Mar 9 2022 Topics Intellectual Property Blog Post Student Blog Initiative Do Androids Dream of Patent Protections? American Patent Law and AI-Generated Inventions Sydney Dominguez Madigan The incredible ability of artificial intelligence (AI) has captured the minds of inventors, writers, scientists,...
Mar 8 2022 Topics Article I Initiative Blog Post News Fifth Annual Article I Writing Contest Winner Announced Zachary Austin, Nathan Kaczmarek For the Article I Initiative’s Fifth Annual writing contest, we levied perhaps our most challenging...
Mar 7 2022 Topics Federalist Society Blog Post The 2022 Joseph Story Award Christopher J. Walker The Federalist Society is delighted to announce that the winner of the 2022 Joseph Story...
Mar 7 2022 Topics Due Process Blog Post Student Blog Initiative The Rule of Completeness After Hemphill Mitchell K. Pallaki In Hemphill v. New York, the Supreme Court ruled that the Confrontation Clause bars the...
Mar 1 2022 Topics Administrative Law & Regulation • Corporations, Securities & Antitrust • Labor & Employment Law • Law & Economics Blog Post The Incoherence of the Biden Administration’s Labor-Market Policies The Biden administration is pushing two irreconcilable theories about labor markets. One theory argues that...
Feb 28 2022 Topics Federalist Society Blog Post News Deadline closing: Olin-Searle-Smith-Darling Faculty Fellowship The Olin-Searle-Smith-Darling Fellowship program offers top young lawyers with a scholarly bent the opportunity to...
Feb 28 2022 Topics State Courts • Federalism & Separation of Powers Blog Post Book Review: Who Decides? Edward B. Foley Judge Jeffrey Sutton (who I must disclose at the outset is a good friend despite...
Feb 24 2022 Topics Environmental Law & Property Rights Blog Post News Litigation Update: Louisiana v. Biden and the Social Cost of Carbon Garrett Kral On February 11, 2022, Judge James D. Cain, Jr., of the Western District of Louisiana,...
Feb 18 2022 Topics Civil Rights • Supreme Court Blog Post Out of Thin Air: Cummings v. Premier Rehab Keller and “Emotional Distress” Damages in Antidiscrimination Law Sarah Parshall Perry In perhaps one of the highest-profile Supreme Court terms in recent memory, one case, lacking...
Feb 18 2022 Topics Administrative Law & Regulation • Financial Services • Separation of Powers • Financial Services & E-Commerce Blog Post Go Ahead, You Do It For Us Wayne A. Abernathy Rule of Law or Rule of Experts? Almost exactly 9 years ago, I spoke...
Topics
Do Androids Dream of Patent Protections? American Patent Law and AI-Generated Inventions
The incredible ability of artificial intelligence (AI) has captured the minds of inventors, writers, scientists,...
Topics
Fifth Annual Article I Writing Contest Winner Announced
For the Article I Initiative’s Fifth Annual writing contest, we levied perhaps our most challenging...
Topics
The 2022 Joseph Story Award
The Federalist Society is delighted to announce that the winner of the 2022 Joseph Story...
Topics
The Rule of Completeness After Hemphill
In Hemphill v. New York, the Supreme Court ruled that the Confrontation Clause bars the...
Topics
The Incoherence of the Biden Administration’s Labor-Market Policies
The Biden administration is pushing two irreconcilable theories about labor markets. One theory argues that...
Topics
Deadline closing: Olin-Searle-Smith-Darling Faculty Fellowship
The Olin-Searle-Smith-Darling Fellowship program offers top young lawyers with a scholarly bent the opportunity to...
Topics
Book Review: Who Decides?
Judge Jeffrey Sutton (who I must disclose at the outset is a good friend despite...
Topics
Litigation Update: Louisiana v. Biden and the Social Cost of Carbon
On February 11, 2022, Judge James D. Cain, Jr., of the Western District of Louisiana,...
Topics
Out of Thin Air: Cummings v. Premier Rehab Keller and “Emotional Distress” Damages in Antidiscrimination Law
In perhaps one of the highest-profile Supreme Court terms in recent memory, one case, lacking...
Topics
Go Ahead, You Do It For Us
Rule of Law or Rule of Experts? Almost exactly 9 years ago, I spoke...