Wrecking Ball Disguised as Law Reform: Alec’s Model Act on Private Enforcement of Consumer Protection Statutes
Introduction
Suggested Reading
#SayHerName: Racial Profiling and Police Violence Against Black Women
Andrea J. Ritchie{{Andrea J. Ritchie is a civil rights attorney who has led groundbreaking research, litigation, and advocacy efforts to challenge profiling, policing, and physical and sexual violence by law enforcement against women, girls and LGBTQ people of color for
Conservative Progressivism in Immigrant Habeas Court: Why Boumediene v. Bush is the Baseline Constitutional Minimum
Ever since Boumediene was decided federal judges have not applied the full force of all six of Boumediene’s holdings to immigrant habeas cases, and as a direct result immigration advocates lost their most important cases to date.
Labor Law and the NLRB: Friend or Foe to Labor and Non-Union Workers?
Wilma B. Liebman{{Former Member and Chairman, National Labor Relations Board, 1997-2011; visiting distinguished scholar Rutgers University School of Management and Labor Relations 2015-17; adjunct faculty, NYU Law School, spring 2015 and 2016. This article is based on remarks at the
In Response to "From the Picket Line to the Courtroom: A Labor Organizing Privilege to Protect Workers" by Nicole Hallet
Moshe Z. Marvit{{Moshe Z. Marvit is a fellow at The Century Foundation where he focuses on labor and employment law and policy.}} For years now, many in the labor movement have seen the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) as a