Stanford Law Review
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Article
How the EU Sustainability Due Diligence Directive Could Reshape Corporate America
by Luca Enriques, Matteo Gatti & Roy Shapira
One of the most important developments in corporate governance is the growing divide between the United States and the European Union (EU) on issues of corporate social responsibility. The starkest example of this divide comes from the new EU Directive on Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence (CS3D). The Directive holds large corporations legally accountable for how…
Article
The Brady Materiality Standard
by Brandon L. Garrett & Adam M. Gershowitz
The Brady doctrine requires prosecutors to disclose all favorable and material evidence to the defense. To effectuate that rule, the U.S. Supreme Court has defined materiality as a “reasonable probability” that the evidence would have affected the outcome at trial. But apart from that definition, the Court has resisted offering any further guidance to lower…
Article
Is History Precedent?
by Allison Orr Larsen
It has been just over three years since the Supreme Court instructed lower courts to evaluate Second Amendment challenges by examining history and tradition. And it is no secret that the courts have struggled. This Article tackles a phenomenon that is born of that struggle. Overwhelmed by the task of evaluating historical claims, lower courts…
Article
Attention Capitalism: The Law and Political Economy of Attention Markets
by John M. Newman
Attention has become one of the most heavily extracted and commodified resources in modern market economies. Firms now supply a wide range of everyday digital products and services in exchange for increasingly vast amounts of attention. A techno-deterministic account portrays this as inevitable, the result of abstract “market forces.” But the ongoing shift of activity…
Note
Rule 19 and Tribal Representation in Indian Gaming Litigation
by Marissa Uri
Since 1988, when Congress passed the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act (IGRA) into law, many Indian tribes have established gaming as a vital source of economic and political sovereignty. The process envisioned by IGRA, however, has allowed private actors to challenge tribal gaming operations by suing state and federal entities that negotiate the gaming operations with…