Governing by Assignment
Although expertise is a pillar of public administration and administrative law, the government is increasingly missing experts. The U.S. federal… Continue reading →
Although expertise is a pillar of public administration and administrative law, the government is increasingly missing experts. The U.S. federal… Continue reading →
Save the Date: Continue reading →
There have been only a few instances in the history of the United States when the conduct of the President… Continue reading →
Over the past decade or so, there has been a proliferation of online‐only law review–law journal supplements (or “companions”). This… Continue reading →
Let us begin with Harris v. Pernsley, the controversial case for which Judge Shapiro reluctantly attracted perhaps the most national… Continue reading →
The University of Pennsylvania Law Review Online presents the first installment of “Independent and Accountable Courts in Perilous Times: Perspectives… Continue reading →

Guidelines and Requirements for submitting your Legal Articles and Essays. Continue reading →
This is an essay about how lawyers and judges manipulate the distinction between changes in facts and changes in values… Continue reading →
This Comment examines the legal vulnerability of race-conscious university scholarship programs following the Supreme Court’s landmark 2023 decision in Students… Continue reading →
Founded in 1852 as the American Law Register, the University of Pennsylvania Law Review is the nation’s oldest law review. Continue reading →