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hundred treaties in the last sixty years with nations across the globe. Many of these agreements integrate Church doctrine into state legal systems at the
meaning any one thing in all cases. In its current form, probable cause’s pluralism is nascent, implicit, and undertheorized—and is thus at best a
and worries and supported me nonetheless. Finally, my gratitude to Prashanta Augustine and the thoughtful editors at the Yale Law Journal. I dedicate
what he has found to be the best understanding of the Constitution and federal statutes. His decisions scrape away at what Ralph Rossum has called the
of Richard Tuck’s The Sleeping Sovereign, David Grewal and Jedediah Purdy adapt the sovereignty-government distinction at the heart of the theory of the modern democratic state.
profit-motivated government confiscations. It argues that these “contemporary civil forfeitures” are not forfeitures at all—they are compensable
adversarialism. This Note assesses the limited participation of outside amici curiae at the court and proposes a special advocate to serve as a permanent
the constitutionality of these profit-motivated government confiscations. It argues that these “contemporary civil forfeitures” are not forfeitures at
these agreements integrate Church doctrine into state legal systems at the expense of LGBTQ rights. This Note unearths this vast treaty regime—and
drift in the Court’s approach. Federalism may be only path left for rebalancing immigration law. Transportation law has a congestion problem—at least