The Yale Law Journal

Results for 'operation second look'

Originalism-by-Analogy and Second Amendment Adjudication

Yale Law Journal - Originalism-by-Analogy and Second Amendment Adjudication Originalism-by-Analogy and Second Amendment Adjudication abstract. In New

The Second Amendment on Board: Public and Private Historical Traditions of Firearm Regulation

Yale Law Journal - The Second Amendment on Board: Public and Private Historical Traditions of Firearm Regulation The Second Amendment on Board

Forum: The Denaturalization Consequences of Guilty Pleas

Operation Second Look, which expanded the scope of this initiative and began reviewing even more records for evidence of fraud. The Trump

The Proper Role of Equality in Constitutional Adjudication: The Cathedral’s Missing Buttress

treatment: it allows for a second look at the constitutionality of a legislative action. That is, it permits courts to make a preliminary finding of

Forum: Lessons from Lawrence: How “History” Gave Us Dobbs—And How History Can Help Overrule It

banned abortion throughout pregnancy as of the Fourteenth Amendment’s enactment. Second, Lawrence suggests that these historical errors should

Forum: Not So Fast: 163(j), 245A, and Leverage in the Post-TCJA World

party debt to engage in “earnings stripping.” Post-TCJA, § 163(j) applies to a broader universe of debt, as it no longer looks to whether parties to

Forum: The Jurisprudence of “Degree and Difference”: Justice Breyer and Judicial Deference

seem. As Justice Breyer retires from the Court, the new conservative majority is looking to impose another simple rule—no deference—via the major

Forum: From Progressivism to Paralysis

Featherbedding became common in some states, driving up the cost of governmental services. Construction of the Second Avenue Subway in New York City

Piety Police

a police-friendly body of case law that applied to all law enforcement in the state. Second, BYU administrators deployed the campus police to advance

Forum: Replacing Smith

than those government interests recognized in the Founding Era. This rule would preserve the second prong of strict scrutiny as it currently exists