The American Model of Federal Administrative Law: Remembering the First One Hundred Years
Jerry L. Mashaw · July 2010 78 GEO. WASH. L. REV. 975 (2010) The conventional story of American administrative law dates its origin to a period 100 years after the founding. In his classic history of American law, Lawrence Friedman tells us, “[i]n hindsight, the development of administrative law seems mostly a contribution of the... Read More
That Is What We Said, but This Is What We Meant: Putting the Meaning Back into Use-of-Force Legislation
Daniel George · June 2010 78 GEO. WASH. L. REV. 942 (2010) Consider: The President takes the country to war following a devastating terrorist attack on U.S. soil. Congress quickly grows frustrated with the progress of the war and the perceived threats to civil liberties arising out of the acts that the President is taking... Read More
The People on the Bus Get Searched and Seized: Why Police Conduct in Suspicionless Bus Sweeps Should Be Circumscribed
Alex Brazier · June 2010 78 GEO. WASH. L. REV. 908 (2010) During a scheduled bus stop in Tallahassee, Florida, two African-American men found themselves in an unexpected and unpleasant situation. After reboarding the Greyhound bus on which they came and surrendering their tickets to the bus driver, the two men reoccupied their adjacent seats,... Read More
Derailing Penn Central: A Post-Lingle, Cost-Basis Approach to Regulatory Takings
Joshua P. Borden · June 2010 78 GEO. WASH. L. REV. 870 (2010) To illustrate the problems created by the Court’s current approach to regulatory takings, this Note examines a hypothetical situation. After years of carefully saving, John decided to invest in a small business and purchase a popular trailer park for $400,000. He rented... Read More
Oral History and the Study of the Judiciary
Chad M. Oldfather · June 2010 78 GEO. WASH. L. REV. 846 (2010) There is no shortage of books on judging. A nonexhaustive list from the past few years alone includes books entitled Justice in Robes, Judging under Uncertainty, Law and Judicial Duty, Judges and Their Audiences, The Judge in a Democracy, Running for Judge,... Read More
Fulfilling Government 2.0’s Promise with Robust Privacy Protections
Danielle Keats Citron · June 2010 78 GEO. WASH. L. REV. 822 (2010) The public can now friend the White House and scores of agencies on social networks, virtual worlds, and video-sharing sites. The Obama Administration sees this trend as crucial to enhancing governmental transparency, public participation, and collaboration. As the President has underscored, government... Read More
Penalizing Punitive Damages: Why the Supreme Court Needs a Lesson in Law and Economics
Steve P. Calandrillo · June 2010 78 GEO. WASH. L. REV. 774 (2010) The recent landmark Supreme Court decision addressing punitive damages in the infamous Exxon Valdez oil spill case has brought the issue of punitive awards back into the legal limelight. Modern Supreme Court jurisprudence, most notably BMW of North America, Inc., State Farm,... Read More
Free Speech and the Myth of the Internet as an Unintermediated Experience
Christopher S. Yoo · June 2010 78 GEO. WASH. L. REV. 697 (2010) In recent years, concerns about the role of Internet intermediaries have continued to grow. The debate initially focused on last-mile broadband providers’ abilities to favor certain content or applications either by giving them different levels of higher priority or by charging them... Read More
Volunteering to Deceive: Criminalizing Citizen-Group Espionage
Andrew Frohlich · April 2010 78 GEO. WASH. L. REV. 668 (2010) The McFate/Sapone saga is not a mere isolated incident, but rather a misstep which has thrust into the public light an industry about which little is publicly known: citizen-group espionage. Corporations—and occasionally rival nonprofit organizations—sometimes seek an unfair advantage in the debate of... Read More
Your Insurance Does Not Cover That: Disability-Based Discrimination Where It Hurts the Most
Timothy Frey · April 2010 78 GEO. WASH. L. REV. 636 (2010) When Brenda Henderson was diagnosed with an aggressive form of breast cancer, her doctor recommended that she undergo a regimen of high-dose chemotherapy (“HDCT”), which was the most effective method of treating the disease. Unfortunately, her insurer did not cover HDCT for breast... Read More