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The Law and Economics of Animus The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2022-05-01 Andrew T. Hayashi
People sometimes want to harm other people. This truism points to a blind spot in law and economics scholarship, which generally assumes that people are indifferent to the effects of their actions on other people. Diverse areas of the law, such as hate-crime legislation and constitutional equal protection doctrine, reside in this blind spot because they are premised on the existence of animus. I argue
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Regulation and Redistribution with Lives in the Balance The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2022-05-01 Daniel Hemel
A central question in law and economics is whether nontax legal rules should be designed solely to maximize efficiency or whether they also should account for concerns about the distribution of income. This question takes on particular importance in the context of cost-benefit analysis. Federal agencies apply cost-benefit analysis when writing regulations that generate multibillion-dollar impacts on
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Experimental Jurisprudence The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2022-05-01 Kevin Tobia
“Experimental jurisprudence” draws on empirical methods to inform questions typically associated with jurisprudence and legal theory. Scholars in this flourishing movement conduct empirical studies about a variety of legal language and concepts. Despite the movement’s growth, its justification is still opaque. Jurisprudence is the study of deep and longstanding theoretical questions about law’s nature
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Neither Here nor There: Wire Fraud and the False Binary of Territoriality Under Morrison The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2022-05-01 Jason Petty
Fraudulent schemes increasingly rely on wire transmissions and the internet as the economy and communications digitize. To combat these schemes, prosecutors have applied the wire fraud statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1343, to defendants located domestically and abroad. Applying the current standard for extraterritoriality under Morrison v. National Australia Bank Ltd., circuit courts disagree as to whether the
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Avoiding a Pie in the Face The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2022-05-01 Henry Walter
Writing for the University of Chicago Law Review Symposium 2022 on Law and Labor Market Power, Henry Walter suggests that antitrust reform efforts directed at labor markets should proceed slowly, mindful of reform's fragile political support and the potential for backlash.
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Guilt by (Anticompetitive) Association: Criminal Enforcement as a Response to Labor Monopsony The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2022-05-01 Marissa Piccolo
Writing for the University of Chicago Law Review Symposium 2022 on Law and Labor Market Power, Marissa Piccolo evaluates when and how criminal antitrust enforcement can address the problem of labor monopsonies.
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No More No-Poach? An (Early) Retrospective on Public and Private Antitrust Enforcement in the Fight against Franchise No-Poach Agreements The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2022-05-01 Spencer J. Parts
Writing for the University of Chicago Law Review Symposium 2022 on Law and Labor Market Power, Spencer J. Parts argues that private lawsuits and state enforcement were a suboptimal way of causing many national franchises to abandon the use of no-poach agreements.
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Symposium Introduction: This Violent City? Urban Violence in Chicago and Beyond The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Aziz Z. Huq
Abstract not available
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The Enduring Neighborhood Effect, Everyday Urban Mobility, and Violence in Chicago The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Robert J. Sampson
A longstanding tradition of research linking neighborhood disadvantage to higher rates of violence is based on the characteristics of where people reside. This Essay argues that we need to look beyond residential neighborhoods to consider flows of movement throughout the wider metropolis. Our basic premise is that a neighborhood’s well-being depends not only on its own socioeconomic conditions but
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Neighborhood Inequality and Violence in Chicago, 1965–2020 The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Patrick Sharkey
This Essay analyzes trends in violence from a spatial perspective, focusing on how changes in the murder rate are experienced by communities and groups of residents within the city of Chicago. The Essay argues that a spatial perspective is essential to understanding the causes and consequences of violence in the United States and begins by describing the social policies and theoretical mechanisms that
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Prospects for Reform? The Collapse of Community Policing in Chicago The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Wesley G. Skogan
In an era of renewed enthusiasm for police reform, it could be instructive to examine how reforms—even successful reforms—fail. In the 1990s and 2000s, Chicago’s community-policing initiative was widely recognized as one of the most impressive in the country. In short order, it then collapsed. Community policing’s accomplishments were numerous, but it fell victim to issues commonly facing reform: money—especially
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Capitalizing on Crisis: Chicago Policy Responses to Homicide Waves, 1920–2016 The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Robert Vargas
This Essay investigates Chicago city-government policy responses to the four largest homicide waves in its history: 1920–1925, 1966–1970, 1987–1992, and 2016. Through spatial and historical methods, we discover that Chicago police and the mayor’s office misused data to advance agendas conceived prior to the start of the homicide waves. Specifically, in collaboration with mayors, the Chicago Police
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Identifying and Measuring Excessive and Discriminatory Policing The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Alex Chohlas-Wood
We describe and apply three empirical approaches to identify superfluous police activity, unjustified racially disparate impacts, and limits to regulatory interventions. First, using cost-benefit analysis, we show that traffic and pedestrian stops in Nashville and New York City disproportionately impacted communities of color without achieving their stated public-safety goals. Second, we address a
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Racially Territorial Policing in Black Neighborhoods The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Elise C. Boddie
This Essay explores police practices that marginalize Black people by limiting their freedom of movement across the spaces of Black neighborhoods. In an earlier article, I theorized “racial territoriality” as a form of discrimination that “excludes people of color from—or marginalizes them within—racialized White spaces that have a racially exclusive history, practice, and/or reputation.” In this Essay
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Barbed Wire Fences: The Structural Violence of Education Law The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 LaToya Baldwin Clark
In this Essay, I argue that, in urban metros like Chicago, poor Black children are victims of not just gun violence but also the structural violence of systemic educational stratification. Structural violence occurs in the context of domination, where poor Black children are marginalized and isolated, vulnerable to lifelong subordination across many domains. Specifically, I argue that U.S. education
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An Abolitionist Critique of Violence The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Allegra McLeod
Abstract not available
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Cities, Preemption, and the Statutory Second Amendment The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Joseph Blocher
Although the Second Amendment tends to dominate the discussion about legal limits on gun regulation, nothing has done more to shape the state of urban gun law than state preemption laws, which fully or partially limit cities’ ability to regulate guns at the local level. The goals of this short Essay are to shed light on this “Statutory Second Amendment” and to provide a basic framework for evaluating
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Civil Procedure as the Regulation of Externalities: Toward a New Theory of Civil Litigation The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Ronen Avraham
Civil procedure serves a multitude of goals, from regulating the cost of fact gathering to dictating the rules of advocacy in court to promoting public participation in trials. To what extent can procedural design serve them all, or must rules sacrifice some interests to serve others? In this Article, we are the first to introduce a theory of procedural design that answers this question. We build upon
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Remembering: The Constitution and Federally Funded Apartheid The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Joy Milligan
For much of the twentieth century, the U.S. government authorized and invested heavily in segregation and racial inequality. Often it did so through federal programs authorized under Congress’s Spending Clause powers. Federal spending allowed powerful national investments in areas like health, education, and housing but frequently created segregated hospitals, schools, and communities. From the New
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The Power of Attorneys: Addressing the Equal Protection Challenge to Merit-Based Judicial Selection The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Zachary Reger
Many states use merit-based judicial selection to limit political influence on state courts. Under merit selection, an independent, nonpartisan commission screens candidates for any open judgeship, sending a slate of finalists to the governor. Because the governor may appoint only from these approved finalists, merit selection constrains the ability of political officials to stack the courts with partisan
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Textual Rules in Criminal Statutes The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Joshua Kleinfeld
Abstract not available
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Intellectual Property Norms in American Theater The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Kelly Gregg
When a musical opens on Broadway, what aspects of the production are covered by copyright’s protection of “dramatic works”? The script clearly is (although policing infringement is nigh impossible), but courts have yet to address whether the work of the director or designers should be afforded copyright protections. Nonetheless, within the close-knit professional New York theater community, rarely
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Can Procedure Take?: The Judicial Takings Doctrine and Court Procedure The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Rebecca Hansen
In considering the value of the judicial takings doctrine, this Comment argues that we should look to a new area of law: procedure. Courts often have the authority to set procedure, and they use this authority for substantive ends. This Comment argues that applying the Takings Clause to procedure demonstrates the value of the judicial takings doctrine. It argues that the Takings Clause, rather than
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A Place Worth Protecting: Rethinking Cost-Benefit Analysis Under FEMA’s Flood-Mitigation Programs The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Kelly McGee
As climate change threatens coastal areas with more frequent and intense flooding, the federal government has adopted a greater focus on mitigating the effects of natural disasters. While neighborhoods differ in terms of physical risk exposure, they also differ in social vulnerability—the characteristics that influence a community’s ability to safely weather a storm, withstand disruptions to employment
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Write Like You’re Running Out of Time: Prepublication Review, Retroactive Classification, and Intermediate Scrutiny The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Henry Walter
The Constitution’s promises of freedom of speech and common defense can, at times, be at odds. One acute example of that tension is the prepublication review process, by which the government reviews written works by certain current and former employees to ensure that they do not contain classified or other sensitive information. While this process surely has its merits in preserving national security
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On Prisoners, Politics, and the Administration of Criminal Justice: Professor Rachel Barkow The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Sonja Starr
Abstract not available
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Applying Harold Koh’s Transnational Legal Model to Current Human Rights Challenges The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Michael Posner
Abstract not available
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Jeffrey Rachlinski: Man, Myth, Legend The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Gregory S. Parks
Abstract not available
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Tribe’s Trajectory & LGBTQ Rights The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Joshua Matz
Abstract not available
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The Most-Cited Legal Scholars Revisited The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-11-01 Fred R. Shapiro
This Essay presents a list of the fifty most-cited legal scholars of all time, intending to spotlight individuals who have had a very notable impact on legal thought and institutions. Because citation counting favors scholars who have had long careers, I supplement the main listing with a ranking of the most-cited younger legal scholars. In addition, I include five specialized lists: most-cited international
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Lessons to be Learned from Peter Yu The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-11-01 John T. Cross
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Guido Calabresi’s “Other Justice Reasons” The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-11-01 Adam Davidson
Abstract not available
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Reading Erwin Chemerinsky The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-11-01 Michele Goodwin
Abstract not available
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The Problem of Gender Inequity: The Legacy of Deborah Rhode The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-11-01 Joanna L. Grossman
Abstract not available
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A Cross-Cutting Public Law Scholar for the Ages The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-11-01 Nicole Huberfeld
Abstract not available
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As Brown Has Waned The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-11-01 Aziz Z. Huq
Abstract not available
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What is Privacy? That’s the Wrong Question The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-11-01 Woodrow Hartzog
Abstract not available
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Lucian Bebchuk and the Study of Corporate Governance The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-11-01 Kobi Kastiel
Abstract not available
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A Pioneer of the Law & Society Movement: One Eyewitness’s Reflections The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-11-01 Jayanth K. Krishnan
Abstract not available
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The Scholar as Coauthor The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-11-01 Jonathan S. Masur
Abstract not available
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Asymmetric Subsidies and the Bail Crisis The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-10-01 John F. Duffy
When individuals are arrested or indicted for a crime, governments have legitimate interests in assuring that those individuals show up for future legal proceedings and also do not cause more social harm in the meanwhile. To serve those legitimate interests, governments may restrain the personal liberty of those presumptively innocent individuals—traditionally accomplished either by incarceration or
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In Search of Ordinary Meaning: What Can Be Learned from the Textualist Opinions of Bostock v. Clayton County? The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Sam Capparelli
In Bostock v. Clayton County, the Supreme Court held that Title VII protects gay and transgender individuals from employment discrimination. Writing for the majority, Justice Neil Gorsuch adhered to textualist principles and relied on the ordinary public meaning of the phrase “discriminate because of sex.” Despite the majority opinion purportedly not reaching beyond the words of the statute, three
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It’s All About (Re)location: Interpreting the Federal Sentencing Enhancement for Relocating a Fraudulent Scheme The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Stephen Ferro
Section 2B1.1(b)(10) of the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual increases the recommended sentencing ranges for defendants who make fraudulent schemes harder to uncover. In particular, subsection (A) of this Guideline—the relocation enhancement—increases a defendant’s recommended sentence if she “relocated, or participated in relocating, a fraudulent scheme to another jurisdiction to evade law enforcement
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The Scope of Evidentiary Review in Constitutional Challenges to Agency Action The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Conley K. Hurst
When reviewing agency action, the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) instructs courts to “review the whole record or those parts of it cited by a party.” The Supreme Court has interpreted this brief statement as a restriction on the evidentiary scope of judicial review under the APA. Courts may consider only the administrative record compiled by the agency, which includes all materials before the decisionmaker
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The Legal Causes of Labor Market Power in the U.S. Agriculture Sector The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Candice Yandam Riviere
Abstract not available
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Trademark Law Pluralism The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Daniel J. Hemel
In recent years, trademark scholars have come to recognize that the supply of words, sounds, and symbols available to designate new goods and services is an exhaustible resource. In certain sectors, the most common English words and syllables and the most common U.S. surnames are almost all claimed as marks. Some firms have responded by resorting to ever-more-unusual brand names so as to avoid trademark
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The Pigouvian Constitution The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Peter N. Salib
How can lawmakers reduce the skyrocketing rate of gun deaths in the United States? How can they stymie the spread of viral fake news stories designed to undermine our elections? Certain constitutionally protected activities—like owning a gun or speaking online—can generate social harms. Yet when lawmakers enact regulations to reduce those harms, they are regularly struck down as unconstitutional. Indeed
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Arbitration and Title VII Pattern-or-Practice Claims After Epic Systems The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Simon Jacobs
In recent years, the Supreme Court has put up roadblocks for workers who seek relief in court for wrongs committed by their employers. This development is a consequence of the Court’s arbitration jurisprudence. Epic Systems Corp. v. Lewis, a 2018 decision, was par for the course. The Supreme Court held that employers could prevent group wage-and-hour claims by enforcing individual arbitration agreements
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Defining Forced Labor: The Legal Battle to Protect Detained Immigrants from Private Exploitation The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Samantha Sherman
Privately run immigration detention facilities allegedly profit from a nationwide system of forced labor. People detained in these for-profit facilities allege that they are compelled to work—often without pay—under threats of solitary confinement, deprivation of basic necessities, and other serious harms. Advocates have challenged these human rights abuses through a series of class action lawsuits
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Never Ask a Woman Her Wage: The Constitutionality of Salary-History Bans The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Tyler M. Wood
For over a half-century, legislatures have struggled to close the pay gap between men and women. Although the gap has shrunk substantially since Congress passed the Equal Pay Act in 1963, in recent years, progress has slowed to a near standstill. Why has the residual gap remained so persistent? Some argue that employers—by asking applicants to reveal their wage histories and then relying on that information
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Deal Protection Devices The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Albert H. Choi
In mergers and acquisitions transactions, a buyer and a seller will often agree to contractual mechanisms (deal protection devices) to deter third parties from jumping the deal and to compensate a disappointed buyer. With the help of auction theory, this Article analyzes various deal protection devices, while focusing on the two most commonly used mechanisms: match rights and target termination fees
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Federal Rules of Platform Procedure The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Rory Van Loo
Tech platforms serve as private courthouses for disputes about speech, lodging, commerce, elections, and reputation. After receiving allegations of defamatory content in top search results, Google must decide between protecting one person’s public image and another’s profits or speech. Amazon adjudicates disputes between consumers and third-party merchants about defective or counterfeit items. For
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Vindicating the Right to Be Heard: Due Process Safeguards Against Government Interference in the Clemency Process The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Jay Clayton
In Ohio Adult Parole Authority v. Woodard, the Supreme Court held that death row prisoners are entitled to some minimal due process protections in petitioning for clemency—most commonly, a commutation to a sentence of life in prison—from a state governor. This conclusion reflects a tension between the recognition that the Due Process Clause applies after conviction and a historical reluctance to involve
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Removing Interpretative Barnacles: Counterclaims and Civil Forfeiture The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Nicholas Hallock
Through civil forfeiture, the federal government can take ownership of property merely by proving it “guilty” by a preponderance of the evidence. The government need not formally accuse its owner of any crime. Yet the procedural mechanisms available to a property owner who wishes to contest a forfeiture are limited, complex, and strictly enforced. A creature of admiralty law, civil forfeiture draws
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Education’s Deep Roots: Historical Evidence for the Right to a Basic Minimum Education The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Caroline A. Veniero
For decades, the U.S. Supreme Court has left open the question whether the U.S. Constitution protects a right to some amount of education. While such a right is not specifically enumerated in the Constitution, advocates have long argued for the existence of an implicit, fundamental right to a basic minimum education under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Recognition of such a right
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Rethinking Nudge: An Information-Costs Theory of Default Rules The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Oren Bar-Gill
Policy makers and scholars—both lawyers and economists—have long pondered the optimal design of default rules. From the classic works on “mimicking” defaults for contracts and corporations to the modern rush to set “sticky” default rules to promote policies as diverse as organ donation, retirement savings, consumer protection, and data privacy, the optimal design of default rules has featured as a
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Qualified Immunity's Boldest Lie The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Joanna C. Schwartz
Qualified immunity shields government officials from damages liability—even if they have violated plaintiffs’ constitutional rights—so long as they have not violated “clearly established law.” The Supreme Court has explained that watershed cases describing legal requirements—like Graham v. Connor and Tennessee v. Garner—are alone insufficient to clearly establish the law. Instead, the plaintiff must
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The Misunderstood Role of Reliance in American Pipe Tolling The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Jeremy L. Brown
The commencement of a class action tolls statutes of limitations for all members of the putative class. This rule, so simply stated by the Supreme Court in American Pipe & Construction Co. v. Utah, has proved complicated in practice. Since American Pipe, lower courts have disagreed about the circumstances under which the tolling rule applies. Though the Court has resolved many of these disagreements
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Organizational Rights in Times of Crisis The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Katerina Linos
As populist leaders gain power around the world, democratic governments retreat, and authoritarian states gain power in the international system, it is critical to find levers of resistance. Professors Adam Chilton and Mila Versteeg’s masterful volume, How Constitutional Rights Matter, offers a timely and provocative answer: let’s look to organizations as potential defenders of rights in challenging
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The Corpus and the Critics The University of Chicago Law Review (IF 2.722) Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Thomas R. Lee
Most any approach to interpretation of the language of law begins with a search for ordinary meaning. Increasingly, judges, scholars, and practitioners are highlighting shortcomings in our means for assessing such meaning. With this in mind, we have proposed the use of the tools of corpus linguistics to take up the task. Our proposals have gained traction but have also seen significant pushback. The