Fixing Antitrust’s Indirect Purchaser Rule
A recent Supreme Court case allows end users to sue for antitrust violations.
Endangered Deference
The Supreme Court’s recent Weyerhaeuser decision will add to the administrative costs of protecting endangered species.
The Supreme Court Holds the Line on Truth over Pretext
The unprecedented deference conferred by Department of Commerce v. New York sets the tone for cases to come.
Correcting a Persistent Myth About the Law that Created the Internet
Scholar argues that section 230 of the Communications Decency Act applies to internet platforms regardless of their “neutrality.”
The Sound of Silence
A three-way split in Virginia Uranium v. Warren presents conflicting views of preemption.
A Missed Opportunity in Securities Fraud Enforcement
The Supreme Court failed to clarify a key aspect of fraud claims in Lorenzo v. SEC.
Deference After Kisor
A recent Supreme Court decision could reshape judicial deference of agency actions.
A Turning Point in the Deference Wars
The Supreme Court preserved agency deference in Kisor v. Wilkie.
Gundy, Nondelegation, and Never-Ending Hope
The intelligible principle standard lives to see another day—but for how long remains unclear.
What Does Risk-Based Regulation Mean?
Risk-based regulation requires regulators to choose which decision-making principles to apply.
The Problem of Health Information Inequity
Scholar argues that the poor and elderly are most vulnerable to health data security breaches.
Could the Common Law Help Combat Climate Change?
Scholars argue that as EPA deregulates, nuisance suits could replace traditional environmental regulation.