“The Civil Rights Litigation Clearinghouse: Origins and Goals”
“How Not to Do Things with International Law”
- International and Comparative Law
- Constitutional Law
- Human Rights
“A New Approach to Executory Contracts”
“Divine Justice and the Library of Babel: Or, Was Al Capone Really Punished for Tax Evasion?”
- Criminal Law
“Bankruptcy Fiduciary Duties in the World of Claims Trading”
“The International Implications of Wayfair”
- Tax Law
“Marriage Registrars, Same-Sex Relationships, and Religious Discrimination in the European Court of Human Rights”
- International and Comparative Law
- Human Rights
“Litigating Federal Habeas Corpus Cases: One Equitable Gateway at a Time”
- Litigation
“Outcome Prediction in the Practice of Law”
The Formation of the English Common Law: Law and Society in England from King Alfred to Magna Carta
- International and Comparative Law
“Insider Trading Law and the Ambiguous Quest for Edge”
- Corporate and Securities Law
“CEDAW in National Courts: A Case Study in Operationalizing Comparative International Law Analysis in a Human Rights Context”
- International and Comparative Law
“Historical Jurisprudence”
Principles of Secured Transactions
“The Crime of Rape in Military and Civilian Jurisdictions”
- Human Rights
Property
“Poor Wesley Hohfeld”
“Climate Change Litigation in the Federal Courts: Jurisdictional Lessons from California v. BP”
- Litigation
- Environmental and Energy Law
“In Memoriam: John W. Reed”
“Dialog About a New Asylum System”
- Human Rights
“Lawyer as Soothsayer: Exploring the Important Role of Outcome Prediction in the Practice of Law”
“Reputation and Litigation: Why Costly Legal Sanctions Can Work Better than Reputational Sanctions”
- Litigation
“Formulating a General Anti-Abuse Rule (GAAR) in Tax Legislation: Insights and Recommendations”
- Tax Law
“South by Southeast: Comparing the Development of In-House Legal Departments in Brazil and India”
- International and Comparative Law
- Corporate and Securities Law
The Legal Imagination: Studies in the Nature of Legal Thought and Expression
“Work Only We Can Do: Professional Responsibility in an Age of Automation”
- Legal Ethics and Professional Responsibility