The Constitution and Online Exams: A New Fourth Amendment Take on Ogletree v....
By: Arthur Benne* Abstract In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, teachers across the United States adapted to online instruction. Unable to physically watch students during exams, schools devised new...
View ArticleAI and the Fine Print Disruption of Copyright
By: Nancy S. Kim* Abstract Generative AI raises foundational questions for copyright law. Companies use copyrighted works to train large language models, raising important issues regarding fair use,...
View ArticleRestructuring the Standard of Anti-Competitive Behavior with Tax-Free Spinoffs
By: Matthew Carder* Abstract Monopolistic behavior and violations of antitrust statutes are prominent issues in the United States. Large corporate entities strive to maximize the wealth of their...
View ArticleAfter Amgen: Examining the Supreme Court’s Impact on Patents for Therapeutic...
By: Noah Pollio* Abstract Therapeutic antibodies treat many serious medical conditions and represent an industry worth over $160 billion. Acquiring intellectual property protection is paramount for...
View ArticleSolving the Puppy Mill Problem: Using “Carrots and Sticks” to Encourage...
By: Ashlyn Browning* Abstract The puppy mill industry supplies puppies for the public to purchase. Puppy mills maximize profits by frequently breeding dogs kept in poor living conditions. These dogs...
View ArticleA Question of Constitutionality: Do Private Residential Lease Provisions...
By: Mitchell Perez* Abstract In District of Columbia v. Heller, the Supreme Court held that people in the United States have the constitutional right to keep and bear arms in their homes. After...
View ArticleOf Felons and the Mentally Ill: Range, § 922(g)(4), and the Dangerousness...
By: Colin L. Hitt* Abstract 18 U.S.C. § 922(g) is a major federal gun control law that prohibits certain groups of people from owning guns. Among the law’s provisions, § 922(g)(1) prohibits felons...
View Article“That’s how it is on this bitch of an earth”: The Possibilities, Pitfalls,...
By: Ben Phillips* Abstract This Article investigates the sixty references to Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot that have appeared in judicial opinions over the past half-century. The Article first...
View ArticleR.I.P.—A Financial Incentive to Protect Your Cadaver?
By: William A. Drennan* Abstract The “dead hand” can’t control what happens to the dead hand! You can direct where your property goes at death, but your cadaver is out of your hands.Previously, the...
View ArticleDebating Process: Assessing Recurrent Themes in Recent Supreme Court...
By: Stuart Chinn* Abstract Supreme Court justices has been persistent since at least the failed confirmation of Robert Bork in 1987. But, the breadth and depth of concerns about the process have only...
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