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The Yale Law Journal - Forum: Gender-Identity Protection, Trade, and the Trump Administration: A Tale of Reluctant Progressivism Gender-Identity ...
Yale Law Journal - Sheltering Deprivations: FEMA, Section 408 Housing, and Procedural Redesign Sheltering Deprivations: FEMA, Section 408 Housing, and Procedural Redesign ...
over technology companies 0n the fact that they serve Australians, even if they lack a physical presence in Australia—a far-reaching assertion of ...
Third Geneva Convention, supra note 10, art. 17. See Parry, supra note 23, at 651-52 (“Whether or not it can command the support of a clear major… See ...
Using new archival research, this Article argues that notice-and-comment rulemaking emerged from a series of American transplantations of English rulemaking procedures. Yet, as this Article emphasizes ...
Textualists have yet to explain how to interpret codified positive-law text, which is revised by bureaucrats then enacted by Congress, where it differs from original text. This Note’s proposed ...
After the Supreme Court’s decision in Regents, courts have intensified their scrutiny of agency reversals that upset the expectations of regulatory beneficiaries. This Note defends that development ...
After several decades, the Supreme Court has revised its interpretation of employment-discrimination law requiring religious accommodations, creating waves of new litigation. Latent in the doctrine, ...
The Yale Law Journal is thrilled to announce Volume 134’s Emerging Scholar of the Year: Kate Redburn. The Yale Law Journal’s Emerging Scholar of the Year Award celebrates the achievements of ...
abstract. Will advances in robotics, artificial intelligence, and machine learning put vast swaths of the labor force out of work or into fierce competition for the jobs that remain? Or, as in the ...
abstract. The administrative state is suffering from a crisis of legitimacy. Many have questioned the legality of the myriad commissions, boards, and agencies through which much of our modern ...
Nearly every jurisdiction that allows for the recovery of noncompensatory punitive damages conceives of them as serving two main purposes: (1) punishing outrageous conduct and (2) deterring its future ...