Challenging Immigration Law’s Conviction Definition
Guest post by Phillip L. Torrey. *Phillip Torrey is the Managing Attorney of the Harvard Immigration and Refugee Clinical Program, a […]
Guest post by Phillip L. Torrey. *Phillip Torrey is the Managing Attorney of the Harvard Immigration and Refugee Clinical Program, a […]
Guest Post by Geoffrey Wyatt and Neil Weare Geoffrey Wyatt is Counsel at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP.
The following piece is a guest post by Alyssa Peterson and Arjun Mody. Alyssa and Arjun are law student interns
Guest Post by Ryan H. Nelson Ryan H. Nelson is an Adjunct Professor of Law at New York Law School
Read about the alt-labor movement, sexual abuse in prisons, and the conservation of public lands in Vol. 53, No. 1.
Editors-in-Chief Brie Frank Amber Ashley James Ian Eppler Executive Managing Editors Nathaniel Reisinger Milo Inglehart Karin Drucker Managing Editors Medha Gargeya
Read about the role of grand juries in prosecuting unjustified killings by police, pregnancy behind bars, and the undue burden test for abortion in Vol. 52, No. 2.
Editors-in-Chief Katherine Cielinski Monica Wilk Joseph Breen Executive Managing Editors Michael Ewart Melinda Johnson Lark Turner Managing Editors Edward Benoit Richard
Editors-in-Chief Jimin He Shayna Medley Matthew Ryan Executive Managing Editors Wilfred Beaye Nathan Burcham Ryan Dykhouse Managing Editors Rahel Boghossian Clara
Legal formalism is a consistent theme in Justice Scalia’s voluminous opinions. Yet one should not automatically associate formalism with either
I. Introduction If you want to confuse a roomful of law students, teach them First Amendment doctrine. Courts have struggled