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not created in a series of late nineteenth-century cases. Far from being exceptional, those cases applied the then-standard framework linking due
the most serious cases, they now seek a conviction through a guilty plea. Nevertheless, despite these important changes, the question remains whether
themselves from the “creditor-on-creditor violence” that has become a feature of the public and quasi-public debt markets. For their part, asset
statutory authority is a delicate business: the optimal balance is difficult to calibrate ex ante, the balance is unstable, and there are risks that
allocation of executive power. These risks are not just hypothetical: many of them were realized during the 2016 transition, and their effects continue to be
played in supporting them. Drawing on Cohen’s insights, I construct an account of the “law of informational capitalism,” with particular attention to
the mass-tort landscape. Issued in large toxic-tort cases, these case-management orders require claimants to come forward with prima facie injury
The New Voting Rights Act | Yale Law Journal The New Voting Rights Act This week The Pocket Part is publishing the first of two issues discussing
Yale Law Journal - Reconceptualizing the Burden of Proof Reconceptualizing the Burden of Proof