Christopher G. Bradley Volume 74, Issue 3, 607-678 The intersection between privacy law and the big business of consumer data has become a major focus of policymakers, scholars, the business community, and consumer advocates, yet the legal regime governing the...
Immigration Law’s Boundary Problem: Determining the Scope of Executive Discretion
Peter Margulies Volume 74, Issue 3, 679-764 In immigration law, executive discretion has become contested terrain. Courts, officials, and scholars have rarely distinguished between regulatory discretion, which facilitates exclusion and removal of noncitizens, and...
Loyalties v. Royalties
Sarah Polcz Volume 74, Issue 3, 765-822 Friendship rewards us with a bond of loyalty and equality. The marketplace rewards us based on what we have to offer. When friends work together to create something, and when the market judges their creation to have value, this...
The Surprisingly Strong Case for Local Income Taxes in the Era of Increased Remote Work
Erin Adele Scharff and Darien Shanske Volume 74, Issue 3, 823-868 Traditional theoretical literature on fiscal federalism urges cities to finance themselves with taxes on immobile sources. Thus, the literature sees real property taxes as the best source of local...
Mitigating Catastrophe Risk for Landowners
Stewart E. Sterk Volume 74, Issue 3, 869-910 Local, national, and global catastrophes entail significant risk for landowners. The government-sponsored National Flood Insurance Program illustrates how subsidizing insurance against catastrophe risk can result in...
Pole Cameras: Applying Fourth Amendment Protections to Emerging Surveillance Technology
Rahil Maharaj Volume 74, Issue 3, 911-934 Evolving surveillance technologies present unique challenges for the judiciary to maintain robust Fourth Amendment privacy protections. New surveillance tools such as pole cameras raise significant questions regarding the...
When Further Incarceration Is No Longer in the Interest of Justice: Instituting a Federal Prosecutor-Initiated Resentencing Framework
Lydia Tonozzi Volume 74, Issue 3, 935-958 The dire state of the prison population in the United States has become common knowledge both at home and abroad. Mass incarceration in the United States has been caused by nearly four decades of retributive criminal justice...
Foreign Investment and National Security Challenges in the Data Age: An Assessment of the Current Regime and Recommendations
Irene Yu Volume 74, Issue 3, 959-986 This Note contributes to the growing literature that attempts to grasp the current landscape of international trade and investment norms and policies in the data age. Focusing on the disputes between the United States and China...