Feb 24
Vol.
45
Issue 3

Note

Condensing the Alphabet Soup: Missed Administrative Rulemaking Concerns in U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission v. Alpine Securities Corporation

Introduction For decades, the political landscape in the United States, characterized by deadlock in Congress and increasingly polarized relations among the country’s major political parties, has put the responsibility of keeping the government functioning in the hands of the administrative state. An absence of regular, substantive legislation (and a President willing to sign the bills given to her by Congress into law) leaves the advancement of meaningful policy to the rulemaking functions of federal executive agencies. Agency rules, developed pursuant…

by David Davani

Note

“Swifties” or Swift Suppression? How Police Officers Exploit Copyright Law and Practice Online to Evade Public Accountability

Introduction The video recording of the tragic killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police officers had an immediate and profound impact on the public. The video held essential evidentiary value in the prosecution of Floyd’s killers, as it told a very different story than what the police officers had made the situation out to be. It was by no means the first recording of police misconduct that generated significant attention from the public, but it remains among the most notable.…

by Jeremy Lamstein

Note

in New York? The AFFH Mandate in an Era of Land Use Reform

Introduction New York is experiencing a severe housing affordability crisis. This crisis is driven by a housing supply shortfall decades in the making. The state’s housing shortage exacerbates economic, racial, and regional inequalities, and harms the economy by limiting growth. New York’s struggles with housing affordability reflect a national surge in housing costs since the pandemic that has disproportionally impacted communities of color. Yet, in many respects, the crisis in New York is worse than that in other states with…

by Timothy Gentles

Note

Backdating #MeToo

Introduction The #MeToo movement radically altered the way that people think about workplace sexual harassment. For decades, women were expected to tolerate a broad range of sexualized conduct at work. However, the revelation of Harvey Weinstein’s misdeeds in late 2017, followed by the exposure of countless other bad actors, dramatically shifted the social narrative regarding appropriate workplace behavior. Conduct that employees once ignored or overlooked suddenly became the basis for vociferous objection; the perfunctory responses to harassment that many employers…

by Jessica K. Fink

Note

Crypto-Native Credit Score: Between Financial Inclusion and Predatory Lending

Introduction Decentralized credit scoring has surfaced as a new approach in the ever-evolving consumer credit space. While drawing parallels to traditional credit scoring, decentralized credit scoring sets itself apart by evaluating the financial activity and behavior of users within the blockchain ecosystem. Blockchain technology has been fueling this transformation and serving as the backbone for a diverse range of financial products and services collectively known as decentralized finance (DeFi). DeFi lending, in particular, has been thriving in recent years. However,…

by Nizan Geslevich Packin* & Yafit Lev-Aretz**

Note

Faculty Handbook as Contract

Introduction Colleges and universities, like other employers, typically have in place policies that govern the employment relationship with their faculty. Many such policies—policies against employee misconduct or policies on accommodations for persons with disabilities—are comparable to what employees might encounter outside of academia. Most higher education institutions also have in place policies that are more unique to academia, such as policies establishing shared governance bodies, affirming academic freedom as a core value, or outlining procedures on the granting and revocation…

by Karen Halverson Cross

Note

Modular Bankruptcy: Toward a Consumer Scheme of Arrangement

Introduction In the world of cross-border corporate insolvency, those in the know are familiar with the increasingly popular scheme of arrangement, the British quasi-reorganization procedure that allows a company to restructure some, but not all, of its debt. The typical scheme effects a corporate balance sheet reshuffling by supermajoritarian approval (and judicial “sanction”) but often leaves other debt, such as the trade, untouched. A key conceptual component of the scheme mechanism is its intentional modularity, called by some its “selectivity.”…

by John A.E. Pottow

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