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congressional information requests, and congressional acquiescence threaten separation-of-powers principles by exalting the executive branch at Congress’s expense.
defendant should be required to sit at the table farthest from the jury. Courtroom seating is properly within a trial judges discretion, and there are
Aditi Bagchi | Yale Law Journal Aditi Bagchi 112 Yale L.J. 1881 (2003) Some American scholars of law and economics have expressed dismay at the
Kevin Blackwell | Yale Law Journal Kevin Blackwell In this Essay, researchers at the United States Sentencing Commission respond to criticisms by
by some measure at odds with a capacious understanding of the demands of reproductive justice. No matter its rationale, the constitutional right to
in criminal law favor the defendant. The asymmetry seems to disappear when physical evidence is at issue. One goal of this Essay...
Linda Greenhouse | Yale Law Journal Linda Greenhouse On February 3, 2014, Justice Sonia Sotomayor delivered the James A. Thomas Lecture at Yale Law
willingness to subjugate, at least temporarily, ones own priorities, beliefs, and comforts to those of another. Today, that willingness is tested and
humanitarian intervention undertaken by the Court of Vice Admiralty at Sierra Leone through the suppression of the West African slave trade during the early
landowners when regulations diminish their land values. This movement has grown in recent years, particularly at the state level. Scholars have focused thus