Why the Equality Act Remains Important to LGBTQ Equality
A Supreme Court victory is the beginning, not the end, of the fight against anti-LGBTQ discrimination.
The Americans with Disabilities Act Thirty Years Later
Experts address the ADA’s relevance to modern life, thirty years after its passage.
Week in Review
HUD reduces federal oversight of affordable housing, President Trump issues memo to exclude undocumented immigrants from the census, and more…
Federalism and Environmental Advocacy
The Supreme Court appears inconsistently enthusiastic about federal regulation and state-centric environmentalism.
What is Murphy’s Law?
A death penalty case could unsettle the borders of Native American reservations nationwide.
Another Explanation of Justice Gorsuch’s Bostock Vote
A recent case protecting LGBTQ rights may help the Supreme Court circumscribe the administrative state.
A Failure of Administrative Law in OSHA During the Pandemic
The hyper-deference courts provide to agencies has failed to protect workers from OSHA inaction amid COVID-19.
Revisiting the Constitutionality of Independent Agencies
The Supreme Court has destabilized principles on federal agencies’ structures and for-cause removal.
A Dream Deferred
An uncertain future awaits the federal program designed to benefit children of immigrants.
Closing a Concocted Clean Water Act Loophole
Congressional intent and clear statutory text promote common-sense enforcement of federal water regulations.
The Supreme Court’s 2019-2020 Regulatory Term
Scholars and practitioners highlight the Court’s most significant regulatory and administrative law decisions.
Week in Review
The Trump Administration rescinds its rule on visas for international students taking online classes, the Supreme Court authorizes the use of single-drug protocol for death penalties, and more…