Search results for: "The" (7026 results)
Thomas R. Lee | Yale Law Journal Thomas R. Lee When we speak of ordinary meaning we are asking an empirical question—about the sense of a word or
applies the theory of intersectionality to show that Justice Powell’s reasoning was flawed. As his “single-axis” approach reveals, tiers-of-scrutiny
featuring short commentaries on recent Supreme Court cases. In Arizona Christian School Tuition Organization v. Winn, the U.S. Supreme Court decided, by the
Anupam Chander | Yale Law Journal Anupam Chander 114 Yale L.J. 1193 (2005) There was a time when the critics of international law denounced it for
military tribunals, jeopardizes the separation of powers today and charts a dangerous course for the future. Our Constitutions structure mandates that
to many areas of law. Race is not among them. Justice Thomas’s opinions reflect, first and foremost, his conviction that the Fourteenth Amendment’s
McKaye Neumeister | Yale Law Journal McKaye Neumeister The President is increasingly the epicenter of national security decision making, a
Simon Chin | Yale Law Journal Simon Chin The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court’s ex parte, in camera proceedings are in tension with the
Darien Shanske | Yale Law Journal Darien Shanske Our current approach to state debt overcorrects for the problem that states might borrow too much
minority voters existing representation be compared to the representation they would receive if the redistricting process were race blind. This