Essay Animus Thick and Thin The Broader Impact of the Ninth Circuit Decision in Perry v. Brown by Nan D. Hunter on March 19, 2012 There is a concern among supporters of marriage equality, especially those in the legal academy, that the decision of the Ninth Circuit in Perry v. Brown was too good to be true or, perhaps, too clever to be sustainable. Judges Reinhardt and Hawkins crafted a decision that struck down Proposition 8 with reasoning that applies… Volume 64 (2011-2012)
Essay In Search of Cyber Peace A Response to the Cybersecurity Act of 2012 by Scott J. Shackelford on March 8, 2012 The Cybersecurity Act of 2012, which was recently introduced in the Senate Homeland Security and Governance Affairs Committee, is the latest legislative attempt to enhance the nation’s cybersecurity. If enacted, the bill would grant new powers to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to oversee U.S. government cybersecurity, set “cybersecurity performance requirements” for firms operating… Volume 64 (2011-2012)
Essay Physical and Regulatory Takings One Distinction Too Many by Richard A. Epstein on March 1, 2012 At this moment, it looks as though the law of eminent domain takings is in a quiet phase, as the Supreme Court has not recently taken any major case that examines the foundations of the field. One apparently settled area of takings jurisprudence deals with rent control, where the Court provides only scant protection to… Volume 64 (2011-2012)
Essay The Ninth Circuit’s Perry Decision and the Constitutional Politics of Marriage Equality by William N. Eskridge Jr. on February 22, 2012 In Perry v. Brown, the Ninth Circuit ruled that California’s Proposition 8 violates the Equal Protection Clause. Reacting to the state supreme court’s recognition of marriage equality for lesbian and gay couples, Proposition 8 was a 2008 voter initiative that altered the state constitution to “restore” the “traditional” understanding of civil marriage to exclude same-sex… Volume 64 (2011-2012)
Essay The 2011 Basketball Lockout The Union Lives to Fight Another Day—Just Barely by William B. Gould IV on January 25, 2012 Sports in 2011 was synonymous with labor-management relations, which became contentious in two of the three sports in which collective bargaining agreements expired—football and basketball. The National Basketball Association (NBA or the owners), for its part, made it clear that it would utilize a lockout as a means of economic pressure to obtain the kind… Volume 64 (2011-2012)
Essay The Iraq War, the Next War, and the Future of the Fat Man by Stephen L. Carter on January 16, 2012 When the last American combat troops departed Iraq in December, they left behind a disordered democracy that may not survive, along with a great deal of ethical confusion. The invasion of Iraq in 2003 represented the apotheosis of “anticipatory” self-defense—the theory that the use of armed force can be justified to prevent an attack that… Volume 64 (2011-2012)
Essay How to Reach the Constitutional Question in the Health Care Cases by Daniel J. Hemel on January 9, 2012 Although the Supreme Court has agreed to hear three suits challenging the 2010 health care reform legislation, it is not at all clear that the Court will resolve the constitutional questions at stake in those cases. Rather, the Justices may decide that a Reconstruction-era statute, the Tax Anti-Injunction Act (TA-IA), requires them to defer a… Volume 64 (2011-2012)
Essay Don’t Break the Internet by Mark Lemley, David S. Levine & David G. Post on December 19, 2011 Two bills now pending in Congress—the PROTECT IP Act of 2011 (Protect IP) in the Senate and the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) in the House—represent the latest legislative attempts to address a serious global problem: large-scale online copyright and trademark infringement. Although the bills differ in certain respects, they share an underlying approach and… Volume 64 (2011-2012)
Essay The Drone as Privacy Catalyst by M. Ryan Calo on December 12, 2011 Associated today with the theatre of war, the widespread domestic use of drones for surveillance seems inevitable. Existing privacy law will not stand in its way. It may be tempting to conclude on this basis that drones will further erode our individual and collective privacy. Yet the opposite may happen. Drones may help restore our… Volume 64 (2011-2012)
Essay Sweet Home Alabama? Immigration and Civil Rights in the “New” South by Kevin R. Johnson on December 5, 2011 In the next few weeks, the Supreme Court will decide whether to review the constitutionality of Arizona’s high-profile immigration enforcement effort, known popularly as S.B. 1070. Arizona’s law is simply the tip of the iceberg. State legislatures have passed immigration enforcement laws over the last few years at breakneck speed, and, generally speaking, have attempted… Volume 64 (2011-2012)
Essay Misconceptions About Lehman Brothers’ Bankruptcy and the Role Derivatives Played by Kimberly Summe on November 28, 2011 On November 4, 2011, Lehman Brothers’ creditors voted on Lehman Brothers’ liquidation plan, with approval from the bankruptcy court to follow on December 6, 2011. In the three years since the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers, which was the largest bankruptcy filing in U.S. history, Congress enacted the Dodd-Frank Act to prevent the failure of another… Volume 64 (2011-2012)
Essay Constitutions as Peace Treaties A Cautionary Tale for the Arab Spring by Allen S. Weiner on November 18, 2011 The December 2010 self-immolation of 26-year-old Tunisian Mohamed Bouazizi, a desperate response to the debilitating lack of economic opportunities for Tunisia’s youth and the pervasive sense of humiliation engendered by the state’s corrupt and degrading treatment of its citizens, tapped into deep popular frustration in Tunisia and throughout the Middle East. It sparked a series… Volume 64 (2011-2012)
Essay California’s De Facto Sentencing Commissions by Robert Weisberg on November 11, 2011 The concept of a sentencing commission as a mechanism for governance of a jurisdiction’s criminal justice system has achieved great prominence in recent years and been the subject of much important commentary. In light of California’s recent passage of A.B. 109, legislation that drastically overhauls the state’s sentencing and correctional systems, now is an ideal… Volume 64 (2011-2012)