Volume 155
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A Policymaker’s Guide to Welfarism
Welfarism is widely employed and debated not only among philosophers, political scientists, and economists, but also increasingly among legal scholars.… Continue reading →
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Welfare-Based Ex Post Egalitarianism
In a thoroughly argued article, Adler and Sanchirico defend the view that egalitarianism is concerned not merely with the equalization… Continue reading →
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Complete Preemption and the Separation of Powers
Identifying muddles, messes, and even incoherencies in the Supreme Court’s decisions on federal jurisdiction is regrettably easy. Rescuing even part… Continue reading →
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Are Unions Doomed to Being a “Niche Movement” in a Competitive Economy?
Professor Wachter has done something quite extraordinary in the long-running scholarly debate over the causes of union decline: he has… Continue reading →
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Bifurcation and the Law of Evidence
That the law of evidence is the child of the jury system is not only oft-repeated but also, as a… Continue reading →
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Which Evidence Law? A Response to Schauer
As usual, Frederick Schauer raises profound issues in his insightful essay, On the Supposed Jury-Dependence of Evidence Law. Schauer is… Continue reading →
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Rehnquist to Roberts: The "Reagan Revolution" Fulfilled?
Exactly one week before Chief Justice Warren E. Burger’s retirement was publicly announced (the White House knew in advance of… Continue reading →