This article reviews the fate of truth and falsehood outside of the courtroom, largely—but not exclusively—in the United States. Describing opportunities and techniques to mislead or deceive on and off the Internet and social media, it focuses on the evolving social control response undertaken by institutions and increasingly by distributed networks.
This article, featuring Laura Beth Nielsen, suggests that current implementations of Title IX policies leave them ineffective to combat sexual assaults on campus.
This article by Traci Burch identifies the justification frame as a common narrative used by public officials to justify the use of lethal force by police.
Featuring Stephen Daniels, this article considers the Washington State Supreme Court’s creation of the ‘limited licensed legal technician’ (LLLT).
This article highlights growing concerns about jury fairness, emphasizing the need for improvements in jury selection, trial processes, and deliberations to ensure a fair justice system.
This article analyzes a survey of tenured law professors in the United States to track how gender and race are tied to salary outcomes.
Stanley S. Surrey was the most prominent mid-twentieth-century American tax law academic. Ajay K. Mehrotra presents his unpublished professional memoirs.
Traci Burch explores the likelihood that officer-involved killings affect protest in this article.
The season finale of Season 1 of Whose Law is it Anyway explores the impact of ABF’s research with our Executive Director, Ajay K. Mehrotra.