Legal publication founded by Stanford Law students in 1989. SLPR is a forum for academics and policymakers to publish articles on current issues. Tweet≠Endorse
Check out our new online piece from @marknilsstrand and Tim Lang from @conginst on how reintroducing reformed earmarks would allow Congress to reassert its constitutional role over both the country’s finances and policy. https://t.co/K6vLzQn1CR
Almost one year ago today, during Justice Gorsuch's nomination hearing, the U.S. Senate debated the issue of whether Roe v. Wade should be considered a "super precedent." Check out @senorrinhatch's analysis of this issue in SLPR online. https://t.co/cAnH6ozRj9.
Be sure to check out @mjs_DC, Karen Oehme, and Nat Stern's article on the judicial and generational dispute over transgender rights. 1,124 student newspapers and over 8,000 references to LGBTQ terms over a three-year period were analyzed for this piece!
https://t.co/smopWKrKqp
SLPR Volume 29, Issue 1 is now available online!
Featuring articles on the settlement problem in public interest law, gender sidelining, targeting white supremacy in the workplace, and the judicial and generational dispute over transgender rights. https://t.co/0JQuUV4T8d