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Reason July 2005 |
Who Should Reign Supreme? Libertarian legal experts weigh in on who their favorites are--past, present, and future--on the nation's highest court. |
BusinessWeek February 10, 2011 Paul M. Barrett |
Attack of the Commerce Clause A new assault on regulation is gathering force -- and it's deploying a constitutional weapon |
Reason March 2008 Nick Gillespie |
Litigating for Liberty The Institute for Justice's Chip Mellor on campaign-finance reform, eminent-domain abuse, and licensing laws gone wild. |
BusinessWeek November 19, 2009 |
The Making of Two Anti-Reg Bulldogs Biographical data on two lawyers who would like to dismantle Sarbanes-Oxley regulations. |
Reason April 2007 Radley Balko |
Official Extortion The U.S. Supreme Court recently refused to hear the case of an entrepreneur in Port Chester, New York. It thus let stand one of the more egregious abuses of eminent domain authority since the court's infamous Kelo v. New London case. |
American History December 14, 2004 David J. Garrow |
The Once and Future Supreme Court The last four decades have witnessed a fundamental transformation in the types of men, and now women, who exercise the broad and untrammeled judicial power of the U.S. Supreme Court. |
Reason April 2005 Jacob Sullum |
Coffin Break In Oklahoma, where only licensed funeral directors are allowed to sell caskets, an online casket seller is asking the Supreme Court to review such laws and to help break up the casket cartel. |
National Real Estate Investor July 1, 2006 Matt Hudgins |
Eminent Domain: A Year After Kelo Legislative action in response to the Kelo decision is winding down, eminent domain will remain a hot issue into 2007 and beyond. That's because new eminent domain laws enacted by legislatures around the nation will be tested in the courts. |
Pharmaceutical Executive August 1, 2011 Jill Wechsler |
The Supremes Shape Pharma A number of important decisions from the Supreme Court will affect drug marketing, research, and regulation |
Reason November 2005 Tim Cavanaugh |
Property Seizures and the New London Tea Party Homeowners' attorney Scott Bullock talks about the Supreme Court's Kelo v. New London decision and America's brewing revolution against eminent domain abuse. |
Reason January 2006 Jacob Sullum |
Takings, Take 2 State courts, where the battle over eminent domain is now shifting, don't necessarily agree with the U.S. Supreme Court's 2005 ruling in Kelo v. New London. |
BusinessWeek May 12, 2011 Tim Jones |
Secret Cash Dominates in State Court Races Unidentified contributors are pumping big money into key races. |
Reason Aug/Sep 2007 Ilya Somin |
The Limits of Anti-Kelo Legislation Reformers are trying to outlaw eminent domain abuse. But will the laws they're passing be effective? |
Inc. February 2006 Clay Risen |
Who Loves You In D.C. (and Who Doesn't) Most people in and around the government are beholden to Corporate America and don't pay attention to the needs of entrepreneurs. Here's a list of Beltway movers and shakers who are trying to change that. |
National Real Estate Investor May 1, 2005 Matt Hudgins |
When is Eminent Domain Eminently Unfair? Developers counting on city governments to use eminent domain to clear urban renewal sites are watching to see if the U.S. Supreme Court favors property owners in a high-profile eminent domain dispute. |
Reason October 2007 Jacob Sullum |
Kick 'Em While They're Down A new report from the Institute for Justice looked at 184 areas where the use of eminent domain was approved for private economic development projects. On average, the residents were poorer, less educated, less likely to own property, and more likely to be racial minorities. |
Information Today July 11, 2013 |
Judge Rules Against Apple in Price-Fixing Trial The ebook price-fixing trial that began on June 3 and ended 17 days later has finally come to a close with the release of Judge Denise Cote's ruling on July 10. And the news isn't good for Apple. |
ifeminists March 17, 2004 Carey Roberts |
Radical Feminist on the U.S. Supreme Court Ruth Ginsburg received her law degree from Columbia Law School. In 1971 she established the Women's Rights Project at the American Civil Liberties Union. Throughout the 1970s Ginsburg acquired a first-hand knowledge of the workings of the Supreme Court as she argued six cases - all feminist issues - to the Justices. |