There is a war raging over the admissibility of the prior bad acts of criminal defendants in federal trials. While many circuits treat Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b) as a rule of โinclusionโ and liberally admit such prior bad-acts evidence with predictably explosive effects on criminal juยญries, a few circuits are developing rigorous standards deยญsigned to foreยญclose prosecutorial use of such bad-acts evidence. This Article chronicles the...
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Many have argued that the United Statesโ two major political parties have experienced โasymmetric polarizationโ in recent decades: The Republican Party has moved significantly further to the right than the Democratic Party has moved to the left. The practice of constiยญtutional hardball, this Essay argues, has followed a similarโand causally relatedโtrajectory. Since at least the mid-1990s, Republican officeยญholders have been more likely...
Affordable housing residency preferences give residents of a specific geographic โpreference areaโ prioritized access to affordable housing units within that geographic area. Historically, majority-white municiยญpalities have sometimes used affordable housing residency preferences to systematically exclude racial minorities who reside in surยญrounding comยญmunities. Courts have invalidated such residency prefยญerences, usually on the grounds...
Batson v. Kentucky is widely regarded as a failure. In the thirty-plus years since it was decided by the Supreme Court, the doctrine has been subjected to unrelenting criticism for its inability to stop the disยญcriminatory use of peremptory challenges. The scholarly literature is nearly unanimous: Batson is broken. But this Article approaches Batson from a different perspective, focusing on Batsonโs appellate...
High drug prices are in the news. In some cases, such as AIDS-treating Daraprim and the life-saving EpiPen, the price increases dramatiยญcally. In other cases, which have received less attention, the price stays high longer than it should. Either way, anticompetitive behavior often lurks behind inflated prices. By delaying price-reducing generic competition, this behavior […]
This Note examines the disparate treatment of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in the regulatory costโbenefit analysis and the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) review contexts. In Zero Zone, Inc. v. United States Department of Energy, the Seventh Circuit upheld the use of the social cost of carbon (SCC) when agencies consider GHG emissions in their costโbenefit analyses. At the same time, courts have almost uniformly rejected...
โBut always, always, / A man must wait the final day, and no man / Should ever be called happy before burial.โ So warns the narrator of Ovidโs Metamorphoses, in recounting how Cadmus founded Thebes. This dark pronouncement underscores the caprice of fate, to which Cadmus himself would fall prey. Were Robert Ferguson here, […]
Professor Robert Ferguson enriched all of our lives. The man lived by and luxuriated in words. They are important to all of us, but they had a particularly magical significance to Robert. He chose them carefully, crafted their construction, and gloried in their rhythm. He encouraged all of usโhis colleagues, students, friends, and […]
The 2016 presidential election was one of the most divisive in reยญcent memory, but it produced a surprising bipartisan consensus. Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton, and Bernie Sanders all agreed that U.S. trade agreements should be, but are not, โfair.โ Although it...
Employers seeking to test job applicants for strength or speed while adhering to the mandates of Title VII often use gender-normed physical-ability tests. Gender-normed tests set different raw cutoffs for male and female applicants such that each class would be expected to have roughยญly equal pass rates. This practice has helped employersโespecially law enforcement agenciesโretain physical hiring standards while mitiยญgating their disparate...