Vol. 133 No. 6 In American law schools, first-year students learn about the basic obligations of private law through two required classes: contracts and torts. For the most...
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...
Vol. 131 No. 3 The Supreme Court’s recent decision in Armstrong v. Exceptional Child Center, Inc. has raised concerns within the healthcare community and beyond that Armstrong’s limitation...
Vol. 131 No. 3 Scholars of administrative law focus overwhelmingly on lawsuits to review federal government action while assuming that, if plaintiffs win such lawsuits, the government will...
Vol. 131 No. 2 In several recent high-profile cases, federal district judges have issued injunctions that apply across the nation, controlling the defendants’ behavior with respect to nonparties....
Vol. 130 No. 7 Harmless error review is profoundly important, but arguably broken, in the form that courts currently employ it in criminal cases. One significant reason for...
Vol. 128 No. 6 The Supreme Court has rendered two lines of decisions about the remedies available for a violation of the Takings Clause. One line holds that...