The Rights Of Others: Protection And Advocacy Organizations’ Associational Standing To Sue
Popular discussion of the standing doctrine has reached a fever pitch. A search for “standing to sue” in the New… Continue reading →
Popular discussion of the standing doctrine has reached a fever pitch. A search for “standing to sue” in the New… Continue reading →
Oren Bar-Gill and Elizabeth Warren’s Making Credit Safer begins by noting that, while physical products, from toasters to toys, are… Continue reading →
In his Article, Professor Cox questions the central principle of immigration law that rules for selecting immigrants are fundamentally different… Continue reading →
Rather than overrule the previous sixty years of Commerce Clause cases, Lopez reinterpreted many of the earlier cases to make… Continue reading →
This Comment explores the current legal paradox that allows for the repatriation of art taken during World War II while… Continue reading →
In well-functioning domestic legal systems, courts provide a mechanism through which commitments and obligations are enforced. A party that fails… Continue reading →
Lawmaking bodies in one polity sometimes incorporate the law of another polity “dynamically,” so that when the law of the… Continue reading →
In this Article, Dean Graham examines the recent history of federal lifesaving regulation and argues that, considering both philosophical and… Continue reading →
Democratic experimentalism, the procedural component of the “new governance” movement, has won widespread acceptance in calling for decentralization, deliberation, deregulation,… Continue reading →
We are sorry to note that William S. Stevens, member of the University of Pennsylvania Law School Class of 1975… Continue reading →