Court Packing, Senate Stonewalling, and the
Constitutional Politics of Judicial
Appointments Reform

2022, Past Issues, Print, Volume 54 (2022) Issue 2 (Summer)
Matthew A. Seligman Reforming the Supreme Court is at the center of the political and legal landscape for the first time in generations. The growing gap between the ideological composition of the Court, the democratic will of the electorate, and perceived procedural irregularities in the appointment of Justices over the last five years, has fueled calls for expanding the size of the Court. Those calls have triggered renewed efforts to repair the appointments process through term limits and a regularized appointments schedule. But in an age of peaking partisanship, the bipartisan cooperation that would be necessary for that proposal to pass seems far out of reach.Full Article.
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Law Enforcement Officers, Students, and the
School-to-Prison Pipeline: A Longitudinal
Perspective

2022, Past Issues, Print, Volume 54 (2022) Issue 2 (Summer)
Jason P. Nance & Michael Heise Recent data indicate that a majority of schools now have regular contact with law enforcement officers, transforming the educational experience for hundreds of thousands of students nationwide. The proper role of police officers in schools, if any, has been hotly debated for years. But this debatewas elevated to an unprecedented level during the summer of 2020 following the tragic deaths of George Floyd and others, precipitating national calls to “defund the police” and leading many school districts to reconsider their relationships with law enforcement agencies. This debate over whether police officers belong in schools continues today. While proponents argue that a police presence is necessary to keep students safe, the existing empirical literature assessing the efficacy of school police officer programs in creating safe environments…
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Bringing Predictability to the Chaos of Punitive
Damages

2022, Past Issues, Print, Volume 54 (2022) Issue 2 (Summer)
Benjamin J. McMichael & W. Kip Viscusi  Punitive damages remain unique in the American legal system. Awarded in the civil context with none of the protections offered in criminal law, courts levy punitive damages to punish and deter. The Supreme Court of the United States has clearly stated that courts may only seek to achieve these two goals when imposing punitive damages. A closer reading of the Court’s punitive damages jurisprudence, however, reveals another goal that has largely been ignored: predictability. Unlikepunishment and deterrence, predictability is not a purpose for which to award punitive damages. Instead, the Court requires that, when awarded, the level of punitive damages must be predictable. Failure to provide fair notice of the penalty for which a defendant may be liable amounts to a violation of…
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The Great American Outdoors Act:
Refreshing America’s National Parks

2022, Past Issues, Print, Volume 54 (2022) Issue 2 (Summer)
Danika Marzillier From white sandy beaches and jagged, snow-capped mountains, national monuments and even some parks in urban neighborhoods, America’s federally managed public lands cover over a quarter of the country. From citizens looking to increase their daily step goals to all-out adventure enthusiast vacationers, a large and diverse group of Americans use these lands every day. Although public lands may often be imagined as places only for hikers and outdoor aficionados, their value to the general community should not be overlooked. Public lands offer breathtaking views, contribute to economic value, and conserve wildlife. They preserve historic sites, promote active lifestyles, and provide moments of Zen for the often all-too busy American.Full Article.
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Damned Causation

2022, Past Issues, Print, Volume 54 (2022) Issue 2 (Summer)
Elissa Philip Gentry The inherent mismatch between the questions law asks and the answers statistics provides has led courts to create arbitrary rules for statistical evidence. Adherence to these rules undermines deterrence goals and runs the risk of depriving recovery for whole categories of injuries. In response, some courts adopt new theories of recovery, relying on the loss of chance doctrine to provide some relief to injured plaintiffs. These solutions, however, only serve to exacerbate the fundamental misunderstanding of probabilities. While these doctrines largely operate within the context of medical malpractice, the increased ability to capture more statistical data may prompt courts to acknowledge the probabilistic nature of causation in other contexts. It is important to ensure that courts correctly approach this information. This Article presents a simple framework for thinking…
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Green Is the New Black: Achieving Whole-
System Sustainability in U.S. Coffee via a
Hybrid Certification Scheme

2022, Past Issues, Print, Volume 54 (2022) Issue 2 (Summer)
Alexandra Eagle Near the village of Las Capucas, in the Copán region of Honduras, Omar Rodríguez Romero manages a coffee farm and a coffee farmer cooperative called Cooperativa Cafetalera Capucas Limitada (COCAFCAL). COCAFCAL assists hundreds of small coffee farmers in the region with growing, processing, and distributing their coffee each season. Coffee is a labor of love, with trees requiring several seasons’ growth before producing a single coffee cherry. During the Honduran harvest season from December to March, coffee cherries bound for specialty coffee shops around the world must be carefully handpicked by teams of seasonal and permanent employees. COCAFCAL farmers then promptly process the fruit at their group facilities to prevent cherries from spoiling. The resulting coffee beans are then sorted for quality and packaged for export.Full Article.
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Generals of the Resistance: Multistate
Actions and Nationwide Injunctions

2022, Past Issues, Print, Volume 54 (2022) Issue 2 (Summer)
Elysa M. Dishman State attorneys general (AGs) have become leaders of the political resistance against recent presidential administrations. They are suing the federal government with increasing frequency, seeking nationwide injunctions that thwart presidential priorities and shape national policies.Nationwide injunctions have sparked considerable debate among jurists, scholars, and policymakers. However, the largely court-centric debate has overwhelmingly overlooked the role that state litigants and litigators play in shaping criticisms of the nationwide injunction. States and AGs have uniqueattributes, advantages, and incentives that allow them to frequently seek and successfully secure nationwide injunctions. And these advantages are enhanced when states litigate together. Because states and AGs contribute to common criticisms of the nationwide injunction, reforms to the remedy should consider this special class of litigants and litigators.Full Article.
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Challenging the EPA’s Authority to Exempt Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations from EPCRA’s Pollution Reporting Requirements

2022, Past Issues, Print, Volume 54 (2022) Issue 1 (Spring)
Catherine Swett The residents of Arlington and Tonopah, Arizona have some very smelly neighbors—the millions of chickens at Hickman’s Egg Ranch (“Hickman’s”). But an unpleasant odor is just one of the many environmental issues created by the concentrated animal feeding operation (“CAFO”). These two small towns, located just west of Phoenix, also deal with excessive dust, flies, and hazardous chemical emissions. Some residents even complain of nausea and breathing difficulty due to the ammonia released from the decomposing manure in the chicken houses.Full Article.
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Private Solutions to a Public Problem: Next Steps for Section 230

2022, Past Issues, Print, Volume 54 (2022) Issue 1 (Spring)
Tessa R. Patterson Humans do many small things every day that add up to grand numbers. For example, the average human spends about twenty-six years of her life asleep; around thirteen years at work; and four years and six months eating. There are also plenty of small things that, arguably, humans do not do enough. The typical human will only spend three years, one month, and three weeks of their life on vacation; one year and four months exercising; and one year and thirty days doing anything romantic.Full Article.
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PFAS Are Forever: Why Unregulated Agricultural Water Is Not a Girl’s Best Friend

2022, Past Issues, Print, Volume 54 (2022) Issue 1 (Spring)
Sarah Brunswick “Good God, Joe . . . What the hell is that stuff doing in your water?”–Regional Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) ScientistJoe Kiger’s water bill reported that his drinking water contained low levels of perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), but said not to worry. He lived in Parkersburg, West Virginia, and much of the town worked at DuPont’s Washington Works plant. His wife, Darlene, was previously married to a DuPont chemist who had bouts of the so-called “Teflon flu” when he worked with too much PFOA. Darlene remembered that he brought home extra PFOA for cleaning dishes and that DuPont had paid for his schooling and secured their mortgage. But she also remembered that he stopped wearing his work clothes home when their second child was born—DuPont had learned that PFOA was…
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