New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Read McCaffrey | December 20, 2018
Needless to say it was I who had been blessed with the litigation experience of a lifetime.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Daniel J. Kornstein | December 10, 2018
But is our Democracy so ideal? Is it worth exporting? Is it even real? Is it endangered? What do we even mean by Democracy?.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Michael J. Broyde | December 5, 2018
The law gives everyone just enough rights to hurt schoolchildren in underperforming private religious schools, but not enough rights to actually help them. In cases where religious parents want less education than the state mandates—or even simply refuse to teach that which conflicts with their religious faith that the state labels a minimum—a compromise is needed.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Shira A. Scheindlin | November 29, 2018
The media bears some share of responsibility for attaching political tags to judges. Many articles describe a judge who issues a controversial ruling by the name of the appointing president.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By David Reiss | November 21, 2018
At the end of The Hunger Games, Katniss and Peeta both survive the death match imposed by their overlords by agreeing to live or die together. Imagine what might have happened if Virginia and New York City had the courage to do the same.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Brad S. Karp and Robert A. Atkins | October 25, 2018
Voters in 23 states—nearly half the country—face barriers to registering and voting that did not exist ten years ago and that disenfranchise our fellow citizens just as the Jim Crow laws did fifty years ago.
New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Students and Faculty of Albany Law School | October 10, 2018
Civil rights of any kind are always won the hard way, with painful losses that always seem more visible and more numerous than the wins. But progress is not won from the top down.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Kyron Huigens | September 26, 2018
The underlying principle that a person speaking against her own interests can be believed is fully implicated in this case, and it points strongly in favor of believing Dr. Blasey.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Michael Miller | August 27, 2018
These very rights are now under siege in a way that we haven't seen at least since the McCarthy era in the 1950s when individuals' lives were destroyed because of their beliefs.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Eric Eingold | August 24, 2018
The American economy loses between $78 billion and $87 billion in annual GDP every year as a result of the policies and practices that lock people with felony convictions out of the workforce.
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