Judicial Recusal and the Court
Later this month, all nine justices will be hearing oral argument on the constitutionality of the Patient Protection and Affordable… Continue reading →
Later this month, all nine justices will be hearing oral argument on the constitutionality of the Patient Protection and Affordable… Continue reading →
In September 2011, President Obama signed the most significant patent law overhaul in decades, the America Invents Act. The central… Continue reading →
In Climate Change and the Courts, Professors Jason S. Johnston and Heidi M. Hurd debate whether there should be a… Continue reading →
Beginning in the early 1980s, and continuing for nearly three decades, federal circuit courts unanimously found retail store managers exempt… Continue reading →
The fraud-on-the-market class action no longer enjoys much academic support. The justifications traditionally advanced by its defenders—compensation for out-of-pocket loss… Continue reading →
Few words play a more central role in modern constitutional law without appearing in the Constitution than “dignity.” The term… Continue reading →
The U.S. Supreme Court—thanks to various statutes passed by Congress beginning in 1891 and culminating in 1988—currently enjoys nearly unfettered… Continue reading →
On a bus in West Philadelphia, a woman feeds her baby an artificial orange beverage from his bottle. The drink… Continue reading →
In the wake of a passing comment and footnote in In re Revlon, Inc. Shareholders Litigation, Delaware practitioners have grappled… Continue reading →
After two decades of dormancy, the sleeping giant of personal jurisdiction has finally awakened with the Supreme Court’s opinion in… Continue reading →