115 Yale L.J. 2633 (2006) ...
Federalism has had a resurgence of late, with symposia organized,1 stories written,2 and new scholarly paths charted. Now is an appropriate moment to assess where the new “new federalism”3 is heading.
century. Together, these books define the core curriculum of what might be called the modern Yale School of Constitutional Interpretation.3 The publication of Alexander Bickel’s The Least Dangerous ...
115 Yale L.J. 2015 (2006) ...
abstract. In the early 1900s, the country’s 1,100 auto clubs did far more than provide the roadside assistance, maps, and towing services familiar to the American Automobile Association members of ...
Militaries are increasingly targeting “dual-use objects”—objects that serve both civilian and military purposes. Drawing on an original dataset of the U.S. military’s airstrike reports and ground ...
abstract. Railroading today is profitable but struggles to serve customers, workers, and communities, as punctuated by recent high-profile disputes and disasters. This Note traces the development of ...
In the state constitutional conventions of the Reconstruction South, biracial coalitions of delegates constitutionalized universal public-school systems and kept their constitutions free from ...
Antitrust analysis generally assumes that firms seek profit, but that assumption does not always hold. This Feature offers an antitrust framework for analyzing non-profit-maximizing conduct—like ...
In this series of Tributes to Justice David H. Souter, three of his law clerks—Judge Jesse M. Furman, President Heather K. Gerken, and Professor Jeannie Suk Gersen—reflect upon and honor their former ...
Younger v. Harris is canonical in the field of federal courts, but its origins remain largely unknown. Examining diverse sources, this Article reconstructs that story. In doing so, this Article ...