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Displaying 281 - 290 of 1294

Cities, Preemption, and the Statutory Second Amendment

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/print-archive/cities-preemption-and-statutory-second-amendment
Although the Second Amendment tends to dominate the discussion about legal limits on gun regulation, nothing has done more to shape the state of urban gun law than state preemption laws, which fully or partially limit cities’ ability to regulate guns at the local level. The goals of this short Essay are to shed light on this “Statutory Second Amendment” and to provide a basic framework for evaluating it.

Protests, a Pandemic, and the Right to Assemble

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/uclr-online/briefly-podcast/protests-pandemic-and-right-assemble
The First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution guarantees the "right of the people peaceably to assemble." The recent prevalence of protest movements, alongside a global pandemic, has influenced the interpretation of this right.

Civil Procedure as the Regulation of Externalities: Toward a New Theory of Civil Litigation

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/print-archive/civil-procedure-regulation-externalities-toward-new-theory-civil-litigation
Civil procedure serves a multitude of goals, from regulating the cost of fact gathering to dictating the rules of advocacy in court to promoting public participation in trials. To what extent can procedural design serve them all, or must rules sacrifice some interests to serve others? In this Article, we are the first to introduce a theory of procedural design that answers this question.

Remembering: The Constitution and Federally Funded Apartheid

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/print-archive/remembering-constitution-and-federally-funded-apartheid
The substantive Fifth Amendment ideal of preventing the federal government from aiding systemic discrimination receded because of increasing challenges to its substance, judicial fatigue with institutional oversight, and the sweeping scope of the problem—along with collective amnesia regarding the prior decades of constitutional struggle. This Article reveals that forgotten constitutional history. After excavating the Fifth Amendment struggles, I argue that the no-aid norm, and the underlying reality of long-term federal participation in racial apartheid, should be remembered and debated once again.

Foreign Dictators in U.S. Court

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/print-archive/foreign-dictators-us-court
The Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act, the court-created “act of state” doctrine, and other common-law immunities shield foreign officials and governments from most lawsuits. For instance, courts have dismissed claims against China, Cuba, Venezuela, and Russia over allegations of torture, detentions, and election interference. Yet foreign governments have unfettered access to U.S. courts as plaintiffs. And foreign dictatorships—including Russia, China, Turkey, and Venezuela—have leveraged this access to harass political dissidents, critics, and even newspapers in the United States. These doctrines create an asymmetry at the heart of this Article: foreign dictators and their proxies can access our courts as plaintiffs to harass their opponents, but their regimes are, in turn, immune from lawsuits here. This Article exposes that asymmetry and argues that U.S. courts and Congress should make it harder for foreign dictators to abuse our legal system.

Volume 89.1 (January 2022) 1–314

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/volume-891-january-2022-1-314
Articles Civil Procedure as the Regulation of Externalities: Toward a New Theory of Civil Litigation

The Power of Attorneys: Addressing the Equal Protection Challenge to Merit-Based Judicial Selection

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/print-archive/power-attorneys-addressing-equal-protection-challenge-merit-based-judicial-selection
This Comment responds to the equal protection challenge to merit selection. It argues that merit selection is constitutional by way of multiple exceptions, both recognized and implicit, to the “one person, one vote” principle. And though critics of merit selection often couch their arguments in prodemocratic terms, this Comment argues that merit selection—like the “one person, one vote” principle—promotes rather than thwarts the will of the people.

Standing Aside for Animals: Disentangling the Strategy and Goals of Animal Welfare Litigation

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/online-archive/standing-aside-animals-disentangling-strategy-and-goals-animal-welfare-litigation
In Naruto v. Slater (9th Cir. 2018), Naruto, a Celebes crested macaque from Sulawesi, Indonesia, snapped several “selfies” on wildlife photographer David Slater’s unattended camera.

The Abandonment of Adoptees

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/uclr-online/briefly-podcast/abandonment-adoptees
In 2020, YouTube influencer Myka Stauffer received widespread criticism when she revealed her family had given away her adopted son to another family. Host Kyra Cooper speaks with Professor Cynthia Hawkins (Stetson U.

Volume 88.8 (December 2021) 1791–2058

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/volume-888-december-2021-1791-2058
Articles Textual Rules in Criminal StatutesJoshua Kleinfeld - Professor of Law and (by courtesy) Philosophy, Northwestern University.

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