Mar 23
Vol.
45
Issue 2

Note

No Bullying Allowed Here: Adopting a Misuse Doctrine to Defeat Trademark Bullies

Introduction In order to maintain trademark rights, trademark owners are encouraged to enforce and police their trademarks through civil actions. Enforcing trademark rights is encouraged and incentivized by the Lanham Act because failure to do so may result in harsh consequences for trademark owners. Some of these consequences include weakening of strength or abandonment of the mark, which may result in loss of trademark rights. However, large companies go above and beyond to police and protect their trademarks. At times,…

by Jessica Shechtman

Note

In Satan We Trust: The Satanic Temple’s Ongoing Crusade to Protect Abortion Rights

Introduction In the summer of 2022, the Supreme Court overruled the nearly fifty-year-old precedent of Roe v. Wade, eliminating the constitutional right to an abortion. This was one of several decisions in which the newly minted conservative supermajority undermined what could be seen as progressive precedents. At the same time, the Court has been elevating religious liberty claims and strengthening legal protections for religious individuals and organizations (predominantly Christian). For anybody who cares about the “so-called separation of . . . church and state,”…

by Bradley Koberg

Article

Terror and Tenderness in Criminal Law

Introduction Sentencing reductions, executive pardons, prison release programs, and progressive prosecutors have something in common. In word choice and design, they suggest tempering the violence of criminal law in a limited number of cases. The prisoner may be released early based on a record of good behavior. The President may grant clemency to those sentenced in an earlier era to decades in prison for a drug crime. The prosecutor may recommend drug court rather than a jail sentence to a…

by M. Eve Hanan

Article

Applying Militant Democracy to Defend Against Social Media Harms

Introduction Social media inflict multiple harms on liberal democracy. Online platforms thrive on propagating emotionally inflammatory content that maximizes user engagement. Too often that entails amplifying disinformation, hate speech, online extremism, and deep-seated partisan animosity. Tellingly, as documented in testimony before the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack, in the weeks following the 2020 presidential election, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Reddit knowingly enabled a firestorm of vitriolic far-right election denial on their platforms. In so doing, a…

by Neil Netanel

Article

Shadow Districts

Abstract Redistricting disputes—for congressional, state legislative, and local districts—have proven all-consuming in politics. Litigation over the legality of districts, under both federal and state law, is near constant when decennial redistricting occurs. But largely omitted from redistricting litigation and scholarship, however, are the districts drawn to elect members of statewide boards. These boards have outsized authority over some of the most salient disputes in politics today, with state boards of education setting policies for what can be taught in classrooms…

by Quinn Yeargain

Article

Privacy Shield 2.0—A New Trans-Atlantic Data Privacy Framework Between the European Union and the United States

Abstract This Article is the first to thoroughly examine the new adequacy decision for the Trans-Atlantic Data Privacy Framework (also known as “Privacy Shield 2.0”), including the relevant events and milestones ultimately leading to its adoption. The European Commission adopted the new Privacy Shield on July 10, 2023, to restore transatlantic data flows and commercial exchanges between the European Union and the United States. This Article first explores the holdings of the Court of Justice of the European Union in…

by Sara Gerke* & Delaram Rezaeikhonakdar*

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