I feel a bit like Gilligan in one of my favorite episodes of Gilligan’s island. The Professor and the Skipper are having an argument over some issue vital to the castaway’s prospects of being rescued from the island. Gilligan is standing in the middle agreeing with everything both parties to the argument say, and finally the two disputants become fed up with Gilligan’s endorsement of diametrically opposing views and they turn on him. In this Jot, I praise two articles that take conflicting views on an issue vital to the future of administrative law, namely, when should federal courts, confronted with unconstitutional or otherwise illegal Executive Branch action, issue nationwide injunctions: Sam Bray’s Multiple Chancellors: Reforming the Na...
There has been a significant increase in the use of a controversial, dramatic remedy known as the na...
This essay is a response to Professor Samuel Bray’s article proposing a blanket prohibition against ...
From the introductory text of the Statement of Professor Samuel L. Bray There’s a script we’ve all ...
I feel a bit like Gilligan in one of my favorite episodes of Gilligan’s island. The Professor and th...
In two opinions issued Monday (Jan. 14), federal district courts grappled with the question of wheth...
The nationwide injunction has seized the imagination of courts and law professors in recent years. N...
In several recent high-profile cases, federal district judges have issued injunctions that apply acr...
Professor Amanda Frost, of American University Washington College of Law, presented a working draft ...
Nationwide injunctions have become a focus of heated judicial, academic, and even public debate. Muc...
In Part I of this Article, I discuss the existing law and current debates surrounding nationwide inj...
With an Introduction from Professor Sam Brayhttps://scholarship.law.nd.edu/ndls_posters/1764/thumbna...
This Note offers a perspective on nationwide injunctions informed by a selection of environmental ca...
Opponents of nationwide injunctions have advanced cogent reasons why courts should be skeptical of t...
A growing number of scholars, judges, and Justices are debating the permissibility and propriety of ...
Ryan Karnoski, the named plaintiff in a lawsuit challenging the Trump Administration’s decision to b...
There has been a significant increase in the use of a controversial, dramatic remedy known as the na...
This essay is a response to Professor Samuel Bray’s article proposing a blanket prohibition against ...
From the introductory text of the Statement of Professor Samuel L. Bray There’s a script we’ve all ...
I feel a bit like Gilligan in one of my favorite episodes of Gilligan’s island. The Professor and th...
In two opinions issued Monday (Jan. 14), federal district courts grappled with the question of wheth...
The nationwide injunction has seized the imagination of courts and law professors in recent years. N...
In several recent high-profile cases, federal district judges have issued injunctions that apply acr...
Professor Amanda Frost, of American University Washington College of Law, presented a working draft ...
Nationwide injunctions have become a focus of heated judicial, academic, and even public debate. Muc...
In Part I of this Article, I discuss the existing law and current debates surrounding nationwide inj...
With an Introduction from Professor Sam Brayhttps://scholarship.law.nd.edu/ndls_posters/1764/thumbna...
This Note offers a perspective on nationwide injunctions informed by a selection of environmental ca...
Opponents of nationwide injunctions have advanced cogent reasons why courts should be skeptical of t...
A growing number of scholars, judges, and Justices are debating the permissibility and propriety of ...
Ryan Karnoski, the named plaintiff in a lawsuit challenging the Trump Administration’s decision to b...
There has been a significant increase in the use of a controversial, dramatic remedy known as the na...
This essay is a response to Professor Samuel Bray’s article proposing a blanket prohibition against ...
From the introductory text of the Statement of Professor Samuel L. Bray There’s a script we’ve all ...