Patent Enforcement in Cyberterritories

3D printing technology has exposed a gap in patent protection. Thanks to 3D printers, physical products can be created and sold digitally in the form of CAD files, and consumers printing the products are effectively manufacturers. But current law would treat a product patent as being directly infringed only when the physical product is made, used, offered for sale, or sold, making it difficult to target the digital source of the infringement. While past scholarship has fashioned new legal constructs… Read More

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly Behavior

Shaming is usually referred to as the publication of perceived anti-social or illegal behavior of an individual in order to condemn or humiliate him. It has some virtues: it makes it harder for people to get away with wrongful behavior, and it promotes justice. It also promotes freedom of expression and enables efficient deterrence. By spreading information on the behavior of individuals, shaming encourages one to maintain his reputation and facilitates beneficial transactions. Finally, it helps the public to avoid… Read More

We The People: These United Divided States

INTRODUCTION In the wake of President Trump’s announcement that he will withdraw the United States from the 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change, then-California Governor Jerry Brown called on the President to fight climate change or to “get out of the way” while the rest of the world works to reduce emissions and invest in clean energy. Similarly, former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg—now a United Nations (U.N.) Special Envoy for Cities and Climate Change—said, “If Washington won’t lead,… Read More

The Special Norms Thesis: Why Congress’s Constitutional Decision-making Should Be Disciplined by More Than the Usual Norms of Politics

Even if we accept that the most basic rules of fair play do not apply to our nation’s political representatives when they battle one another in the ordinary lawmaking process, we should demand more when they engage in constitutional decision-making. This Article explains why our constitutional system demands different rules of engagement when constitutional questions are at issue, and exactly what we should expect of members of Congress in these situations. Congress does a surprisingly large amount of constitutional decision-making:… Read More

The Claims and Limits of Justice Scalia’s Textualism: Lessons from his Statutory Standing Decisions

Two decisions written by Justice Scalia near the end of his life, Lexmark International Inc. v. Static Control Components, Inc., 572 U.S. 479 (2014), and Thompson v. North American Stainless, LP, 562 U.S. 170 (2011), reshaped the law of statutory standing and provide important insights into the claims and limits of textualism. These decisions have reshaped the law of statutory standing in three ways. They have changed the legal terminology; expanded the range of cases to which the zone-of-interests test… Read More

State Constitutional General Welfare Doctrine

It is black-letter law that the U.S. Supreme Court’s takings doctrine presupposes exercises of eminent domain are in pursuit of valid public uses that require just compensation. But, neither federal doctrine nor the text of the Takings Clause offers any additional constraints. The story of the Supreme Court’s takings jurisprudence is, in other words, incomplete and deserves reexamination. However, the usual protagonists, such as the Supreme Court or federal courts, are not central to this Article’s reexamination. Instead, this Article’s… Read More

Child Marriage in America: An Interim Solution Pending a Total Ban

The freedom to marry has long been recognized as one of the vital personal rights essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness. INTRODUCTION As an institution integral to family life, the state has always played a regulatory role in marriage. But, until recently, a glaring legal issue has been missing from the conversation surrounding marriage in the United States: our child marriage problem. Americans have many misconceptions about child marriage. We tend to think of child marriage as happening in… Read More

The Dark Side of Reputation

Reputation is the foundation of theories of private ordering. These theories contend that commercial actors will act honestly because if they do not, they will get a bad reputation and others will not want to do business with them in the future.

Legal Sets

In this Article, I propose that the practices of legal reasoning and analysis are helpfully understood as being primarily concerned not with rules or propositions, but with sets. This Article develops a formal model of the role of sets in the practices of legal actors in a common-law system defined by a recursive relationship between cases and rules. In doing so, it demonstrates how conceiving of legal doctrines as a universe of discourse comprising (sometimes nested or overlapping) sets of… Read More

The Revival of Economic Nationalism and the Global Trading System

The election of Donald J. Trump to the U.S. Presidency coincided with the United States adopting an “America First” policy in trade. This policy reflects an underlying theory of economic nationalism that is fundamentally at odds with the current approach of the multilateral trading system established by the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade and the World Trade Organization (GATT/WTO). The current multilateral system is based on a “positive sum game” theory, i.e., the view that cooperative trade concessions can… Read More