoryTortsLegal Ethics


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