Leah talks with Wilfred Codrington III about his article, "Purcell in Pandemic," which appeared in the NYU Law Review. The Purcell Principle comes from a 2006 Supreme Court case about what makes an appropriate timeline for changing election laws. The principle wasn't clear to begin with, and has only gotten more confusing in litigation surrounding the 2020 election. Will we see it continue to play out in this year's midterms?
The Originalist Case for Terrorizing Women
The Engagement: America's Quarter-Century Struggle Over Same-Sex Marriage
Lady Justice: Women, the Law, and the Battle to Save America
Cosplaying an Investigation
Busting Unions and Dodging Opinions
The Long Game to Weaken Workers' Rights
Civil Rights Queen
All I Want For Christmas Is Democracy
How the 303 Creative case threatens to roll back the 21st century
Making Fraud Great Again
Turning Fan Fiction Into Reality
Justice Samuel A-leak-o?
The Uncertain Future of the Indian Child Welfare Act
Affirmative Action Reaction
Open Season on Precedents
Credible: Why We Doubt Accusers and Protect Abusers
Pigs, Prince, and Proven Innocence
Limiting the Inevitable Damage
How SCOTUS Distorts Democracy
Judicial Joyriding
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