Search results for: "A" (4252 results)
Robert M. Yablon | Yale Law Journal Robert M. Yablon The Supreme Court’s certiorari process is generally a black box. Occasionally, however, Justices
Victoria F. Nourse | Yale Law Journal Victoria F. Nourse 122 Yale L.J. 70 (2012). We have a law of civil procedure, criminal procedure, and
examines a particular theory of religious disestablishment, one that emphasizes institutional pluralism and the importance of competing sources of
continue to serve as important sites for the perpetuation of national identity myths. By focusing on a subset of cases called “cancellation of removal,” I
Supreme Court created a new framework for judicial deference to agency interpretations of law: courts should defer to an agency interpretation unless
required that government can deprive persons of rights only pursuant to a coordinated effort of separate institutions that make, execute, and
Michael B. Gerrard | Yale Law Journal Michael B. Gerrard In May 2011, The Yale Law Journal Online introduced a new series called Summary Judgment
proposals to let them file for bankruptcy protection. States that have ceded some but not all sovereign prerogatives to a central government face distinct
Martha Minow | Yale Law Journal Martha Minow 120 Yale L.J. 814 (2011). School choice policies, which allow parents to select among a range of options
“static benchmarking test” used to administer section 5 failed to fulfill a core VRA mandate: the preservation of minority political power. This...