Results for 'lE'
Forum: Environmental Justice and Tribal Sovereignty: Lessons from Standing Rock
failure to advocate for the restoration of tribal sovereignty under federal law has left us all with a legal framework incapable of addressing climate
The Price of Public Action: Constitutional Doctrine and the Judicial Manipulation of Legislative Enactment Costs
Yale Law Journal - The Price of Public Action: Constitutional Doctrine and the Judicial Manipulation of Legislative Enactment Costs The Price of
Reactionary Rhetoric and Liberal Legal Academia
professors. Left-leaning legal scholars often propose revised assessments of high-profile Supreme Court opinions, asserting that—properly understood
Private Enforcement of the Affordable Care Act: Toward an "Implied Warranty of Legality" in Health Insurance
legislatures arguably have fewer, suggesting less reason to defer to traditional political processes at the state level. Even more importantly, however
Forum: Online Legal Scholarship: The Medium and the Message
commentary, which may be less thoughtful. It pushes legal scholars to form quick reactions and publish them to attract readers and, equally important
Forum: Democracy and Legitimacy in Investor-State Arbitration
situations can be addressed in advance by the laws that are enacted. Room must be left for judgment to be used to interpret legal standards and apply them
Reading Reinhardt: The Work of Constructing Legal Virtue (Exempla Iustitiae)
Yale Law Journal - Reading Reinhardt: The Work of Constructing Legal Virtue (Exempla Iustitiae) Reading Reinhardt: The Work of Constructing Legal
A Labor Theory of Legal Parenthood
Yale Law Journal - A Labor Theory of Legal Parenthood
A "Flip" Look at Predatory Lending: Will the Fed's Revised Regulation Z End Abusive Refinancing Practices?
Yale Law Journal - A Flip Look at Predatory Lending: Will the Feds Revised Regulation Z End Abusive Refinancing Practices? A Flip Look at Predatory Lending: Will the Feds Revised ...
Legitimacy and Federal Criminal Enforcement Power
aspects of the federal criminal justice system can all be explained by other factors, up to a point. Let us consider whether legitimacy might, at least