Aug 12 2024 Publication Federalist Society Review Declaring Independence to Secure Integrity: The Supreme Court Justices' Code of Conduct Michael S. McGinniss Federalist Society Review, Volume 25 [T]he judiciary is beyond comparison the weakest of the three departments of power; that it...
Aug 20 2024 Topics Article I Initiative • Jurisprudence • Federalism & Separation of Powers Blog Post How President Biden Is Impacting the Judiciary Despite a Changed Appointment Process Thomas Jipping Appointments to the federal bench are among a president’s most profound long-term legacies. Judges serve...
Jan 29 2021 Topics Administrative Law & Regulation Blog Post Student Blog Initiative Undoing the Trump Legacy, Fast: How Congress Could Use the CRA to Nix Trump-Era Regulations Nicole C. Hager The 2020 election gave Democrats control over the White House and both chambers of Congress...
Feb 8 2021 Podcast Necessary & Proper Podcast Necessary & Proper Episode 62: Congressional Review Act: First Branch Gets the Last Word Todd F. Gaziano, Susan E. Dudley After living in relative obscurity since its passage in 1996, the Congressional Review Act caught...
Oct 4 2021 Topics Civil Rights • Healthcare Blog Post News New U.S. Commission on Civil Rights Report: Racial Disparities in Maternal Health Alexander M. Heideman On September 15, 2021, the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights issued a new report entitled...
Dec 6 2022 Podcast The Judge’s Role in Choosing a Successor Josh Blackman, Michael Fragoso, David Lat, Robert Luther, Stephen Alexander Vaden 2022 National Lawyer's Convention Under the Constitution, two branches of government are formally involved in the selection of federal...
Aug 22 2024 Topics First Amendment • Founding Era & History • Free Speech & Election Law Blog Post Reviving the Lost Liberty: Why the Assembly Clause Matters Today Nathan Ristuccia Protests on a range of sensitive issues have roiled college campuses across the nation this...
Aug 23 2024 Topics Federal Courts • Telecommunications & Electronic Media • Federalism & Separation of Powers Blog Post The Sixth Circuit Stays the FCC’s Latest Net Neutrality Flip-Flop Randolph May At last! There’s now a good chance the two decades-old “net neutrality” wars may be...
Aug 26 2024 Publication State Court Docket Watch Indiana Supreme Court Upholds Law Restricting Which Candidates Can Appear on Primary Ballots Brian J. Paul, Melinda Hudson Indiana requires candidates on a primary election ballot to demonstrate party affiliation by either (1)...
Aug 28 2024 Topics Article I Initiative • Founding Era & History • Labor & Employment Law • Law & Economics Blog Post The Accidental Success of the NLRA: How a Law about Unions Achieved Its Goals by Giving Us Fewer Unions Alexander T. MacDonald In today’s politics, agreement is a rare beast. So it’s notable when it shows up. And...
Declaring Independence to Secure Integrity: The Supreme Court Justices' Code of Conduct
Michael S. McGinniss
Federalist Society Review, Volume 25
[T]he judiciary is beyond comparison the weakest of the three departments of power; that it...
Topics
How President Biden Is Impacting the Judiciary Despite a Changed Appointment Process
Appointments to the federal bench are among a president’s most profound long-term legacies. Judges serve...
Topics
Undoing the Trump Legacy, Fast: How Congress Could Use the CRA to Nix Trump-Era Regulations
The 2020 election gave Democrats control over the White House and both chambers of Congress...
Necessary & Proper Episode 62: Congressional Review Act: First Branch Gets the Last Word
Todd F. Gaziano, Susan E. Dudley
After living in relative obscurity since its passage in 1996, the Congressional Review Act caught...
Topics
New U.S. Commission on Civil Rights Report: Racial Disparities in Maternal Health
On September 15, 2021, the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights issued a new report entitled...
The Judge’s Role in Choosing a Successor
Josh Blackman, Michael Fragoso, David Lat, Robert Luther, Stephen Alexander Vaden
2022 National Lawyer's Convention
Under the Constitution, two branches of government are formally involved in the selection of federal...
Topics
Reviving the Lost Liberty: Why the Assembly Clause Matters Today
Protests on a range of sensitive issues have roiled college campuses across the nation this...
Topics
The Sixth Circuit Stays the FCC’s Latest Net Neutrality Flip-Flop
At last! There’s now a good chance the two decades-old “net neutrality” wars may be...
Indiana Supreme Court Upholds Law Restricting Which Candidates Can Appear on Primary Ballots
Brian J. Paul, Melinda Hudson
Indiana requires candidates on a primary election ballot to demonstrate party affiliation by either (1)...
Topics
The Accidental Success of the NLRA: How a Law about Unions Achieved Its Goals by Giving Us Fewer Unions
In today’s politics, agreement is a rare beast. So it’s notable when it shows up. And...