In 2005, Congress passed the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (PLCAA), granting the firearms industry sweeping immunity from civil lawsuits. However, PLCAA immunity is not absolute. This Article demonstrates that both state and federal courts have fundamentally misread PLCAA when adjudicating cases involving the scope of gun industry immunity. Properly understood, PLCAA permits lawsuits against the gun industry so long as they are based on statutory causes of action rather than common law. While broadly preempting state common law claims, PLCAA affords state legislatures autonomy in deciding how to regulate the gun industry within their borders. Additionally, this Article addresses unresolved questions concerning constitutional lim...
In this article, the Second Amendment is analyzed through a discussion of the history of the right t...
Gun violence is a serious problem in the United States. For many years, in order to decrease gun vio...
Who should the state punish? Why? Should punishment be proportional? This article surveys, in the co...
While tort lawsuits against gun manufacturers and sellers have captured much attention in recent yea...
In popular and professional discourse, debate about the right to keep and bear arms most often revol...
Gun violence is a serious problem in the U.S. For many years, in order to decrease gun violence, the...
For many big city mayors and gun control advocates, filing lawsuits against the firearms industry re...
Over two centuries after the Bill of Rights was enacted, the Supreme Court finally resolved the cont...
Recent mass shootings have placed pressure on Congress and state legislatures to regulate semi-autom...
To what extent can states enact legislation that frustrates federal regulation of firearms—in an eff...
Government regulates guns, it is widely assumed, because of the death and injuries guns can inflict....
District of Columbia v. Heller hinged on the Second Amendment, defining for the first time an indivi...
One overlooked issue in the voluminous literature on the Second Amendment is what standard of review...
The recent U.S. Supreme Court decision in Printz v. United States restricted congressional legislati...
The Lautenberg Amendment to the Gun Control Act of 1968 was passed in 1996 with the purpose of preve...
In this article, the Second Amendment is analyzed through a discussion of the history of the right t...
Gun violence is a serious problem in the United States. For many years, in order to decrease gun vio...
Who should the state punish? Why? Should punishment be proportional? This article surveys, in the co...
While tort lawsuits against gun manufacturers and sellers have captured much attention in recent yea...
In popular and professional discourse, debate about the right to keep and bear arms most often revol...
Gun violence is a serious problem in the U.S. For many years, in order to decrease gun violence, the...
For many big city mayors and gun control advocates, filing lawsuits against the firearms industry re...
Over two centuries after the Bill of Rights was enacted, the Supreme Court finally resolved the cont...
Recent mass shootings have placed pressure on Congress and state legislatures to regulate semi-autom...
To what extent can states enact legislation that frustrates federal regulation of firearms—in an eff...
Government regulates guns, it is widely assumed, because of the death and injuries guns can inflict....
District of Columbia v. Heller hinged on the Second Amendment, defining for the first time an indivi...
One overlooked issue in the voluminous literature on the Second Amendment is what standard of review...
The recent U.S. Supreme Court decision in Printz v. United States restricted congressional legislati...
The Lautenberg Amendment to the Gun Control Act of 1968 was passed in 1996 with the purpose of preve...
In this article, the Second Amendment is analyzed through a discussion of the history of the right t...
Gun violence is a serious problem in the United States. For many years, in order to decrease gun vio...
Who should the state punish? Why? Should punishment be proportional? This article surveys, in the co...