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will follow in the next issue of the alumni newsletter. To RSVP to a reception or to subscribe to the alumni newsletter, please email Usha Chilukuri at usha.chilukuri@yale.edu.
jurisprudential categories. Strikes are not just “economic weapons”; they are political protest. And like Progressive Era strikes, the success of strikes today may be in ...
Amendment to argue that CBP and ICE are currently operating outside constitutional constraints and proposes a tiered approach, restricted in scope and
Law and Political Economy | Yale Law Journal Law and Political Economy Previous scholarship has analyzed a host of innovation institutions—including
trust (CIT), a century-old bank product whose dramatic growth has been largely overlooked. As CITs replace mutual funds in retirement plans, this
Jennifer Nou | Yale Law Journal Jennifer Nou Administrative agencies can aggregate or disaggregate provisions during a single legislative rulemaking
presents a comprehensive textual framework for the allocation of the foreign affairs powers of the United States government. The authors argue that
the force of international law as a matter of U.S. law? Who determines that force? This Essay maintains that, for the United States, the U.S
Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) portends a deep rift in the intellectual infrastructure of consumer law that threatens the consumer-welfare oriented
military tribunals, jeopardizes the separation of powers today and charts a dangerous course for the future. Our Constitutions structure mandates that