“Using Transactional Practice Competitions to Introduce Students to Key Deal-Making Skills”
- Legal Writing and Research
“This is What Democracy Looks Like: Title IX and the Legitimacy of the Administrative State”
- Administrative Law
- Civil Rights
“Platform Procedure: Using Technology to Facilitate (Efficient) Civil Settlement”
- Law and Technology
“Taxing the Digital Economy: A Short Book Review”
- Tax Law
“Parsing and Managing Inconsistency in Investor-State Dispute Settlement”
- International and Comparative Law
“The Perils of Pandemic Exceptionalism”
- International and Comparative Law
- Corporate and Securities Law
- Environmental and Energy Law
“Ending Exclusionary Zoning in New York City’s Suburbs”
“Service Provision and the Study of Local Legislatures: A Response to Professor Zale”
- Constitutional Law
- Administrative Law
Energy Law: Concepts and Insights
“Unequal by Design: How the Pandemic Response Exacerbated America’s Two-Tiered System of Justice”
“Antitrust as Allocator of Coordination Rights”
- Intellectual Property and Antitrust
- Corporate and Securities Law
New Environmental Crimes Project Data Shows That Pollution Prosecutions Plummeted During the First Two Years of the Trump Administration
- Criminal Law
- Environmental and Energy Law
“Lawyers Democratic Dysfunction”
“Thin And Thick Conceptions of The Nineteenth Amendment Right to Vote and Congress’s Power to Enforce It”
“On Sexual Harassment in the Judiciary”
“Redefining Reproductive Rights and Justice”
International Encyclopedia of Comparative Law
- International and Comparative Law
Corporate Governance of Large Family Firms
- Corporate and Securities Law
“Incorporating Social Science into Criminal Defense Practice”
- Criminal Law
- Law and Social Sciences
“Resources for Foreign, Comparative, and International Legal Research”
- International and Comparative Law
- Legal Writing and Research
“Golden Parachutes and the Limits of Shareholder Voting”
- Corporate and Securities Law
Incarceration and the Law, Cases and Materials
“Spoiler Alert: When the Supreme Court Ruins Your Brief Problem Mid-Semester”
- Law and Social Sciences