The United States has granted reparations for a variety of historical injustices, from imprisonment of Japanese Americans during the Second World War...
Employment contract law is an antiquated, ill-fitting, incoherent mess. But no one seems inclined to fix this problem. Employment law scholars...
The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Immigration Law is perhaps the first book-length treatment of the subject of comparative immigration law. The...
A growing experimental literature suggests that international law appears to have a larger impact on public opinion than constitutional law. Because...
Human rights discourse has become central to the global debates about treatment of and solutions for refugees and displaced persons. Following the...
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...
This essay presents, in lightly revised form, the Henry J. Miller Distinguished Lecture delivered at Georgia State University College of Law in...
Prevailing theories of employment discrimination law seek to unify the field at a high level of abstraction based on general definitions of equality...
The gender gap is a much debated labor market phenomenon. Our article seeks to examine it in a context where it has received less attention...
Lauren Edelman’s "Working Law" is remarkably relevant to the study of financial regulation. In particular, three factors that Edelman identifies as...
This chapter will tell the legal, historical, and political tale of two major immigration cases decided by the U.S. Supreme Court during President...