“Claiming Queer Liberty”
“Can Moore Be Limited?”
“A Fresh Look at Judicial Remedies in EU Equality Law and Beyond: The Untapped Possibility of Structural Injunctions”
“Constitutional Review of Federal Tax Legislation”
“Coordonner les retenues à la source : une solution possible pour lutter contre l’évasion fiscale”
“Effective Communication with Deaf, Hard of Hearing, Blind, and Low Vision Incarcerated People, Civil Rights Litigation”
“Law and a Crisis of Trust: Human Rights and the Negotiation of Article 2 of the Ireland-Northern Ireland Protocol”
“Editing, Vehicles in the Park, and the Virtue of Clarity”
- Legal Writing and Research
“A Response to Professor Choi’s Beyond Purosivism in Tax Law”
“Controlling Externalities: Ownership Structure and Cross-Firm Externalities”
“Justices May Clarify Expert Witness Confrontation Confusion”
“Nothing New Under the Sun? The Historical Origins of the Benefits Principle”
“Why the Supreme Court Avoided Using Traditional Tools of Statutory Interpretation in West Virginia v. EPA”
“Idealizing Abolition”
“Comment on Cong et al. “Tax loss harvesting with cryptocurrencies””
“Discretion in Immigration Law: A Partial Remedy for Stateless People in the United States”
“The Illusory Right to Counsel”
“Rosalyn Higgins on International Organizations and International Law: The Value and Limits of a Policy-Oriented Approach”
- International and Comparative Law
“The Three Lives of Mamengwaa: Toward an Indigenous Canon of Construction”
“Assessing Visions of Democracy in Regulatory Policymaking”
“Digital Simulacra, Bias, and Self-Reinforcing Exclusion Cycles”
“Reforming Shareholder Claims in Investor-State Dispute Settlement”
- International and Comparative Law
“The Early Years of Congress’s Anti-Removal Power”
“What Would Surrey Say? The Long Reach of Stanley S. Surrey”
“Trust, Trustworthiness, and Misinformation Shared by the Government”
“Legitimacy and Online Proceedings: Procedural Justice, Access to Justice, and the Role of Income”
“The Problematic Structure of Indigent Defense Delivery”
“States’ Duty Under the Federal Elections Clause And A Federal Right to Education”
- Constitutional Law