Vol. 133 No. 9 In the lead up to Volume 134, the Harvard Law Review republished five classic Critical Race Theory articles from our archives. This is the third...
Vol. 133 No. 8 Laws permitting the expungement of criminal convictions are a key component of modern criminal justice reform efforts and have been the subject of a...
Vol. 133 No. 7 Constitutional law has long assumed that mothers and fathers are fundamentally different. Maternity, that law posits, is certain, obvious, and monolithic — consolidated in...
Vol. 133 No. 6 Property tax limits are state-level laws that place caps on local governments’ tax rates and revenue. These statutory limits, which put pressure on already...
Vol. 133 No. 6 It is tempting to assume that the United States has fifty distinct state prison systems. For a time, that assumption was correct. In the...
Vol. 133 No. 5 Article III requires federal judges who exercise federal jurisdiction to be given life tenure and undiminished compensation, limiting Congress’s ability to influence the judiciary....
Vol. 133 No. 5 Canons of statutory interpretation are sometimes said to promote continuity and stability in the law. Yet it is widely acknowledged that canons themselves often...
Vol. 133 No. 4 In cities across the country, artists, protesters, and businesses are using light projections to turn any building’s facade into a billboard without the owner’s...
Vol. 133 No. 4 A go-shop process turns the traditional M&A deal process on its head: rather than a pre-signing market canvass followed by a post-signing “no shop”...
Vol. 133 No. 3 The issuance of injunctions that reach beyond just the plaintiffs has recently become the subject of a mounting wave of censorious commentary, including by...