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The Yale Law Journal - Home From 1919 to 1969, the Offices of the Legislative Counsel in the Senate and House drafted precedential opinions to advise lawmakers on constitutional an

Congressional Intervention in Agency Adjudication: The Case of Veterans’ Appeals

Yale Law Journal - Congressional Intervention in Agency Adjudication: The Case of Veterans’ Appeals Congressional Intervention in Agency Adjudication: The Case of Veterans’ Appeals

Resurrecting the Trinity of Legislative Constitutionalism

Yale Law Journal - Resurrecting the Trinity of Legislative Constitutionalism Resurrecting the Trinity of Legislative Constitutionalism abstract. For generations, scholars have call

To Be Given to God: Contemporary Civil Forfeiture as a Taking

Yale Law Journal - To Be Given to God: Contemporary Civil Forfeiture as a Taking To Be Given to God: Contemporary Civil Forfeiture as a Taking abstract. Although civil asset forfei

Antiracist Expert Evidence

Yale Law Journal - Antiracist Expert Evidence Antiracist Expert Evidence abstract. Since 2020, when mass protests against racism swept across the United States, scholars, lawyers,

Mark S. Krass

The Yale Law Journal - Mark S. Krass Mark S. Krass Feature Prevailing constitutional interpretation sees Congress’s role as legislative, but members of Congress frequently exert no

Jasmine B. Gonzales Rose

The Yale Law Journal - Jasmine B. Gonzales Rose Jasmine B. Gonzales Rose Article This Article introduces “antiracist expert evidence,” an underutilized tool to prove racism in cour

Asees Bhasin

The Yale Law Journal - Asees Bhasin Asees Bhasin Article This Article introduces “antiracist expert evidence,” an underutilized tool to prove racism in court. Based on a nationwide

Richard J.S. Peay

The Yale Law Journal - Richard J.S. Peay Richard J.S. Peay Note Civil asset forfeiture was once a law-enforcement tool. Today, however, police and prosecutors use forfeiture to fun

Lindsey Gailmard

The Yale Law Journal - Lindsey Gailmard Lindsey Gailmard Feature Prevailing constitutional interpretation sees Congress’s role as legislative, but members of Congress frequently ex