and the federal regulation of the threat to distribute nonconsensual intimate imagery.
You can find all this and more at https://t.co/9BbIou6NlW. (4/4)
Georgia Law Review is pleased to announce the publication of Issue 3 of its 59th Volume.
This issue features articles from newer, emerging scholars who have written on topics including genetic relatedness requirements in international surrogacy arrangements; (1/4)
Three student Notes were also published on such topics as the comity concerns of enjoining foreign sovereign parties in U.S. courts; the exercise of eminent domain by private parties over state-controlled land; (3/4)
In this Note from Issue 2, Vol. 59 Notes Editor Daniel Witcher explains a recent Eleventh Circuit decision impacting relief under the ADA and how a stronger Georgia disability code carries better legal and economic incentives.
https://t.co/bX7Caub1a0
In this Article from Issue 2, Daiquiri Steele describes how heightened surveillance of employees after they engage in protected activity perpetuates retaliation and promotes other employment abuses under existing legal frameworks.
https://t.co/TUVbUERXTj
In this Note from Issue 2, Vol. 59 Notes Editor Anna Gowen examines judicial treatment of joint and several liability in criminal asset forfeiture, arguing that such liability is inappropriate and unsupported in the criminal context.
https://t.co/bX7CaubyZy
In this Article from Issue 2, Leigh Osofsky explores problems with tax law's medical care subsidy and proposes a progressive wellness credit to better account for how consumption may classify as medical care under tax law.
https://t.co/TUVbUERXTj
The symposium will take place in person on Friday, March 20, 2026, and will include panels and a keynote address. We hope you will join us in Athens next spring, and we look forward to hearing from interested participants and authors! (4/4)
The Executive Symposium Editors for Volume 60 of Georgia Law Review are pleased to announce our annual symposium for Spring 2026: Polarized Courts: The New Private Enforcement. (1/4)
the arms race among the states to enforce policy preferences through private rights of action; the ramifications for our union of these competing and polarizing uses of courts; and other similar topics. (3/4)
In this Note from Issue 2, Vol. 59 Executive Notes Editor Jack Cofer highlights grey markets in e-commerce and argues for legislative refinements to existing regulations to better protect consumers shopping online.
https://t.co/bX7Caub1a0
In this Comment published with Georgia Law Review Online, UGA School of Law Clinical Associate Professor Elizabeth M. Grant and student Gordon Wayne, '26, discuss ambiguities in Georgia's Safe At Home Act and ways tenants may need to protect themselves.
https://t.co/0U40JMkk1w
In this Note from Issue 2, Vol. 59 Executive Notes Editor Tanner Samples looks at the woodworking industry and advocates for a burden-shifting scheme in design defect cases. Doing so would incentivize safety and limit the impact of bad manufacturers.
https://t.co/bX7Caub1a0
In this Article from Issue 2, Mark A. Lemley analyzes interpolation credits in songwriting and argues that such artists are not and cannot be authors under copyright law. Contrary to what the music industry believes, dead men write no songs.
https://t.co/TUVbUERXTj
In this Comment published with Georgia Law Review Online, recent graduate Mona Abboud analyzes the implications of OnlyFans and argues for an updated Georgia-wide legal approach to the online platform.
https://t.co/0U40JMkk1w
Georgia Law Review is pleased to announce the publication of Issue 2 of its 59th Volume. This issue features four Articles that cover unique questions.
These include whether interpolated artists should count as songwriters under copyright law; (1/4)
Four student Notes were also published on topics including a new burden-shifting scheme in design defect cases, statutory refinements to online consumer protections, a bar on joint and several liability in criminal asset forfeiture, and a stronger Georgia disability code. (3/4)