“Compensatory Constitutionalism: The Function and Potential of Fundamental International Norms and Structures”
- International and Comparative Law
- Constitutional Law
“Women’s September 11th: Rethinking the International Law of Conflict”
- International and Comparative Law
- Human Rights
“The End of the Exclusionary Rule: Among Other Things: The Roberts Court Takes on the Fourth Amendment”
“Don’t Worry, I’ll Be Right Back: Temporary Absences of Counsel During Criminal Trials and the Rule of Automatic Reversal”
- Criminal Law
“WTO Government Procurement Rules and the Local Dynamics of Procurement Policies: A Malaysian Case Study”
- International and Comparative Law
“War and Peace: The 34th Annual Donald C. Brace Lecture”
- Intellectual Property and Antitrust
“The Economics of Open Access Law Publishing”
- Intellectual Property and Antitrust
“Corporate Governance in Groups of Companies”
“Documenting Discrimination in Voting: Judicial Findings Under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act Since 1982”
- Civil Rights
“L’écrit, les archives et le droit en Angelterre (IXe-XIIe siècle)”
- International and Comparative Law
- Legal History
“Why India?: World’s Largest Democracy, With an Anglo-American Common Law System”
- International and Comparative Law
“Cracking the Codex: Late Roman Legal Practice in Context”
“Directors’ Duties and Liabilities in Corporate Control and Restructuring Transactions: Recent Developments in Korea”
- Corporate and Securities Law
“From Laredo to Fort Worth: Race, Politics and the Texas Redistricting Case”
- Civil Rights
“Jurisdictional Competition in Criminal Justice: How Much Does It Really Happen?”
- Criminal Law
“Dibakonigowin: Indian Lawyer as Abductee”
“Same-Sex Marriage, Indian Tribes, and the Constitution”
“Looking to the East: The Stories of modern Indian People and the Development of Tribal Law”
“The Iron Cold of the Marshall Trilogy”
“Toward a Theory of Intertribal and Intratribal Common Law”
“Power, Authority, and Tribal Property”
“The Supreme Court and Federal Indian Policy”
“Benchmarking, Critical Infrastructure Security, and the Regulatory War on Terror”
- Administrative Law