Despite the Supreme Court’s turn against racial preferences, special interests in California seek to gut the state’s non-discrimination protections.
Martin v. Boise is an abomination that has wreaked havoc on cities across the Ninth Circuit.
In the Lone Star State, a long-running legal challenge to “release time” in public-employee union contracts approaches its finale.
Arbitration is not ideal, but it is almost always preferable to the alternative: going to court.
While purporting to expand one set of individual rights, Sullivan did immense harm to another.
The editors of Law & Liberty highlight some of the top pieces of the year.
Alaska is a magnificent state. Is its untamed, unspoiled splendor an asset or a defect?
Benjamin H. Barton's The Credentialed Court reveals the consequences of making the Court elite.
A Texas lawsuit challenges the CDC's authority to require masks on airplanes and in airports. Will it succeed?
Book recommendations that will add some cheer to your holiday season.
The omnipresence of slavery at historic sites today seems intended to tarnish remarkable achievements and promote the cause of identity politics.
Several proposed ABA accreditation rules changes demand ideological conformity and possibly violate faculty’s academic freedom.
Over a year of CDC flip-flops and credibility-straining pronouncements leave a compliant public skeptical. Vaccinated Americans yearn for normalcy.
Opponents of the Leviathan will find no succor in the imagined panacea of nullification.