The oldest and only generalist journal published by @GeorgetownLaw students. Currently publishing Volumes 107 & 108 and the Annual Review of Criminal Procedure.
The Georgetown Law Journal@nandhunter of @GeorgetownLaw argues that the Court failed to comprehend the importance of the 19th Amendment in recent marriage cases, including Obergefell. Read "Reconstructing Liberty, Equality, and Marriage: The Missing Nineteenth Amendment Argument” @
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The Georgetown Law JournalProf. Sam F. Halabi (of @MizzouLaw) traces the origins of global health law and argues that COVID-19 is a dramatic illustration of the movements in global health. Read “The Origins and Future of Global Health Law: Regulation, Security, and Pluralism” at
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The Georgetown Law JournalIn "Faithful Execution: Where Administrative Law Meets the Constitution," @evanbernick argues that the Take Care Clause constrains the President's administrative discretion and that judges must determine if that discretion has been "faithfully" exercised.
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The Georgetown Law Journal@HarvardCorpGov@UCDavisLaw@GeorgetownLaw In "Chevron as Law," @CassSunstein argues that Chevron shouldn't be overruled but that concerns can be addressed by ensuring judicial freedom to identify ambiguity, limiting arbitrary agency interpretations, & deploying nondelegation canons of construction
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The Georgetown Law JournalIn "The Irrepressible Myth of Cooper v. Aaron," @JoshMBlackman of @STCL_Houston argues that Cooper v. Aaron conflated the distinction between SCOTUS judgements and precedents. He argues that Cooper was based on "novel assertions of judicial power."
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