The Yale Law Journal

Results for 'IF '

Forum: If It Aint Broke . . .

The Yale Law Journal - Forum: If It Aint Broke . . . If It Aint Broke . . . “The most important thing we do,” Justice Brandeis once remarked

Who Will Find the Defendant if He Stays with His Sheep? Justice in Rural China

Yale Law Journal - Who Will Find the Defendant if He Stays with His Sheep? Justice in Rural China Who Will Find the Defendant if He Stays with His Sheep? Justice in Rural China

Ifeoma Ajunwa

The Yale Law Journal - Ifeoma Ajunwa Ifeoma Ajunwa Forum An AI arms race and a laissez-faire approach to globalization enable a borderless labor

Forum: Utilizing Foreign Legal Assistance Actions to Promote Corporate Accountability for Human-Rights Abuses

rights abuses by a multinational corporation have little opportunity for recourse under domestic legal processes. Even if a country where a corporation is

Forum: Equal Standards for Equal Protection: Revisiting Race Discrimination in Jury Selection After SFFA

advantages the former group at the expense of the latter.” Thus, if race is used as a “plus” for one applicant, race must necessarily be a “negative” for

Forum: Should Tort Law Care About Police Officers?

injury suits. They next examine police suits through the popular, if inaccurate, frame that civilians can obtain virtually no civil remedies based on

Forum: Scalia and the King: The Ancient Writ of Habeas Corpus and the Missing Legitimacy Core of Modern Habeas Law

habeas corpus’s role and when it should be deployed by courts. Ramirez might make sense if habeas were a rarefied final line of review for individual

Forum: On the Perpetuation of Our Constitution and Civic Charity

” performing this task of intergenerational transmission of these blessings, he asked? “I answer, if the danger ever reach us, it must spring up amongst us

Rules Against Rulification

ification of rules is necessarily inconsistent with vertical stare decisis norms; even if rounding out the edges of a bright-line command creates

From Gods to Google

government ideology—as if the government were forcing schoolchildren to pledge allegiance to the flag, like in West Virginia Board of Education v. Barnette