Every year, states send thousands of state prisoners and foster youth to live in confinement across state lines. This Note introduces interjurisdictional ...
Cross-sovereign policing allows federal, state, and local officers to exercise overlapping coercive authority while fracturing the structures that ...
Prevailing forms of originalism, which eschew much of history in practice, share much in common with recent attacks on “CRT” and DEI. To illustrate ...
Volume 135 of the Yale Law Journal inaugurates the Atkins Feature. This Introduction recovers three civil-rights cases litigated by Jasper Alston Atkins, ...
Native Nations were invisible in Felix Frankfurter and James Landis’s seminal piece, The Compact Clause of the Constitution, which helped entrench a ...
This year, we invite submissions focusing on novel developments in international law, broadly understood. We encourage submissions on a range of topics, including but not limited to how domestic ...
The Yale Law Journal is excited to invite applications for the third annual Academic Summer Grants program, which supports student scholarship at YLS. These grants will provide students with a stipend ...
Most accounts of trade law see legislation as the primary means of converting international commitments into U.S. law. Taking up trade in distilled spirits as a case study, this Essay shows that ...
114 Yale L.J. 855 (2005) Mainstream and revisionist scholars advance radically different histories of early judicial involvement in foreign affairs. By ...
Former Attorney General Eric Holder reflects on the Justice Department’s unique role in American society.
In several recent cases involving claims that security-clearance decisions violated plaintiffs’ constitutional rights, courts have seemed more willing to scrutinize these decisions, which are usually ...
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