2009
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The River Runs Dry: When Title VI Trumps State Anti–Affirmative Action Laws
Opponents of affirmative action are waging a national battle over race‐conscious admissions through state ballot initiatives like California's Proposition 209,… Continue reading →
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Making Sense of Immigration Law
In Making Sense of Immigration Law, Professor Cox continues his argument from Immigration Law's Organizing Principles that the distinction between… Continue reading →
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The Unusual Man in the Usual Place
In The Unusual Man in the Usual Place, Professor Bowers supports his argument from Punishing the Innocent by individually addressing… Continue reading →
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Immigration Law’s Organizing Principles: A Response
Professor Schuck, in his Response, Immigration Law’s Organizing Principles: A Response, agrees that there is overlap in the incentives and… Continue reading →
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A House Still Divided
Professor Huntington, in her Response, A House Still Divided, is sympathetic to Cox’s desire to discard the traditional dichotomy between… Continue reading →
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Only a Poor Workman Blames His Tools: On Uses and Abuses of Benefit-Cost Analysis in Regulatory Decision Making About the Environment
Professor Elliott, in his Response, Only a Poor Workman Blames his Tools: On the Uses and Abuses of Benefit-Cost Analysis… Continue reading →