Most Recent Print Issue

Volume 78, Issue 3


Article

Warranting Violence

by  Brittany Farr

This Article excavates unfamiliar stories about contracts doctrine and the violence of slavery. One such story begins with six-year-old Martha, whose bill of sale warranted her “to be sound.” When Martha’s purchaser found her unable to perform the “duties that might be reasonably assigned to a child,” however, he sued for breach of warranty, alleging…

Article

Sanctioning Negligent Bankers

by  Kyle D. Logue, W. Robert Thomas & Jeffery Y. Zhang

Over just one week in 2023, depositor runs at a few U.S. banks threatened to trigger a worldwide banking crisis. Afterwards, the United States suffered three of the biggest bank failures in the nation’s history; in Europe, Credit Suisse became the largest financial institution to fail since the 2007-2008 Global Financial Crisis. Stunned by this…

Note

Beyond Infringement: Rethinking DMCA § 1202 for Generative AI

by  Larissa Bersh

With the emergence of large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT, scholars and courts have fervently debated whether LLMs’ training on and reproduction of copyrighted materials amounts to fair use. But in a recent series of cases, a lesser-known challenge to LLMs has reared its head: § 1202 of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. This provision…

Note

The Privatization of Sexual Harassment Adjudication and the Eclipse of Civil Rights

by  Bella M. Ryb

In 1998, the Supreme Court established a standard for employer vicarious liability for sexual harassment in the cases Faragher v. City of Boca Raton and Burlington Industries, Inc. v. Ellerth. Together, these cases hold that an employer is presumptively liable for any actionable sexual harassment by a supervisor. No affirmative defense is available when harassment…

View Current & Past Print Volumes

Recent Online Essays

The Emerging Firearms Hypocrisy of Terry: The Fifth Circuit in United States v. Wilson

Terry v. Ohio’s flexible reasonable-suspicion rule is colliding with the post-Bruen expansion of public carry. In United States v. Wilson, the Fifth Circuit held that suspected concealed gun possession—presumptively lawful in Louisiana—could not alone justify a stop, yet it sustained the seizure by relying on Mr. Wilson’s social associations and arrest history. Professor Hochman Bloom argues this emerging “firearm exceptionalism” elevates guns over other lawful acts and entrenches Terry’s racialized, hindsight-driven policing.

Read Article

A Remedy Inherited: State Law, Universal Vacatur, and the Meaning of “Set Aside”

Introduction This past June, in a decision already heralded as marking a “landmark shift in administrative law,” the Supreme Court in Trump v. CASA, Inc. held that federal courts “likely” lacked the power to issue universal injunctions. Universal injunctions, the 6-3 majority concluded, likely exceeded the equitable authority that Congress had bestowed on the federal courts…

Read Article

Threats to Contraception

Many question the future of the right to contraception after Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, but Deborah Tuerkheimer argues that the more immediate threats lie beyond the Supreme Court. Contraceptive access is eroding through three interconnected forces: post-Dobbs funding cuts and clinic closures, expanding parental- and conscience-based claims, and misinformation-driven cultural shifts that invite restrictive regulation. Together, these developments imperil contraception even as formal protections remain intact.

Read Article

Protecting Consumers in a Post-Consent World

In Charting a New Course on Digital Consumer Protection at the Federal Trade Commission, former FTC Chair Lina Khan and her co-authors Samuel Levine and Stephanie Nguyen set out a fundamentally new regulatory framework for privacy that seeks to move beyond the “notice and consent” paradigm that has dominated privacy law for a generation. They…

Read Article

Tribal Sovereignty, Justice Gorsuch, and the Letter of the Law

I meant what I said, and I said what I meant. An elephant’s faithful, one hundred percent!  —Dr. Seuss, Horton Hatches the Egg Introduction This Comment seeks to defend Justice Neil Gorsuch’s approach to statutory interpretation, arguing against pragmatist efforts to reduce the Supreme Court’s reliance on textualism and against efforts by fellow self-proclaimed textualists…

Read Article