| Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year | Key Terms |
| Ali Hakim, Matei Alexianu |
NON-STATE SANCTIONS: PRIVATE INSTRUMENTS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW |
58 Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law 839 (October, 2025) |
Amid the catastrophic wars in Gaza and Ukraine, private organizations have arranged boycotts, bans, and other nonviolent measures to pressure Israel and Russia to comply with international law. These are just the latest examples of a long tradition of international law enforcement by non-state actors. But despite this rich history, international... |
2025 |
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| Lily Wang |
ONCE ACQUITTED, TWICE IN JEOPARDY: THE USE OF STATE CRIMES AS RICO PREDICATES |
77 Florida Law Review 1217 (May, 2025) |
Since its enactment in 1970, the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) has been the target of--and survived--many constitutional challenges. While RICO passes constitutional muster as enacted, federal prosecution that uses state acquittals as predicate acts under RICO is barred by the Double Jeopardy Clause. Justice Neil... |
2025 |
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| James Thomas Tucker, Jacqueline De León, Daniel Craig McCool |
OVERCOMING THE BARRIERS THAT NATIVE AMERICANS FACE IN THE VOTING PROCESS |
53 Urban Lawyer 243 (Spring, 2025) |
Since 1970, the Native American Rights Fund (NARF) has provided legal assistance to Indian tribes, organizations, and individuals nationwide who might otherwise have gone without adequate representation. NARF has successfully asserted and defended the most important rights of Indians and tribes in hundreds of major cases, achieving significant... |
2025 |
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| Jonathan Zasloff |
OWENS VALLEY REDUX: THE CASE FOR LOS ANGELES AND WHY IT MATTERS FOR THE PLANET |
53 Urban Lawyer 161 (Spring, 2025) |
The bourgeoisie has subjected the country to the rule of the towns. It has created enormous cities, has greatly increased the urban population as compared with the rural, and has thus rescued a considerable part of the population from the idiocy of rural life. Friedrich Engels & Karl Marx Everyone knows that Los Angeles stole its water from the... |
2025 |
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| Nestor M. Davidson , Timothy M. Mulvaney |
PER SE NON-TAKINGS |
104 Texas Law Review 103 (November, 2025) |
In the discourse on the Takings Clause, disputes over methodology have long formed a kind of proxy war, with per se rules ordinarily underwriting strong constitutional protection for property rights and ad hoc standards more often vindicating public interests. At a moment when the Supreme Court is increasingly embracing the rules end of this... |
2025 |
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| Austin Vertesch |
POSEIDON'S EXECUTIVE: HOW THE UNITARY EXECUTIVE THEORY COULD IMPACT COASTAL FISHERIES |
15 Arizona Journal of Environmental Law & Policy 198 (Summer, 2025) |
Recent constitutional challenges to Regional Fishery Management Councils have trimmed away various minor powers that council members previously possessed to regulate coastal fisheries. Currently, district and appellate courts have shown restraint by refusing plaintiffs extreme remedies that threaten to disrupt the unique system of appointments that... |
2025 |
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| Bethany R. Berger |
PREEMPTING COLONIALISM: THE CONSTITUTIONAL & STRUCTURAL DIMENSIONS OF FEDERAL INDIAN LAW PREEMPTION |
58 U.C. Davis Law Review 2045 (April, 2025) |
In federal Indian law, preemption is about preempting colonialism. This may seem strange; preemption classically blocks the authority of non-federal sovereigns. In Indian affairs, however, preempting state law creates room for Indigenous sovereignty, allowing tribal governments to shape the social, economic, and cultural conditions for their... |
2025 |
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| Jehan El-Jourbagy, Elissa Underwood Marek, Jeff Todd |
PREVENTING DISASTER THROUGH CORPORATE-COMMUNITY AGREEMENTS |
103 Oregon Law Review 429 (2025) |
Introduction. 430 I. Themes from Environmental Justice. 434 A. Vulnerable Communities Endure a Disproportionate Burden from Hazardous Business Activities. 435 B. Governmental Authorities Perpetuate Injustice. 437 C. Community Empowerment to Fight Injustice. 441 D. Narrow Conceptions and a Focus on Conflict Limit the Environmental Justice Frame. 445... |
2025 |
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| Beatrice Jauregui , University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada |
PRINCIPLED EXPERIMENTS IN JUST BEING: FROM POLICE OVERSIGHT TO COMMUNITY INTERSIGHT |
48 PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review 1 (November, 2025) |
Received: 23 June 2023 Revised: 27 March 2025 Accepted: 13 June 2025 Keywords: police | oversight | sovereignty | Indigenous studies | Mohawk | Gandhi This article compares ideals and practices of police oversight in two very different contexts--settler colonial North America and post colonial South Asia--to interrogate fundamental principles... |
2025 |
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| |
PROCEDURAL MEANS OF ENFORCEMENT UNDER 42 U.S.C. § 1983 |
54 Georgetown Law Journal Annual Review of Criminal Procedure 1282 (2025) |
Scope of Section 1983. Under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, a prisoner may seek redress against state and local (but not federal) officials when a person acting under color of state law deprives the prisoner of rights guaranteed by the Constitution or federal laws. The Court has provided at least three categories of conduct that qualify as under color of... |
2025 |
|
| Ezra Rosser |
PROGRESS AND THE TAKING OF INDIGENOUS LAND |
85 Ohio State Law Journal 623 (2025) |
The taking of Indigenous land to further other societal goals is so ubiquitous and fundamental to the American project that sometimes acts of dispossession are not even recognized as such. This Article argues that the generally accepted understanding of Hawaii Housing Authority v. Midkiff, a key case in the American takings law canon, overlooks... |
2025 |
|
| Jessie Big Knife |
PROTECTING MOTHER EARTH |
39-WTR Natural Resources & Environment 28 (Winter, 2025) |
My name is Jessie Big Knife; I am a member of the Chippewa Cree Tribe. I begin my story as many in my Tribe begin their stories--with an expression of gratitude. I am grateful to my grandparents and tribal elders for passing their stories to me; to each of you for reading this story; to the ABA Section of Environment, Energy, and Resources for... |
2025 |
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| Allie Verdesca |
PROTECTING NATIVE KNOWLEDGE SYSTEMS? IMPLEMENTING WIPO'S GRATK TREATY |
2025 Boston College Intellectual Property & Technology Forum 1 (14-Jul-25) |
Abstract: The World Intellectual Property Organization's (WIPO) Treaty on Intellectual Property, Genetic Resources and Associated Traditional Knowledge (GRATK) was passed in May 2024 to establish a mandatory patent disclosure requirement for inventions that are based on genetic resources and/or associated traditional knowledge. This Article... |
2025 |
|
| Jessica Faucher |
PROTECTION OR INDIFFERENCE: WHY THE ARIZONA v. NAVAJO NATION DECISION DOESN'T HOLD WATER |
54 Stetson Law Review 501 (Spring, 2025) |
In Arizona v. Navajo Nation, a 5-4 majority of the Supreme Court held under the Navajo Nation's 1868 Treaty with the United States that the United States has no affirmative duty to secure water for the Tribe. In doing so, the majority inflated the Navajo's request for relief, analyzed the Tribe's claim under the wrong legal framework, and reached... |
2025 |
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| Temple Stoellinger , Sam Johnson , Bryan Leonard , Eric C. Atkinson |
PUBLIC PLAYGROUNDS OR PRIVATE TRUSTS? THE FUTURE OF RECREATION ON STATE TRUST LANDS |
55 Environmental Law Reporter (ELI) 10294 (May/June, 2025) |
State trust lands, covering more than 40 million acres across the West, were granted to states with the primary purpose of generating revenue for public schools and other designated beneficiaries. These lands were historically managed for extractive uses such as grazing, timber harvesting, and mineral development. This Article examines how... |
2025 |
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| Erin Ryan |
PUBLIC TRUST PRINCIPLES AND ENVIRONMENTAL RIGHTS: THE HIDDEN DUALITY OF CLIMATE ADVOCACY AND THE ATMOSPHERIC TRUST |
49 Harvard Environmental Law Review 225 (2025) |
This article explores the confluence of two seemingly contrasting models of climate advocacy that are, in fact, one--claims for climate regulation based on (1) governmental public trust obligations to protect the atmosphere, and (2) environmental rights held directly by members of the public. The analysis explores how climate litigants are... |
2025 |
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| Joshua J. Schroeder |
PURE//EVIL PART ONE: HOW EVIL IS POPULARIZED AS TRUTH IN THE MARKETPLACE OF IDEAS |
59 UIC Law Review 137 (Fall, 2025) |
Introduction: Why the Antecedent of Belief is a First Amendment Interest. 138 I. Ghost Guns, Bitcoin Bills, and the Powers of the Librarian of Congress. 146 II. How to Release Internet Law from Milton's Public vs. Private Binary. 170 III. How to Use Penumbral Rights to Predicate Social Media Regulation. 192 Conclusion: How to Assert a Right to... |
2025 |
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| Ediberto Román , Ernesto Sagás |
RACE AND EMPIRE: THE UNITED STATES OVER PUERTO RICO |
103 Oregon Law Review 483 (2025) |
Abstract. 483 Introduction. 483 I. The Racial Basis of Empire. 485 II. The Racialized Legal Foundations of Empire. 490 III. The Commonwealth's Fiction of Self-Rule. 499 IV. The More Things Change. 506 Conclusion (and It Will Stay the Same). 517 |
2025 |
|
| Christian Zavardino |
RECOGNITION POLICIES, SELF-DETERMINATION, AND ACCESS TO LEGAL REDRESS FOR INDIGENOUS PEOPLES IN THE UNITED STATES, AUSTRALIA, AND CANADA: A COMPARATIVE STUDY |
8 Cardozo International & Comparative Law Review 209 (Winter, 2025) |
I. Introduction. 209 II. United States Federal Indian Laws Regarding Tribal Recognition Compared with New York State Indian Tribal Recognition Laws. 215 A. The Historical Background and Context of U.S. Federal and New York State Law. 216 1. Federal Indian Law and Policy. 216 a. The Modern Federal Recognition Process and State Recognition. 221 i.... |
2025 |
|
| Lisa Davis , Kirby Anwar |
RECOGNIZING ALL VICTIMS OF RACIAL AND GENDER APARTHEID IN THE DRAFT CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY TREATY |
9 Howard Human & Civil Rights Law Review 1 (2024-2025) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 2 I. Defining Protected Groups Under International Criminal Law. 10 A. Defining Protected Groups Under Genocide. 11 1. Objective And Subjective Criteria: Determining Protected Group Membership. 16 2. The Persistence Of The Genocide Convention's Outdated Limitations On Protected Groups. 23 3. Calls For A... |
2025 |
|
| Cynthia Nicoletti |
RECONSTRUCTING THE MEANING OF "FORTY ACRES AND A MULE" |
27 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law 522 (June, 2025) |
This article offers a new interpretation of the land grant to freedpeople contained in General William T. Sherman's Special Field Orders No. 15. Issued in January 1865 at the end of the Civil War, Sherman's Orders are widely considered to be the origin of the government promise to endow freedpeople with forty acres and a mule as they transitioned... |
2025 |
|
| Ally Coll |
REDEFINING EFFICIENCY IN THE DOGE ERA: THE VALUE OF EQUITABLE EVIDENCE-BASED POLICYMAKING IN FEDERAL AGENCIES |
20 Harvard Law & Policy Review 1 (Summer, 2025) |
In one of the first actions of his second term, President Donald Trump established the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and tasked it with the mission of making government work for the people again. This basic theoretical goal is shared by a growing bipartisan group of policymakers and practitioners who have called for implementing... |
2025 |
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| Jaclyn Neo, Diego W. Arguelhes |
REDISCOVERING THE CONSTITUTIONAL PREAMBLE? HOW JUDGES ENLIST PREAMBLES TO LEGITIMATE TRANSFORMATIVE INTERPRETATIONS |
73 American Journal of Comparative Law 236 (Summer, 2025) |
Despite being increasingly ubiquitous inhabitants of the constitutional realm, the role of preambles in judicial decision-making remains under-studied in comparative constitutional scholarship. In this Article, we look at how these texts have been employed by courts, regardless of--and often contrary to--their formal legal status and the political... |
2025 |
|
| Leonard C. Brahin |
REDISTRICTING AND THE ORIGINS OF THE GOOD FAITH PRESUMPTION |
30 Barry Law Review 1 (Spring, 2025) |
Evidentiary and substantive presumptions are a well-established tool that courts employ when addressing a variety of legal problems. These presumptions streamline litigation, avoid debate over minor disputes, and ensure that the most important issues can be addressed. But these same presumptions just as frequently close the courthouse doors on... |
2025 |
|
| Sean M. Kammer |
REFLECTIONS ON THE IMPORTANCE OF CRITICAL THEORY TO TEACHING ENVIRONMENTAL LAW |
70 South Dakota Law Review 40 (2025) |
The freedom of students to learn about critical approaches to understanding their world is under sustained political attack. In this time of increasing environmental peril and political dysfunction, Professor Sean M. Kammer reflects upon the importance of critical theory (including Critical Race Theory) to understanding--and ultimately... |
2025 |
|
| Nicholas A. Smith |
REGULATING BY CONTRACT: A FUNCTIONS-BASED APPROACH TO ANTI-ESG LAWS |
21 NYU Journal of Law & Business 305 (Spring, 2025) |
With the rise of stakeholder capitalism since the turn of the century, companies have adopted policies and practices related to environmental, social, and governance (ESG) issues. Parties wishing to do business with such companies are often required to agree to contract provisions related to these ESG policies, such as committing to reduce their... |
2025 |
|
| Jason Anthony Robison |
RELATIONAL RIVER: ARIZONA v. NAVAJO NATION & THE COLORADO |
72 UCLA Law Review 116 (May, 2025) |
It is not every day the U.S. Supreme Court adjudicates a case about the water needs and rights of one of the Colorado River Basin's thirty tribal nations and the trust relationship shared by that sovereign with the United States. Yet just that happened in Arizona v. Navajo Nation in June 2023. As explored in this Article, the Colorado is a... |
2025 |
|
| Aman K. Gebru |
REMEDIATING CULTURAL APPROPRIATION |
57 Arizona State Law Journal 859 (Fall, 2025) |
Accusations of cultural appropriation--using cultural symbols from a culture that is not one's own without consent, understanding, or respect--have sparked fervent social, ethical, and political debates. While the issue does not seem to be a legal one at first blush, there's a growing area of legal scholarship on the topic. This Article builds on... |
2025 |
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| Maria Trubetskaya |
REPARATIONS FOR INCULCATION: DECONSTRUCTING THE SUPREME COURT'S TACIT ENDORSEMENT OF WHITE HEGEMONY IN SCHOOLS AND REPARATIONS AS A PATH FORWARD |
30 National Black Law Journal 101 (2025) |
This comment argues that the law constructs the education system as a hegemonic device for the inculcation of ideologies that reproduce generational inequality and white supremacy. The Supreme Court created a values paradox wherein education is revered as the most important medium to prepare students for intelligent participation in the democratic... |
2025 |
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| Cynthia D. Bond |
REPRESENTATIONS OF LAW AND RACE REVISITED: AN UPDATED SURVEY OF RECENT AMERICAN FILM |
30 University of Denver Sports and Entertainment Law Journal 51 (Spring, 2025) |
This article revisits the author's Laws of Race/Laws of Representation: The Construction of Race and Law in Contemporary American Film, 11 Univ. Tex. Rev. of Sports and Ent. L. 219 (2010), surveying recent developments in mainstream films' depiction of the interrelated narratives of law and race. This article applies to current film the 2010... |
2025 |
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| Neoshia R. Roemer |
REPRODUCING CITIZENSHIP |
27 Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law 31 (Fall, 2025) |
I. Introduction. 31 II. Reproductive Justice and the Order. 34 A. The Reproductive Justice Framework. 35 B. The Order and its Context. 38 C. The Mythical Immigrant: the Imagined Illegal Immigrant. 41 III. The Rights of Citizens (and Noncitizens). 46 A. The Right to Procreate and Parent. 48 B. The Right to Citizenship. 53 C. Defining Citizenship... |
2025 |
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| Journey Alexia Hikialani Matos |
RETURNING HAWAIIAN LAND TO HAWAIIAN HANDS |
22 Pittsburgh Tax Review 261 (Spring, 2025) |
Native Hawaiians, or Knaka Maoli, have faced numerous obstacles in recent years to maintaining their cultural tradition of keeping a close physical and spiritual relationship with their ancestral land in Hawaii. Before the arrival of missionaries, Hawaiians had for centuries practiced a polytheistic religion that had roots in the environment... |
2025 |
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| Adam Crepelle |
ROBOTS AND (INDIAN) RESERVATIONS: A JURISDICTIONAL NIGHTMARE WAITING TO HAPPEN |
22 Northwestern Journal of Technology & Intellectual Property 313 (Spring, 2025) |
Abstract--Advances in artificial intelligence are expanding the possibilities of robots. Indeed, robots are now engaging in numerous activities previously thought to require human cognition, such as driving cars and diagnosing diseases. Scholars have published numerous articles examining the intersection of law and robots across myriad fields.... |
2025 |
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| Regina M. Buono , Shannon Roesler |
SACKETT AND BEYOND: READING RECENT SUPREME COURT DECISIONS THROUGH THE LENS OF ADAPTIVE GOVERNANCE |
38 Tulane Environmental Law Journal 279 (Spring, 2025) |
I. Introduction. 279 II. Adaptive Governance for Resilience of Social-Ecological Systems. 282 III. What Features Make Law Maladaptive for Social-Ecological Resilience?. 286 IV. Conclusion: Disrupting Resilience in Constitutional Governance. 293 |
2025 |
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| Margo A. Bagley, Justin Hughes |
SECRET TRADITIONS AS TRADE SECRETS |
66 Harvard International Law Journal 103 (Summer, 2025) |
In 2024, World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) member states adopted two new treaties, both of which were groundbreaking in their mention of subject matter discussed in WIPO meetings for 25 years but never acted on until now: Traditional Knowledge (TK). Most simply, TK can be said to comprise knowledge (e.g., agricultural, medical,... |
2025 |
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| Isaac Cui |
SEPARATION-OF-POWERS FORMALISM AND FEDERAL INDIAN LAW: THE QUESTION OF EXECUTIVE ORDER RESERVATIONS |
77 Stanford Law Review Online 205 (June, 2025) |
The creation of Indian reservations largely coincided with and was facilitated by the development of presidential authority to withdraw public lands for Indian purposes. Of the roughly 42.8 million acres of total tribal trust lands in 1951, slightly over 23 million were set aside through executive order. That number far dwarfs any other method by... |
2025 |
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| Thomas P. Schlosser |
SEPTEMBER 2023 -- AUGUST 2024 |
13 American Indian Law Journal 43 (May, 2025) |
I. INTRODUCTION. 3 II. UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT. 3 III. OTHER COURTS. 4 A. Administrative Law. 4 B. Child Welfare Law And ICWA. 19 C. Contracting. 29 D. Employment. 38 E. Environmental Regulations. 41 F. Fisheries, Water, FERC, BOR. 48 G. Gaming. 72 H. Jurisdiction, Federal. 79 I. Religious Freedom. 99 J. Sovereign Immunity. 108 K. Sovereignty,... |
2025 |
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| Devon W. Carbado , Russell K. Robinson |
SFFA: BAKKE'S CHICKENS COMING HOME TO ROOST |
113 California Law Review 1031 (June, 2025) |
The Supreme Court's decision in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard will undoubtedly generate enormous debate. Much of that debate will likely focus on whether Chief Justice Roberts effectively overruled the very precedent he purported to apply. Whether the Chief Justice evidenced fidelity to the affirmative action case law he inherited is not... |
2025 |
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| Nathan Lee |
SHOULD CENTRAL PARK HAVE STANDING? |
15 Arizona Journal of Environmental Law & Policy 259 (Summer, 2025) |
Expanding conceptions of legal personhood and the pressing need for creative approaches to remedying environmental damage have led to a resurgence in the Rights of Nature Doctrine. Under the Rights of Nature framework, the environment itself becomes a plaintiff with recognizable rights and causes for action. The Rights of Nature literature has thus... |
2025 |
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| Katya Lancero Norris |
SHOULD TRIBES "BAN THE BOX"? |
61-AUG Arizona Attorney 22 (July/August, 2025) |
So-called ban-the-box legislation (also sometimes called fair chance legislation) arose from the idea that employers should consider a candidate's qualifications first--without the stigma of a checked box on a job application reflecting a history of a past criminal arrest or conviction. In this way, banning the box provides a second chance for... |
2025 |
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| Paul Umbaugh |
SPORTS BETTING IN FLORIDA: LET'S BET ON IT |
19 Florida A & M University Law Review 173 (Summer, 2025) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 174 I. The History and Current Status of Sports Betting at the Federal Level and Indian Tribe's Involvement. 176 A. The Federal Ban on Sports Betting and its Repeal. 177 B. Tribal Gaming in the United States. 178 II. The Supreme Court should Rule that the Florida Sports Betting Compact with the Seminole Tribe... |
2025 |
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| Wilfred U. Codrington III |
SPRINGBOARD TO ARTICLE V (OR ELECTORAL DEMOCRACY AND THE END OF CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT IN THE NATION AND STATES) |
19 Harvard Law & Policy Review 375 (Spring, 2025) |
Drafted in exceedingly sparing terms and notoriously difficult to amend, the U.S. Constitution is falling short in one of the most important functions of a government charter: establishing and maintaining a fair and just electoral framework--marked by rules that promote the values of equality, participation, competition, and transparency in... |
2025 |
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| Tyler Mebane |
STANDING IN THE WRONG LINE: NAVAJO NATION WATER RIGHTS AFTER ARIZONA v. NAVAJO NATION |
57 Arizona State Law Journal 353 (Spring, 2025) |
Close to a thousand years ago, the ancestors of the Navajo Nation arrived in what would become the American Southwest. They settled in the Colorado River basin, using the river's water to support agriculture and establish a homeland for themselves in the region. Pushed out by the encroachment of the United States as it expanded West, the Navajo... |
2025 |
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| Kirsten Matoy Carlson |
STATUTES AND SPECIAL INTERESTS |
119 Northwestern University Law Review 1367 (2025) |
Abstract--Who really decides what statutes say? Most Americans think that special interests play an outsized role in our lawmaking processes. Yet empirical studies have produced little evidence that special interests get everything, or even most of, what they ask for from Congress. This Article takes an innovative new approach to tackling the... |
2025 |
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| Sadie C. Pate |
STOLEN STREAMS: TRIBAL WATER RIGHTS AND JUDICIAL TAKINGS |
49 Harvard Environmental Law Review 655 (2025) |
Tribal water rights are fundamental to tribal existence and self-determination. Yet, despite treaty protection and federal recognition of these rights for over a century, tribal communities still struggle to realize their water rights. Forced to litigate in state courts under the McCarran Amendment, tribes frequently see those rights systematically... |
2025 |
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| Gregory Ablavsky |
STRUCTURAL FEDERAL INDIAN LAW AFTER BRACKEEN |
67 Arizona Law Review 291 (Summer, 2025) |
You know, when it comes to Indian law, most of the time we're just making it up, Justice Scalia once observed. This admission echoed long-standing critiques of the Supreme Court's jurisprudence in the field, but these anxieties did not trouble the Court--until recently. Over the past two decades, the Court has begun to revisit the field's... |
2025 |
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| Ian Bartrum |
STRUCTURAL ORIGINALISM: A SECOND AMENDMENT CASE STUDY |
27 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law 846 (September, 2025) |
Originalism is having a national moment, even if it is not entirely clear what the word means. What should we be originalist about? The leading academic approach asks us to parse the communicative content of text ratified in a very different linguistic culture; then construct a modern legal meaning consistent with our semantic speculations. Too... |
2025 |
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| Rachel Mucha |
STUDENTS FOR FAIR ADMISSIONS AND THE FUTURE OF AFFIRMATIVE ACTION FOR WOMEN IN AMERICAN AGRICULTURE |
113 California Law Review 1797 (October, 2025) |
The federal government has a well-documented history of discrimination against women in American agriculture. And the government now has many compelling reasons--from remedying past discrimination to shoring up food security--to provide targeted support to women farmers. But the Biden Administration's attempts to provide targeted financial support... |
2025 |
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| William N. Eskridge Jr. |
SUPER-CANONS |
78 Vanderbilt Law Review 727 (April, 2025) |
Especially since 2017, the Roberts Court has been imposing a new regime onto American public law. The new regime is paring back the authority of expert agencies to implement their delegated responsibilities, reducing the power of Congress to make long-term delegations while enhancing the power of the states and the President (and the U.S. Supreme... |
2025 |
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| Hannah Marquis |
TANGIBLE RECOMMENDATIONS TO EXECUTE CALIFORNIA ASSEMBLY BILL 3099: A PROACTIVE APPROACH TO COMBATTING THE MISSING AND MURDERED INDIGENOUS PEOPLE CRISIS |
58 Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review 753 (Summer, 2025) |
Indigenous people across the United States experience disproportionately high rates of violence and relatedly high rates of murders and disappearances. This phenomenon has been coined the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Peoples Crisis (MMIP), and as a state with one of the largest Indigenous populations, California also has one of the largest MMIP... |
2025 |
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