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Volume 110 - Issue 2

Immigration Law and the Regulation of Marriage

By Kerry Abrams. Full text here. This Article argues that much of federal immigration law functions as a form of family law. Although conventional wisdom holds that family law is state law, federal immigration law actually regulates marriages that involve immigrants much more extensively than state family law does, and often unintentionally. This Article maps the…

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Terms of Use

By Mark A. Lemley. Full text here. Electronic contracting has experienced a sea change in the last decade. Ten years ago, courts required affirmative evidence of agreement to form a contract. No court had enforced a “shrinkwrap” license, much less treated a unilateral statement of preferences as a binding agreement. Today, by contrast, it seems widely…

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The Jurisdictional Heritage of the Grand Jury Clause

By Roger A Fairfax, Jr. Full text here. For the first 150 years of our constitutional history, a valid grand jury indictment was deemed to be a mandatory prerequisite to a federal court’s exercise of criminal subject matter jurisdiction. Under that view of the Grand Jury Clause, a defendant in a federal felony case could neither…

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In Defense of Redistribution Through Private Law

By Daphna Lewinsohn-Zamir. Full text here. Most people agree that enhancing individuals’ well-being and promoting equality among them are important goals of the state. Much more controversial, however, is the question of which means should be used to redistribute welfare. An ongoing debate centers on whether redistribution should be attained solely through taxes and transfer payments,…

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