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D. Daniel Sokol* Review of Tim Wu’s The Curse of Bigness: Antitrust in the New Gilded Age. *University of Florida Research Foundation Professor of Law, University of Florida, and Senior Advisor, White & ...

Monica Hakimi* Review of Harold Hongju Koh’s The Trump Administration and International Law. *James V. Campbell Professor of Law, University of Michigan Law School. For helpful comments and conversations, I ...

Jonathan I. Tietz* Review of Benjamin Dreyer’s Dreyer’s English: An Utterly Correct Guide to Clarity and Style. *J.D. May 2019, University of Michigan Law School. Thank you to Professors Margaret Hannon ...

Ana Santos Rutschman* Introduction In late 2019 and early 2020, a new strain of coronavirus, a family of pathogens causing serious respiratory illness, began infecting populations across the globe. A quick uptick in ...

Dr. Thibault Schrepel* Blockchains promise to decentralize the economy, bypassing trusts in favor of decentralized communities. The World Economic Forum predicts that 10 percent of the global gross domestic product ...

Ari Glogower* Policymakers and scholars are giving serious consideration to a federal wealth tax. Wealth taxation could address the harms from rising economic inequality, promote equality of social and economic ...

Thomas Ward Frampton* Peremptory strikes, and criticism of the permissive constitutional framework regulating them, have dominated the scholarship on race and the jury for the past several decades. But we have ...

Gabriel S. Mendlow* Thought crimes are the stuff of dystopian fiction, not contemporary law. Or so we’re told. Yet our criminal legal system may in a sense punish thought regularly, even as our existing criminal ...

Tezira Abe* The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) is the primary governing body of college athletics. Although the NCAA proclaims to protect student-athletes, an examination of its practices suggests ...

Bryce Freeman* Courts and scholars have long grappled with whether and to what extent educational institutions are in contract with their students. If they are, then students can sue their private universities for ...