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All Volumes | Volume 87 | Issue 3

The Body, Incorporated

Saru M. Matambanadzo | Article

Listen to Professor Matambanadzo discuss The Body, Incorporated.

Legal personhood has become a contested issue for individuals of all political persuasions. Some activists seek to expand the boundaries of legal personhood to include fetuses, human tissue, or even animals. Other activists, however, have sought to limit the community of legal persons by expelling one long-recognized group: corporations. Since the United States Supreme Court decided Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission in 2010, a variety of activists, artists, entertainers, and political commentators have claimed that corporate personhood should be severely limited or completely eliminated.

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NEPA’s Footprint: Information Disclosure as a Quasi-Carbon Tax on Agencies

Sarah E. Light | Article

The National Environmental Policy Act’s (NEPA) information-disclosure requirements have the potential to create a quasi-carbon tax on greenhouse gas emissions arising out of major federal actions. By requiring government polluters to expend more resources, both financial and political, on disclosure as project-related emissions increase, NEPA can operate like a carbon tax that forces agencies to internalize negative externalities associated with emissions.

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Registering Relationships

Erez Aloni | Article

Despite the dramatic changes in family structure in the past decades—including the unprecedented and skyrocketing number of families who live in nonmarital arrangements— marriage and marriage-mimic institutions remain the only legal options for the recognition of relationships. This regulatory regime leaves millions of Americans without the means to establish and protect relationship rights. This Article suggests that the legal issues arising from nonmarital relationships would be best addressed if more options for legal recognition of such relationships were offered. Accordingly, this Article presents the primary principles of a registration-based marriage alternative that is founded on contract: “registered contractual relationships” (RCRs). [...]

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A Bibliography of Executive Branch War Powers Opinions Since 1950

Stephen M. Griffin | Article

Listen to Professor Griffin discuss A Bibliography of Executive Branch War Powers Opinions Since 1950.

While there is extensive literature on presidential war powers,1 to my knowledge there has never been a comprehensive listing of the relevant legal opinions provided by the executive branch.  This bibliography of executive branch legal opinions on war powers since the beginning of the Korean War in 1950 is therefore intended as an aid to future scholarship.  The opinions are listed in chronological order.  Most have been published as public documents, although some were confidential at the time they [...]

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  • Directory

    • All Volumes
      • Volume 87
        • Issue 1
        • Issue 2
        • Issue 3
      • Volume 86
        • Issue 1
        • Issue 2
        • Issue 3
        • Issue 4
        • Issue 5
        • Issue 6
      • Volume 85
        • Issue 1
        • Issue 2
        • Issue 3
        • Issue 4
        • Issue 5 & 6
      • Volume 84
        • Issue 1
        • Issue 2
        • Issue 3
        • Issue 4
        • Issue 5
        • Issue 6

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