Featuring Janice Nadler, this article argues that public attitudes toward regulation are shaped by a range of factors, including perceived effectiveness and legitimacy of regulatory agencies.
Janice Nadler examines the use of emotional evidence in court and analyzes the legal and ethical implications of such evidence.
This edition of Researching Law details the history of the ABF’s Doctoral and Postdoctoral Fellowship Programs.
In this article, the authors consider whether soda taxes are becoming a more common local policy throughout the country — like local smoking restrictions — or whether, instead, they will remain a limited legal phenomenon.
This resource compiles the public documents created by ABF’s Research Group on Legal Diversity, which was formed to investigate diversity in the legal profession.
This article, with Ajay K. Mehrotra, explores how the organized tax bar navigated serving private clients and defending the integrity of the tax system.
Tom Ginsburg and Aziz Huq explore the challenges faced by constitutional democracies and offer practical solutions for safeguarding freedom and democracy.
Ajay K. Mehrotra argues against the idea of the “overtaxed” American by comparing U.S. taxation levels to other developed countries with a value-added tax.
This article covers the history of Section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment, highlighting the ways that Congress used its enforcement to address civil rights issues in the early twentieth century.
This book explores how race, gender, and class intersected to shape the experiences of Black children in the juvenile justice system at its origin.