Presidential Disability and Mandatory Removal
Presidents often develop physical and mental impairments during their tenure in the White House. While certain impairments have a neutral… Continue reading →
Presidents often develop physical and mental impairments during their tenure in the White House. While certain impairments have a neutral… Continue reading →
For decades, constitutional theory has been haunted by the problem of disagreement: the reality that we are deeply divided on… Continue reading →
Introduction Trump v. United States is a blockbuster decision that has been reviled and celebrated by different quarters of American… Continue reading →
Introduction Gavil and Salop claim that the Chicago School’s “conservative critique of antitrust law” has peddled numerous pro-defendant economic assumptions,… Continue reading →
As Judge Jack Weinstein says, the Third Restatement of Torts “should attempt to synthesize a tort law for the industrialized… Continue reading →
In situations of domestic violence, divorce offers legal freedom from an abusive spouse. But too often, access to divorce cuts… 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 →
Criminal law is typically understood as the exclusive province of the government. Conventional wisdom holds that crime harms the public… Continue reading →
In 2015, the United States military struck a hospital in Afghanistan run by Médecins Sans Frontières, killing forty-two staff and… Continue reading →