An AI arms race and a laissez-faire approach to globalization enable a borderless labor market without labor protections and the capture of workers’ capital. Proposed redress includes: (1) workers’ ...
118 Yale L.J. 1900 (2009). Recent surveys and events indicate that judicial corruption could be a significant problem in the United States. This Note builds an ...
116 Yale L.J. 768 (2007) American historic preservationists are increasingly emphasizing the need to preserve not only prominent landmarks, but also the ...
113 Yale L.J. 1029 (2004) Terrorist attacks will be a recurring part of our future. The balance of technology has shifted, making it possible for a small band ...
112 Yale L.J. 1179 (2003) Focusing a discussion of intellectual property on a 300-year-old text may seem unusual, but John Locke's Two Treatises of Government ...
114 Yale L.J. 273 (2004) This Essay offers a framework to explain large-scale effective practices of sharing private, excludable goods. It starts with case ...
121 Yale L.J. 1168 (2012). This Note argues that the Twenty-Sixth Amendment did more than just lower the voting age. It also gave Congress the power to ...
122 Yale L.J. 384 (2012). Regularly invoked by the Supreme Court in diverse contexts, the maxim nemo iudex in sua causa—no man should be judge in his own ...
119 Yale L.J. 1351 (2010).Copyright 2025 The Yale Law Journal. All rights reserved Designed by Point Five. Build by Tierra Innovation ...
122 Yale L.J. 980 (2013). The debate over the Senate filibuster revolves around its apparent conflict with the principle of majority rule. Because narrow ...
113 Yale L.J. 1143 (2004) Today, application of the exclusionary rule to evidence obtained in reliance on a potentially invalid search warrant is governed by ...