Search results for: "law" (5606 results)
goals” —exalting certain constitutional protections over others—imperil rule-of-law principles. When the law’s requirements are uncertain, potential
Federalism | Yale Law Journal Federalism Drawing on interviews and historical accounts, this Article explains how federal agencies help states write
Contracts | Yale Law Journal Contracts States should respond to the U.S. Supreme Court’s 303 Creative decision by enacting implied warranties of
Bankruptcy | Yale Law Journal Bankruptcy Mirroring the recent paradigm shift in corporate equity, corporate debt is now increasingly private and
Tax | Yale Law Journal Tax Critics argue that the Civil Rights Act of 1866 prevents charitable giving based on race. This Feature defends these
lawmaking. As a result, the President is now able to make law over an immense array of issues—including issues with significant domestic ramifications—by
Interconstitutionalism | Yale Law Journal Interconstitutionalism abstract. New constitutions aim to break from the past, but they rarely do. Instead
the law, even if it might have survived heightened scrutiny. Identifying laws as bans can thus provide an end run around the tiers of scrutiny and
—exclusions from service provision—across the common law and statutory laws of networks, platforms, and utilities. It is, of course, not a treatise
Privacy | Yale Law Journal Privacy There’s a hole in efforts to create abortion “safe havens”: they fail to recognize that medical care increasingly