Emory Law Insights is published for law school faculty, judges, and members of the bar.
Latest Insights Issue
An important aspect of legal scholarship is to bring questions, concepts, or practices that the law has not addressed to the fore, because jurisprudence doesn’t always evolve at the same pace as the world. Another component is to provide a workable solution or at least, steps toward one. In this issue, Professors Kristin N. Johnson, Darren Hutchinson and Timothy Holbrook each address areas where, they argue, the law has failed, is inadequate, or is outdated.
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Past Issues
Spring 2021
Quantitative Analysis: Filibuster Change and Judicial Appointments, by Jonathan Nash & Joanna Shepherd
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Fall 2019
Securities Regulation - Why the SEC Pay Ratio Disclosure Rule Doesn’t Work, by George S. Georgiev.
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Fall 2015
Quantitative Methods - The Best Judges Political Parties Can Buy, by Michael Kang and Joanna Shepherd
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Summer 2015
Health Law and Policy - Patents, Partnerships, Pharmaceuticals: the Pre-competitive Myth, by Liza Vertinsky
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Fall 2014
Constitutional Rights and Liberties - Same-sex marriage post-Windsor, by Michael Perry
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Fall 2012
International, Comparative, and Foreign Relations Law - A Time for War?, by Mary L. Dudziak
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Summer 2012
Economic Analysis of Law - Probing the Reversal in Baseball’s Racial Trends, by George B. Shepherd
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Fall 2011
Constitutional Law - Making Constitutionalism Work in Islamic Countries, by Abdullahi Ahmed An-Na`im
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Spring 2011
International Law - Globalization: Historical, Political and Legal Dimensions, by David J. Bederman
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Fall 2010
Environmental Law - The Complex Battlegrounds of Environmental Law, by William W. Buzbee
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