Constitutional torts allow victims of governmental misconduct to seek redress. But the doctrinal regime is in disarray ...
The Supreme Court’s new standing cases have further narrowed the class of claims justiciable in federal court. Some state ...
abstract. There is a growing consensus among scholars and public policy experts that fundamental labor law reform is necessary in order to reduce the nation’s growing wealth gap. According to ...
abstract. Public schools have generated some of the most far-reaching cases to come before the Supreme Court. They have involved nearly every major civil right and liberty found in the Bill of Rights.
This Essay disputes the myth that employment, unlike independent contracting, is inherently inflexible. It traces the roots of this widely shared belief to corporate propaganda and rejects ...
abstract. Common wisdom has it that bureaucrats are unaccountable to the people they regulate and must therefore be closely supervised by elected officials or (perhaps ironically) the federal courts.
Labor and Employment Law • Gender and Sexual Orientation • Antidiscrimination Law ...
The Yale Law Journal welcomes submissions of Notes, Comments, and Forum Essays from J.D., M.S.L., and LL.M. students at Yale Law School. The Notes & Comments Committee reviews submissions only after ...
abstract. This Feature deepens and seeks to provide a foundation for the current broadening in the anti-trust debate and, ultimately, in adjacent areas relating to market organization. As normative ...
abstract. In addition to “persons, houses, [and] papers,” the Constitution protects individuals against unreasonable searches and seizures of “effects.” However, “effects” have received considerably ...
abstract. The glaring gap in tort theory is its failure to take adequate account of liability insurance. Much of tort theory fails to recognize the active and central role that liability insurance ...