Articles, notes, and symposia pieces published in CLR’s print volumes.

Print Edition

Junk Cities: Resolving Insolvency Crises in Overlapping Municipalities

What would happen if the City of Chicago, the Chicago Public Schools, and Cook County all became insolvent at the same time? How should policy-makers and courts respond? This Article argues that the pension and budget crises that have left so many local governments deeply in debt have generated another looming problem: the prospect of…

Read More
Article, Volume 107, April 2019, Andrea Roth California Law Review Article, Volume 107, April 2019, Andrea Roth California Law Review

“Spit and Acquit”: Prosecutors as Surveillance Entrepreneurs

A high-stakes debate has emerged around the legislative expansion of forensic DNA databases, a move that would assist thousands of criminal investigations but also raise profound privacy issues. In Maryland v. King, where the Court upheld the constitutionality of forced DNA sampling of arrestees, Justice Alito described the Court’s 2013 decision as “perhaps the most…

Read More
Article, Volume 107, April 2019, Ben Grunwald, Jeffrey Fagan California Law Review Article, Volume 107, April 2019, Ben Grunwald, Jeffrey Fagan California Law Review

The End of Intuition-Based High-Crime Areas

In 2000, the Supreme Court held in Illinois v. Wardlow that a suspect’s presence in a “high-crime area” is relevant in determining whether an officer has reasonable suspicion to conduct an investigative stop. Despite the importance of the decision, the Court provided no guidance about what that standard means, and over fifteen years later, we…

Read More
Article, Volume 107, February 2019, Kristelia A. García California Law Review Article, Volume 107, February 2019, Kristelia A. García California Law Review

Copyright Arbitrage

Regulatory arbitrage—defined as the manipulation of regulatory treatment for the purpose of reducing regulatory costs or increasing statutory earnings—is often seen in heavily regulated industries. An increase in the regulatory nature of copyright, coupled with rapid technological advances and evolving consumer preferences, have led to an unprecedented proliferation of regulatory arbitrage in the…

Read More
Article, Volume 107, February 2019, Marin K. Levy California Law Review Article, Volume 107, February 2019, Marin K. Levy California Law Review

Visiting Judges

Despite the fact that Article III judges hold particular seats on particular courts, the federal system rests on judicial interchangeability. Hundreds of judges “visit” other courts each year and collectively help decide thousands of appeals. Anyone from a retired Supreme Court Justice to a judge from the U.S. Court of International Trade to a district…

Read More

The New World of Agency Adjudication

In 1946, the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) set forth the criteria for “formal” adjudication, requiring an administrative law judge to make the initial determination and the agency head to have the final word. That is the lost world. Today, the vast majority of agency adjudications Congress has created are not paradigmatic “formal” adjudications as set…

Read More

Arbitration Nation: Data from Four Providers

Forced arbitration has long been controversial. In the 1980s, the Supreme Court expanded the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), sparking debate about whether private dispute resolution was an elegant alternative to litigation or a rigged system that favors repeat-playing corporations. Recently, these issues have resurfaced, as the Court has decided a rash of cases mandating that…

Read More

#I🔫U: Considering the Context of Online Threats

The United States Supreme Court has failed to grapple with the unique interpretive difficulties presented by social media threats cases. Social media make hateful and threatening speech more common but also magnify the potential for a speaker’s innocent words to be misunderstood. People speak differently on different social media platforms, and architectural features of platforms…

Read More
Article, Volume 106, December 2018, Meghan Boone California Law Review Article, Volume 106, December 2018, Meghan Boone California Law Review

Lactation Law

Over the last twenty years, state legislatures have passed a number of laws designed to support and encourage breastfeeding, including laws that protect public breastfeeding and lactating employees in the workplace. Both sides of the political aisle cheered the passage of these laws, and more recent federal laws, as an unqualified positive for women, families…

Read More
Article, Volume 106, December 2018, Aaron Tang California Law Review Article, Volume 106, December 2018, Aaron Tang California Law Review

Rethinking Political Power in Judicial Review

For decades, scholars have argued that the proper judicial response when democratically enacted laws burden politically powerless minority groups is more aggressive judicial review. This political process approach, however, has fallen on deaf ears at the Supreme Court since the 1970s. Justice Scalia was thus accurate (if not politic) when…

Read More
Article, Volume 106, October 2018, Sean Farhang California Law Review Article, Volume 106, October 2018, Sean Farhang California Law Review

Legislating for Litigation: Delegation, Public Policy, and Democracy

When Congress enacts command-and-control regulation, it chooses between implementation through litigation and courts, through bureaucracy, or through a hybrid regime. Since the late 1960s, the frequency with which Congress has relied on civil litigation for frontline enforcement of statutes grew dramatically, and with it grew rates of federal statutory litigation and the role of courts…

Read More
Article, Volume 106, October 2018, Leah Litman California Law Review Article, Volume 106, October 2018, Leah Litman California Law Review

Remedial Convergence and Collapse

This Article describes and interrogates a phenomenon of spillovers across remedies—how the legal standards governing the availability of remedies in cases regarding executive violations of individuals’ constitutional rights, particularly in the area of policing, have converged around similar ideas that narrow the availability of several different remedies. A similar set of limits restricts the availability…

Read More
Article, Volume 106, October 2018, Sarath Sanga California Law Review Article, Volume 106, October 2018, Sarath Sanga California Law Review

A Theory of Corporate Joint Ventures

In a corporate joint venture, two corporations—often competitors—collaborate on a project. But how can corporations be partners and competitors at the same time? Though it sounds like a contradiction, such collaborations are commonplace. Many of the most familiar products come from corporate joint ventures, from high-technology like solid-state drives for laptops or rocket boosters for…

Read More