Love Across Barriers: In a new book, David Richards explores the connection between our abilities to love and to resist injustice Featured News November 23, 2015 Faculty Ideas
Doubly Condemned: Alina Das argues that individuals with criminal convictions are treated unfairly in the immigration system Featured News November 10, 2015 Alumni Clinics Faculty Ideas
Finding a Place to Sue: Linda Silberman tracks the evolving, and often confusing, Supreme Court decisions on jurisdiction Featured News October 26, 2015 Faculty Global Ideas
Testing DNA: In her new book, Erin Murphy investigates how the criminal justice system misuses genetic identification Featured News October 7, 2015 Faculty Ideas
Pros in Con: 's constitutional law faculty is asking rigorous questions about how to live today within a 228-year-old framework for our laws and democracy Featured News September 8, 2015 Faculty Ideas
A Hierarchy of Equalities: Gráinne de Búrca examines how the European Court of Justice is dealing with anti-discrimination laws Featured News September 4, 2015 Faculty Ideas
Adverse Reaction: Professors find fatal flaws in a body of work on takeovers and corporate governance Featured News September 4, 2015 Faculty Ideas
Mapping Summer 2015: Law faculty engage with legal issues here and abroad Featured News August 26, 2015 Faculty Global Ideas
Rules of Asking and Telling: Adam Samaha examines “must ask, don’t tell” and other combinations Featured News June 30, 2015 Faculty Ideas
What Fledgling Democracies Need: In a new book, Samuel Issacharoff discusses how constitutional courts buttress "fragile democracies" Featured News June 15, 2015 Ideas