Is There a Light at The End of the Dark-Pattern Tunnel?
Lindsay Wilson 91 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 1048 In the wake of the AMG Capital Management, LLC v. FTC Supreme Court decision... Read More
Two Hooligans Forever Barred: When the Immaterial Becomes Material
Olive Lee 91 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 1009 As victims of persecution, war, and forcible displacement, refugees and asylees are unprotected by... Read More
Racism and Trademark Abandonment
Jon J. Lee 91 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 932 As companies have come to terms with the fact that their brand names... Read More
The Problematic Forgotten Buyback
Yesha Yadav 91 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 864 Totaling in excess of $100 billion dollars in transactions annually, debt buybacks allow a... Read More
Constitutional Double Standards: The Unintended Consequences of Reducing Police Presence
Ric Simmons 91 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 817 In the wake of massive protests in the summer of 2020, many municipalities began... Read More
Schutte & Polansky: Shifting the Landscape of False Claims Act Litigation & Compliance
The Supreme Court made waves in the False Claims Act litigation and compliance world this term, affirming the government's near unfettered dismissal authority and eliminating a key defense in cases involving ambiguous statutes or regulations.
A State Court Trial Judge’s Thoughts on Samia v. United States: Not Entirely Consistent with Crawford v. Washington
Samia promotes judicial economy at the cost of the Sixth Amendment’s right of confrontation.
The Surprising Success of the Alabama Plaintiffs in the Voting Rights Case Allen v. Milligan
In the recent Supreme Court term, the conservative majority on the Court prevailed on a significant number of controversial decisions. In the area of minority voting rights, however, the Court surprised experienced observers by ruling in favor of Alabama minority plaintiffs in a major redistricting case.
How Stalking Became Free Speech: Counterman v. Colorado and the Supreme Court’s Continuing War on Women
The Counterman decision suggests that when it comes to women’s speech and safety, the more intractable problem with the current Supreme Court is not the forces that divide it, but those that unite it.