Today, legal culture is shaped by One Big Question: should courts, particularly the US Supreme Court, have a lot of power? This question is affecting...
The United States has granted reparations for a variety of historical injustices, from imprisonment of Japanese Americans during the Second World War...
In New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, Justice Thomas’s majority opinion announced that the key to applying originalist methodology...
Originalism is becoming the coin of the realm at the conservative Supreme Court. Even newly appointed liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson has drawn...
A division exists between scholars who claim that Congress made only limited delegations to executive officials in the early Republic, and those who...
The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Immigration Law is perhaps the first book-length treatment of the subject of comparative immigration law. The...
A growing experimental literature suggests that international law appears to have a larger impact on public opinion than constitutional law. Because...
Just as the Supreme Court is poised to achieve many of the stated aims of the conservative legal movement, including overturning Roe v. Wade and...
Human rights discourse has become central to the global debates about treatment of and solutions for refugees and displaced persons. Following the...
The modern law of personal jurisdiction in the United States is largely the product of living constitutionalism. The most important decision is Intern...
A major contribution to our understanding of the “Second Founding” that remade the United States after the Civil War, The Original Meaning of the...
Citizenship is invaluable, yet our status as citizens is always at risk—even for those born on US soil.
Over the last two centuries, the US government...
Formalism is one of the most widely applied but misunderstood features of law. Embroiled in a series of conflicts over the course of the twentieth...