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not of most court-martial convictions. For them, an Article I court can veto access to the Supreme Court. This Essay argues for elimination of that
constitutions included the right to jury trial in criminal prosecutions. The Constitution of 1787 later established the federal right to trial by jury in
process that Professor Persily chronicles. The essential question the VRA process posed was whether the country or the Congress of this era was prepared
This essay is part of a collection Emerging Technologies in Investigations Novel technologies shift the costs of government investigations. They
This essay is part of a collection I Yale Law Journal /I Public-Interest Fellowship Essays In this Collection, the 2020-21 Yale Law Journal Public
unquestioned, yet its true justification is something of a mystery. In this Essay, I argue that each of the prevailing justifications is deficient
Deliberative Trouble? Why Groups Go to Extremes | Yale Law Journal
of founding era texts James Phillips, Daniel Ortner, and Thomas Lee begin their engaging essay, Corpus Linguistics & Original Public Meaning: A New
This essay is part of a collection i Griswold /i at 50 Reflections on the fiftieth anniversary of Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479 (1965). These
as open data in bulk form in 2010. To understand how significant the open data movement is for FOIA, this Essay discusses the impact of open data on