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Harvard Law Review Commentaries Page 5

Commentaries

Campaign Finance

After McCutcheon

The decision will likely help the political parties regain some power

Vol. 127 No. 8 June 2014
  • Marc E. Elias
  • Jonathan S. Berkon
Campaign Finance

The Practical Consequences of McCutcheon

The decision leaves our campaign finance system largely undisturbed

Vol. 127 No. 8 June 2014
  • Robert K. Kelner
Election Law

Dismissing Deterrence

The VRAA's proposed preclearance regime would still be vulnerable to attack

Vol. 127 No. 6 April 2014
  • Ellen D. Katz
Election Law

Voting Rights Law and Policy in Transition

Activists ought not settle for the valiant but modest VRAA

Vol. 127 No. 6 April 2014
  • Guy-Uriel E. Charles
  • Luis E. Fuentes-Rohwer
Constitutional Law

Good Cause Requirements for Carrying Guns in Public

Should any reason for wanting a gun be good enough?

Vol. 127 No. 6 April 2014
  • Joseph Blocher
Constitutional Law

Does the Second Amendment Protect Firearms Commerce?

Defending the right to sell and trade arms

Vol. 127 No. 6 April 2014
  • David B. Kopel
Constitutional Law

The Second Amendment as a Normal Right

Ruling out ad hoc interest-balancing

Vol. 127 No. 6 April 2014
  • Alan Gura
Constitutional Law

Peruta, the Home-Bound Second Amendment, and Fractal Originalism

A critique of strictly originalist Second Amendment jurisprudence

Vol. 127 No. 6 April 2014
  • Darrell A.H. Miller
Reproductive Rights

Undue Burdens in Texas

Vol. 127 No. 4 February 2014 In 2007 and 2008, I spent about six weeks living on a visitor’s chair in my mother’s hospital room, where she was being treated...
  • Jennifer S. Hendricks
Reproductive Rights

In Abortion Litigation, It’s the Facts that Matter

Vol. 127 No. 4 February 2014 The undue burden standard has become a double standard in the evaluation of abortion restrictions. Courts demand from plaintiffs fact-intensive proof that an abortion...
  • Caitlin E. Borgmann
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