It’s hard to read the news these days without seeing the dramatic effect of COVID-19 on professional and collegiate sports. Among others, a number of professional athletes have opted out of their ...
In April 2014, the Minnesota Court of Appeals issued a published decision clarifying certain aspects of state procurement law. In Rochester City Lines, et al., v. City of Rochester, et al., No.
Over at the Yale Journal on Regulation's Notice and Comment blog, T.T. Arvind and Christian R. Burset have an interesting post explaining that the basic impulse underlying the Major Questions Doctrine ...
Since 1990, the UCC Permanent Editorial Board (PEB), has issued 27 commentaries interpreting the UCC or its Official Comments, the most recent of which the authors discuss here. In many ways, a ...
Constitutional theorists on the right are engaged in a debate about the moral foundations of originalism, the theory that government officials, including judges, are bound by the original meaning of ...
Mr. Joel Prentiss Bishop in his Law of Married Women makes the following comments on the Act of 1874, one of a series of Massachusetts statutes for the amendment of the law of married women: “It ...
This is a preview. Log in through your library . Journal Information Journal of the Indian Law Institute is a leading law journal pertaining to the field of law. It is published since 1958. It is ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Matthew F. Erskine is a trusts and estates attorney. Probate Law: Judge's Gavel as a symbol of legal system, Themis is the goddess ...
Arguments for libertarianism typically take two forms. Some libertarians base their creed on natural rights—the idea that each individual has an inborn right to self-ownership, or freedom from ...
A recent New York Court of Appeals decision clarified the scope of the attorney-client privilege under New York law. In Matter of Appellate Advocates v. New York State Department of Corrections & ...
Judges “must interpret the law, not make the law,” observed Judge Brett Kavanaugh in accepting Donald Trump’s designation to fill Justice Anthony Kennedy’s seat on the Supreme Court. This oft-repeated ...
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