Stanford Law Review
Most Recent Print Issue
Article
Shadow Banking and Securities Law
by Gabriel V. Rauterberg & Jeffery Y. Zhang
Shadow banking may be the single greatest challenge facing financial regulation. Financial institutions that function like banks, but fall outside the scope of banking regulation—aptly termed “shadow banks”—were at the heart of the Global Financial Crisis and most episodes of serious financial stress since then. Scholars have largely focused on one response to this problem:…
Article
Prosecutors in Robes
by Jacob Schuman
Criminal law enforcement is traditionally considered a core executive power. Yet federal district judges exercise this power tens of thousands of times a year by initiating proceedings to revoke probation and supervised release. “Prosecutors in robes” is an insult sometimes levied by criminal defense attorneys against judges who are allegedly biased in favor of the…
Article
Deputization and Privileged White Violence
by Ekow N. Yankah
A number of high-profile and racially charged killings, such as Trayvon Martin’s, Kenneth Herring’s, Ahmaud Arbery’s, and Jordan Neely’s, have been at the hands of civilians declaring themselves the law. These deaths stemmed from a phenomenon best described as “deputization.” Deputization describes a latent legal power that has empowered White people throughout American history to…
Note
Default Difficulties: The Case for Regulatory Intervention in Merchants’ Reliance on Default Rules That Harm Consumers
by Kate Reinmuth
This Note investigates how incomplete contracting between merchant parties may harm third-party consumers. After defining this phenomenon and noting several examples, this Note considers solutions to the social inefficiencies arising from these merchant-to-merchant contracts. To do so, this Note engages in a detailed case study of generic drug shortages and how incomplete failure-to-supply provisions affect…