Old Statutes, New Problems
Congress is more ideologically polarized now than at any time in the modern regulatory era, which makes legislation ever harder… Continue reading →
Congress is more ideologically polarized now than at any time in the modern regulatory era, which makes legislation ever harder… Continue reading →
Are corporations “persons” with constitutional rights? The Supreme Court has famously avoided analysis of the question, while recognizing that corporations… Continue reading →
Do new regulations apply to pending cases? The question is simple, but the short answer is a lawyer’s favorite: “It… Continue reading →
In Yates v. United States, the Supreme Court will decide whether tossing undersized fish overboard can be prosecuted under the… Continue reading →
The state action doctrine has been a significant impediment in the campaign against anticompetitive conduct by provider‐dominated state licensing boards.… Continue reading →
On July 1, 2014, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) released Form 1023‐EZ, a streamlined version of the application required of… Continue reading →
Since its decision more than thirty years ago in Illinois v. Gates, the Supreme Court has emphasized that the Fourth… Continue reading →
In Insider Trading via the Corporation, Professor Jesse M. Fried expresses his frustration that “when insiders are subject to strict… Continue reading →
This Essay examines what I call “post‐parodies” in apparel. This emerging genre of do‐it‐yourself fashion is characterized by the appropriation… Continue reading →
“I imagine that many law students who arrive here at this famous law school in Philadelphia, the city that hosted… Continue reading →