

Citation
Craig Konnoth, No Matter How the Masterpiece Cakeshop Case Is Decided, Gay Rights Win, Washington Post (December 6, 2017).
More in This Category
Coercive policing is conducted mostly by means of commands, and officers usually cannot use force unless they have first issued an order. Yet, despite...
More
Both statutory and constitutional law prohibiting discrimination forbid actions taken on the basis of certain traits. But rarely are those traits...
More
When the Supreme Court recently returned the issue of abortion to the states, Justice Brett Kavanaugh indicated in his concurrence that interstate...
More
Almost one half of the U.S. population is single, and the number of single people has almost tripled since 1950. Companies run by single CEOs may be...
More
Sonia Suter
The Supreme Court’s leaked draft opinion in Dobbs indicates the final ruling could have far-reaching consequences beyond upending women’s right to...
More
Douglas Spencer
Campaigns’ increasing reliance on data-driven canvassing has coincided with a disquieting trend in American politics: a stark gap in voter turnout...
More
In “A Tale of Two Statutes,” Elizabeth Kaufer Busch takes a hard look at Title IX on its fiftieth anniversary. Her conclusion? That the landmark civil...
More
Nelson Tebbe
In this review of Jamal Greene’s How Rights Went Wrong , we raise a series of questions about proportionality review as a model for adjudicating...
More
Strengthening the Federal Approach to Educational Equity During the Pandemic provides a timely analysis of three issues of great national significance...
More
Even though women make up roughly half of the students enrolled in law school today, they do not take up roughly half of the speaking time in law...
More
“Speak Up” and similar studies documented something that many thought they already knew about large law school classes: Male students talk a heck of a...
More
Does the U.S. Constitution guarantee a right to a vaccine passport? In the United States and elsewhere, vaccine passports have existed for over a...
More
Troy Rhodes
In 1988, Troy Rhodes was released from prison for the first time. He had served three years at the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola. He vividly...
More
For much of the twentieth century, the U.S. government authorized and invested heavily in segregation and racial inequality. Often it did so through...
More
Education has long stood at the epicenter of the battle for civil rights. More than half a century after the U.S. Supreme Court declared racially...
More
The Supreme Court heard oral argument Tuesday in Cummings v. Premier Rehab Keller, P.L.L.C. , a case on whether emotional distress damages are...
More
There has been an explosion of concern about use of computers to make decisions – from hiring to lending approvals to setting prison terms – affecting...
More
Citizenship is invaluable, yet our status as citizens is always at risk—even for those born on US soil. Over the last two centuries, the US government...
More