How might the judicial, executive, and legislative landscape change in a potential post-Chevron world?
The changing fortunes of Chevron deference have more to do with jurisprudence than ideology or partisanship.
SEC v. Jarkesy raises the issue of the balance of power between a decentralized civil society and a centralized, bureaucratic state.
For decades, civil rights agencies across government have largely ignored anti-Asian discrimination in education.
James Rosen charts Scalia’s rise to greatness.
What is Richard Posner's judicial legacy?
The recent inquiry on the invocation of the Emergencies Act shows the danger it poses to the rule of law.
In oral arguments, the justices asked the tough questions about "race-conscious" admissions.
The left’s hegemony in the legal academy is so total that opponents of originalism no longer feel it necessary to make an original (or convincing) case.
Courts are a part of the state, so expanding their power isn’t necessarily a recipe for restraining state power.
When it comes to the practice of law, the economist’s tools can analyze only so much.
How did the Watergate Hotel break-in bring down a president? And what lessons are there half a century later?