Statutory Interpretation

Online
Essay
Revisiting the Fairness of the Fair Housing Act: Whose Consideration is Enough?
Tahnee Thantrong Monnin
Tahnee Thantrong Monnin is a Managing Editor of the University of Chicago Law Review and a J.D. Candidate in the University of Chicago Law School Class of 2023. She received her B.A. from Duke University in 2018.

She thanks Professor Lee Fennell for her thoughtful advice and insight, as well as Jay Clayton, Matthew Makowski, Claire Rice, and Virginia Robinson for their comments on previous drafts. She also thanks the incredible editors of the Law Review for their continued support and guidance.

In 1975, Lawrence Salisbury moved into his father’s mobile home, which was situated on rented land owned by the city of Santa Monica.

Online
Essay
Can Stealthing Qualify? Navigating Rape Exceptions in States’ Abortion Bans
Erin Yonchak
Erin Yonchak is a J.D. Candidate at the University of Chicago Law School, Class of 2024.

She thanks the exceptional editors of the University of Chicago Law Review Online team. Erin dedicates this Essay to all victims of sexual violence and to all people whose abortion access is in jeopardy.

TW: Rape, Sexual Assault
In June 2022, Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization overruled Roe v. Wade (1973) and Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey (1992), leaving states with complete discretion in determining the legality of abortion.

Online
Essay
Expecting the Unexpected: Moore v. British Airways and Defining an Accident Under the Montreal Convention
Kelsey Roberts
Kelsey Roberts is a J.D. Candidate at the University of Chicago Law School, Class of 2024.

She thanks Benjamin Klein, Matthew Makowski, Annie Kors, and the University of Chicago Law Review Online team. She also thanks her parents for their support and for listening to her ramble on about the law.

When a passenger suffers injuries on an international flight, any claim for damages against the airline must be brought under the Montreal Convention, a multilateral treaty governing the liability of air carriers.

Online
Essay
Examining Causation Standards in False Claims Act Cases Predicated on Anti-Kickback Statute Violations
Josh J. Leopold
Josh J. Leopold is a J.D. Candidate at the University of Chicago Law School, Class of 2024.

He thanks Matthew Makowski, Abigail Barney, Virginia Robinson, and the entire University of Chicago Law Review Online staff for their insightful comments.

Congress has decided that awarding kickbacks to doctors to influence medical decisions is unacceptable, at least when the underlying medical care is reimbursed at the government’s expense.

2
Essay
Ambiguous Statutes
Saul Levmore
William B. Graham Distinguished Service Professor of Law, The University of Chicago Law School

I benefited greatly from conversations with Zak Rosenfield, Rosalind Dixon, and Julie Roin.

2
Article
76.2
The Modernizing Mission of Judicial Review
David A. Strauss
Gerald Ratner Distinguished Service Professor of Law, The University of Chicago Law School

I am grateful to participants in workshops at the Harvard, University of Virginia, University of Michigan, and University of Chicago Law Schools, and to Mary Anne Case, Barry Cushman, Elizabeth Emens, Richard Fallon, Barry Friedman, Don Herzog, Christine Jolls, Michael Klarman, Jacob Levy, Eric Posner, Richard Primus, Adam Samaha, Kirsten Smolensky, Geoffrey Stone, Cass Sunstein, John Sylla, and Adrian Vermeule for comments on earlier versions of this Article. I also thank Mark Sherman and Karen Courtheoux for excellent research assistance and the Sonnenschein Faculty Fund at The University of Chicago Law School for financial support.

2
Article
76.3
Explaining Theoretical Disagreement
Brian Leiter
John P. Wilson Professor of Law and Director of the Center for Law, Philosophy, and Human Values, The University of Chicago Law School

Thanks to John Gardner, Leslie Green, Mark Greenberg, and Scott Shapiro for useful discussion of these issues on various occasions, and to Greenberg for quite helpful discussion of an early draft of this Article. I also benefited from questions and comments by students in my Spring 2007 Jurisprudence class at the University of Texas at Austin when we discussed this topic. Workshop audiences at a variety of venues provided valuable feedback and discussion: the Faculty of Law and Program in Social and Political Theory, Research School of Social Sciences, Australian National University; UCLA School of Law; the Institute for Philosophical Investigation, National Autonomous University of Mexico; the jurisprudence departments of the Faculties of Law at the Universities of Genoa in Italy and Girona in Spain, and the University of Chicago Law School. Of the many who helped me on these occasions, I should mention especially Peter Cane, Riccardo Guastini, Larry Laudan, Adam Muchmore, Martha Nussbaum, Giovanni Ratti, Jane Stapleton, and Ed Stein.