The NYU Law Review invites members of the legal community to submit proposals for our annual symposium for the '26-'27 academic year. Please see the attached for instructions and deadlines. We look forward to reading your proposals!
The NYU Law Review invites members of the legal community to submit proposals for our annual symposium for the '26-'27 academic year. Please see the attached for instructions and deadlines. We look forward to reading your proposals!
In her Case Comment, Prof. @sharonbrett analyzes Justice Kavanaugh's concurrence in the recent Supreme Court case Noem v. Vasquez Perdomo, highlighting the distinctions undermining his reliance on City of Los Angeles v. Lyons and his skepticism of the plaintiffsβ Fourth Amendment claims.
Attention, authors! As of February 1, 2026, we've reopened our Scholastica portal for submissions. For more information, check out nyulawreview.org/submissions/. We look forward to reading your submisssions!
Federal regulations face new challenges from the federal judiciary, state AGs, presidents, and Congress. Former OIRA Administrator Richard Revesz outlines how he led the Biden administrationβs charge to make its regulations more resilient to attack
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Professor Bijal Shah explores how informal agency adjudication and enforcement discretion can be harnessed by the President to expand his power
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Lastly, weβre ringing in the new year with the final issue of Volume 100, highlighting symposium scholarship on administrative law
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Prof Trevor Morrison warns Trump v. US may grant absolute immunity, not just to the President, but to subordinates who exercise conclusive and preclusive powers in his name. Seeking to avoid this disastrous result, this piece charts a path forward
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Profs Ablavsky & Berger debunk the Administration's misuse of Indian law to attack birthright citizenship, showing how 19th-century debates over Native citizenship can't support limits on citizenship for children of immigrants
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Oona Hathaway, Madeline Babin, and Isabel Gensler explore the emerging realm of anti-satellite (ASAT) weaponry and discuss the lawful options available to states to respond to these growing threats under international law.
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Leo Soh & Jared Stehle offer an alternative to issue preclusion in mass tort MDLs that would capture efficiency gains while protecting the rights of litigants: issue presumption.
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Prof Nancy Morawetz discusses the meaning of 8 U.S.C. Β§ 1103(a)(1) and why it does not provide a basis for judicial deference in immigration cases after the Supreme Courtβs decision in Loper Bright overturning Chevron
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Our 2025 online scholarship examined deportation law, mass-tort MDLs, reparative damages for police violence, labor & industrial policy, anti-satellite threats, Indian law & birthright citizenship, substantive due process after MuΓ±oz, & presidential immunity
Check out our website: nyulawreview.org
Emily R. Yanβs student Note examines U.S. & U.K. museum policies on human remains, showing through case studies how regulatory reforms & public pressure can better facilitate repatriation.
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Micah Musser's student Note looks at the landscape surrounding civil liability for software developers and recommends a malpractice-based model to create accountability for buggy code.
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Regulation and stepped-up merger enforcement have left startup founders no exit. Profs Brian Broughman, Matthew Wansley & Sam Weinstein profile emergent corporate forms and rising financing strategies in VC-backed firms
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David Abrams & Priyanka Goonetilleke explore the empirical effect of a policy change by the Defender Association of Philadelphia that increased continuity in attorney representation for criminal defendants.
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Our November Issue featured our annual Brennan Lecture; pieces on public defense representation systems, antitrust and startups, civilian status in war; and a number of student notes
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Soorim βCatβ Song argues that MDLs should limit use of bellwether trials to estimation of proposed settlement amounts, and bellwether trials should be selected by statistical sampling methods to provide a representative sample of all cases in the MDL
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Lydia Schiller's student Note identifies a hole in First Amendment doctrine and discusses its implications for governmental efforts to silence speech based on the viewpoint of the speaker
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Joseph Brau analyzes inconsistent coordination requirements of emergency action provisions in federal environmental statutes, like the Safe Drinking Water Act, and proposes standardization strategies across the legislative, judicial, & executive branches
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Brittany Farr offers a new framework for thinking about race in 1L Contracts. Through a deep historical dive covering 129 casebooks and Walker-Thomas, she traces cultural scriptsβinherited ways of thinking that shape how we read and understand the world
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Our October issue covered racial inequality in integrated schools, race in contracts pedagogy, community supervision in Indian Country, environmental emergency powers, psychiatric commitment, coercive government speech, and bellwether trials in MDLs
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Soomin Shin argues that despite political pushback, the Fed should--and statutorily can--follow the ECB's footsteps in implementing green monetary policy
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Oona Hathaway, Alaa Hachem & Justin Cole examine how contested government recognition creates uncertainty in international law. They analyze the rights tied to recognition and argue for a centralized approach to determine who may act on behalf of a state
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Emily Chertoff & Jessica Bulman-Pozen argue the administrative state has a βsecond faceβ: a regime enabling agencies like ICE and the CIA to operate with broad power and little oversight as courts constrain the regulatory state
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Ben Bates analyzes the impact of increasingly complex advance notice bylaws passed by nearly 4,000 public companies and discusses reforms for reducing the resulting costs of shareholder elections while still filtering out bad actors
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Our June Issue examined election bylaws and board entrenchment, the administrative stateβs βsecond face,β rules for recognizing governments in international law, the non-enforcement functions of contract, and climate-conscious monetary policy at the Fed
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By illuminating the spatial imagination of the U.S. Supreme Court, Erica Liu reveals a key practice employed by the Court in its tribal jurisdiction cases that is central to empires past and presentβcartography
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Building on a renewed interest in state constitutionalism, Kate Evans' student Note argues that the Supreme Court should look at state constitutional decisions to evaluate what constitutes cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth Amendment
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Evan Meisler's Note critiques the prevailing approach to federal common law displacement and argues for a new framework analogous to state law preemption doctrine using the Courtβs foreign sovereign immunity opinion, TΓΌrkiye Halk Bankasi, as a case study
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