Geofence Warrants: Yet another example of the law playing catch up to technology and private companies being charged with establishing legal process. harvardlawreview.org/2021/05/geofen…
To honor and highlight the anti-racist uprisings this summer, we're posting classic pieces of Critical Race Theory from our archive. First up, Cheryl Harris's seminal "Whiteness as Property," first published in June 1993. harvardlawreview.org/1993/06/whiten…
The Harvard Law Review is proud to announce that we are sponsoring an original reality TV series, "Love is Binding," where single law professors read anonymized versions of each others' legal scholarship and, without ever meeting face to face, decide if they want to get engaged.
Free and fair presidential elections are a cornerstone of American democracy, but are they required by the Constitution? This Note says no, arguing for state discretion to regulate how, and whether, presidential elections occur. harvardlawreview.org/2022/02/as-the…
The editors of the Harvard Law Review respectfully offer this collection of tributes to Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. harvardlawreview.org/2021/01/memori…
Tweets aren’t law, even when issued by @realDonaldTrump. Here’s the first scholarly account of why tweets lack the legal status of formal presidential directives. ow.ly/BGmh30hH0jS
Crime really does pay . . . for law enforcement. How civil asset forfeiture lets
governments forfeit constitutional rights (and private property) at a profit by bypassing the criminal justice system and flouting state laws. ow.ly/Ez8230kqwsM
HLR is proud to have published some of the most important and foundational pieces of Critical Race Theory scholarship. Today we're republishing "Race, Reform, and Retrenchment: Transformation and Legitimation in Antidiscrimination Law" by Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw. @sandylocks.