Mar 1, 2026 | Volume 77, Issue 3
Reuven S. Avi-Yonah, Doron Narotzki, and Tamir Shanan Volume 77, Issue 3, 497-554 Modern legal scholarship has largely relegated tariffs to economic analysis, overlooking their legal and policy significance. This Article challenges that view by examining tariffs as a...
Mar 1, 2026 | Volume 77, Issue 3
Lisa Waters Volume 77, Issue 3, 555-612 In the late twentieth century, the boom of forensic disciplines in criminal prosecutions helped drive mass incarceration to an all-time high. Yet scientific and legal inquiry revealed a disturbing truth: Most forensic methods...
Mar 1, 2026 | Volume 77, Issue 3
Jonathan Abel Volume 77, Issue 3, 613-658 This Article answers a crucial empirical question at the heart of the scholarly and judicial debates about the laws governing felon-in-possession of a firearm: How often do defendants charged with this offense have violent...
Mar 1, 2026 | Volume 77, Issue 3
Celeste Greaves Volume 77, Issue 3, 659-688 Artificial intelligence (“AI”) burst onto the legal scene and will soon revolutionize practice altogether. Despite enduring technical issues, like hallucinations and implicit bias, AI’s capabilities and potential benefits...
Mar 1, 2026 | Volume 77, Issue 3
Kevin Afiesh Volume 77, Issue 3, 689-726 The legal landscape for generative artificial intelligence (AI) and copyright is now shaped more by private settlements that overwhelmingly favor copyright holders than by courts or legislators. As AI companies rely on...