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Georgia State University College of Law

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Full-Text Articles in Law

Did January 6 Defendants (Including Donald Trump) “Otherwise Obstruct An Official Proceeding”? Linguistic Analysis For The Fischer Case Before The Supreme Court, Clark Cunningham, Ute Römer-Barron Jan 2024

Did January 6 Defendants (Including Donald Trump) “Otherwise Obstruct An Official Proceeding”? Linguistic Analysis For The Fischer Case Before The Supreme Court, Clark Cunningham, Ute Römer-Barron

Faculty Publications By Year

When judges, skilled and sophisticated users of the English language, come to opposing conclusions about the “plain” or “ordinary” meaning of a phrase, how can such a conflict be resolved in an objective way? Traditionally courts have resorted to citing dictionary definitions, but in recent years an alternative approach has been gaining attention and respect: the use of corpus linguistics. The supreme courts of Michigan, Idaho, Utah, Vermont have used made use of corpus-based research in their decisions as has the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. Both the Sixth Circuit and the Ninth Circuit have requested that …


Four Reasons The Supreme Court Should Reconsider Its Article Iii Standing Doctrine, Clark Cunningham, Ute Römer-Barron Jan 2024

Four Reasons The Supreme Court Should Reconsider Its Article Iii Standing Doctrine, Clark Cunningham, Ute Römer-Barron

Faculty Publications By Year

This paper reviews four reasons the Supreme Court should reconsider its long-standing doctrine that Article III of the Constitution prevents federal courts from hearing civil cases unless plaintiffs show that their claims arise out of “injury-in-fact”. The doctrine is (1) incoherent in theory and unworkable in practice, (2) manipulable to serve policy-driven decisions, (3) inconsistent with historical practices in the Founding Era, and (4) not grounded in the text of Article III.

Parts I – III of the paper briefly review judicial decisions and legal scholarship that support or provide perspective on the first three reasons why the Court should …


The Tourism Industry And Plastic Waste Policies - Comparative Perspectives From The Portuguese Experience, Marina Monne De Oliveira, Romulo S.R. Sampaio, Patricia Regina Pinheiro Sampaio May 2023

The Tourism Industry And Plastic Waste Policies - Comparative Perspectives From The Portuguese Experience, Marina Monne De Oliveira, Romulo S.R. Sampaio, Patricia Regina Pinheiro Sampaio

Journal of Comparative Urban Law and Policy

This paper investigates the correlations between the tourism industry and plastic waste. It starts by evidencing that increase in tourism is likely to enhance the volume and improper destination of waste, including plastic, which has become a major environmental concern in touristic cities. The paper suggests that, on the other hand, negative environmental impact caused by plastic may disincentivize tourism, due to pollution in beaches and seas. As tourism grew in Portugal, the country experienced an increase in plastic waste and has taken measures to deal with the problem. Portugal passed federal legislation to ban single-use plastic tableware as of …


The Literary Language Of Privacy—How Judges' Use Of Literature Reveals Images Of Privacy In The Law, Elizabeth De Armond May 2023

The Literary Language Of Privacy—How Judges' Use Of Literature Reveals Images Of Privacy In The Law, Elizabeth De Armond

Georgia State University Law Review

George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four. When we think of literary works and privacy, that is the first book that comes to mind, and the same is true for judges penning privacy law opinions too. Although the novel is notable for expressing fears of authoritarian overreach, other literary works offer judges a tool for describing the plights of parties before them—parties who seek to vindicate breaches of privacy in many different forms. Nineteen Eighty-Four particularly suits cases that challenge government surveillance or non-governmental wiretapping. References to Franz Kafka and Joseph Heller illuminate other privacy harms, such as unease with governmental collection, …


Spring 2023 Cover Page, Georgia State University Law Review May 2023

Spring 2023 Cover Page, Georgia State University Law Review

Georgia State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Correcting Crooked Licensing Boards With A Revolving-Door Statute, Ronnie Thompson May 2023

Correcting Crooked Licensing Boards With A Revolving-Door Statute, Ronnie Thompson

Georgia State University Law Review

Contrary to conventional wisdom, occupational licensing restrictions do not serve a primary purpose of protecting consumers. They instead wage war on the market economy. This reality is unsurprising when one considers the makeup of a typical licensing board, which consists primarily of active market participants. These industry incumbents scheme to keep potential competitors out. Entrance exams for florists and onerous educational requirements for interior designers—absurd as they seem—become the rule rather than the exception. Despite their propensity for anticompetitive conduct, licensing boards elude review under the Sherman Act, the nation’s chief law regulating anticompetitive conduct. Licensing boards need not defend …


Inside Front Cover Page, Georgia State University Law Review May 2023

Inside Front Cover Page, Georgia State University Law Review

Georgia State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Copyright Page, Georgia State University Law Review May 2023

Copyright Page, Georgia State University Law Review

Georgia State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Member Masthead, Georgia State University Law Review May 2023

Member Masthead, Georgia State University Law Review

Georgia State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Faculty Masthead, Georgia State University Law Review May 2023

Faculty Masthead, Georgia State University Law Review

Georgia State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Table Of Contents, Georgia State University Law Review May 2023

Table Of Contents, Georgia State University Law Review

Georgia State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Public Good Through Charter Schools?, Philip Hackney May 2023

Public Good Through Charter Schools?, Philip Hackney

Georgia State University Law Review

Should nonprofit charter schools be considered “charitable” under § 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and be entitled to the benefits that go with that designation (income tax exemption, charitable contribution deduction, etc.)? Current tax law treats them as such; the question is whether there is a good rationale for this treatment. In addition to efficiency and equity, I consider political justice as a value in evaluating tax policy. By political justice, I mean a democratic system that prioritizes the opportunity for more people to have a voice in collective decisions (political voice equality or PVE). Thus, a tax policy …


Trading Nonenforcement, Ryan Snyder May 2023

Trading Nonenforcement, Ryan Snyder

Georgia State University Law Review

In recent years, federal agencies have increasingly used nonenforcement as a bargaining chip—promising not to enforce a legal requirement in exchange for a regulated party’s promise to do something else that the law doesn't require. This Article takes an in-depth look at how these nonenforcement trades work, why agencies and regulated parties make them, and the effects they have on social policy. The Article argues that these trades pose serious risks: Agencies often use trading to evade procedural and substantive limits on their power. The trades themselves present fairness problems, both because they tend to reward large, well-connected firms and …


Degrees Of Losing: A Challenge To The Federal "Frozen Benefit Rule", Tuscan A. Fairfield May 2023

Degrees Of Losing: A Challenge To The Federal "Frozen Benefit Rule", Tuscan A. Fairfield

Georgia State University Law Review

The 2016 amendment to the Uniformed Services Former Spouses’ Protection Act dramatically changed the level of discretion afforded to states in dividing military retired pay between divorcing parties. Now, all divorces involving an active service member at the time of divorce must adhere to Congress’s strict formula when dividing the former spouse’s interest in the service member’s pension. This Note explores the question of whether Congress overstepped its constitutional limitations in directing the actions of state courts, whether the new rule may violate principles of equal protection doctrine, and whether a challenge to the novel scheme has any chance of …


High Time To Revisit Federal Drug Sentencing: The Confusing Interplay Between Controlled Substances And Career Offender Sentence Enhancements, Carly Knight May 2023

High Time To Revisit Federal Drug Sentencing: The Confusing Interplay Between Controlled Substances And Career Offender Sentence Enhancements, Carly Knight

Georgia State University Law Review

The 1970s in the United States were largely defined by wars, both foreign and domestic: the Vietnam War and the War on Drugs, respectively. As part of President Richard Nixon’s anti-drug offensive, Congress enacted the Controlled Substances Act (CSA), part of the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970. The CSA organized—and criminalized—various drugs into schedules based on their permissible uses and potential for abuse. As states enacted their own versions of the CSA, some states chose to criminalize additional substances that were not included in the CSA.

The Sentencing Reform Act of 1984 and the United States …


Canary In A Coal Mine: What It Means To Lose A Constitutional Right, Mary Ziegler May 2023

Canary In A Coal Mine: What It Means To Lose A Constitutional Right, Mary Ziegler

Georgia State University Law Review

Remarks on Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization by Mary Ziegler at the 66th Henry J. Miller Distinguished Lecture


First Inside Page, Georgia State University Law Review May 2023

First Inside Page, Georgia State University Law Review

Georgia State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Mitigating Peer-To-Peer Housing Impacts: Toward A Rational Nexus P2p Housing Impact Mitigation Strategy, Arthur C. Nelson Apr 2023

Mitigating Peer-To-Peer Housing Impacts: Toward A Rational Nexus P2p Housing Impact Mitigation Strategy, Arthur C. Nelson

Journal of Comparative Urban Law and Policy

Traveler lodging has been around since humans created tribes and certainly since they invented civilization. The internet and the rise of peer-to-peer, short-term housing has accelerated traveler and lodging opportunities. Today, Airbnb alone has nearly three million hosts offering more than seven million listings. This article explores the rise of “peer-to-peer,” or P2P housing, and offers economic, planning, and public policy perspectives.


Lisbon: Pelos Frutos Conhece-Se A Arvore: Food Waste In The Land Of Plenty, Becky Jacobs Apr 2023

Lisbon: Pelos Frutos Conhece-Se A Arvore: Food Waste In The Land Of Plenty, Becky Jacobs

Journal of Comparative Urban Law and Policy

According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, one-third of all food produced for human consumption, approximately 1.3 billion tons per year, is wasted or lost globally. Data as of March 1, 2020 indicates that Europe produces 88 million tons of food waste annually, of which approximately one million tons is food waste from Portugal. Portugal has, and Lisbon in particular has, been a leader on food loss and waste policy issues. This article will detail Portugal’s efforts to reduce food waste as well as other countries efforts.


Introduction, Karen Johnston Apr 2023

Introduction, Karen Johnston

Journal of Comparative Urban Law and Policy

This article provides an introduction to the Journal of Comparative Urban Law & Policy, the Study Space Program offered by Georgia State University College of Law, and the articles resulting from the Study Space Lisbon Program.


Race, Indigeneity, And Migration, Natsu T. Saito Mar 2023

Race, Indigeneity, And Migration, Natsu T. Saito

Faculty Publications By Year

Race, indigeneity, and migration are integrally related in international law. This relationship can be traced to their origins in a legal system dedicated to facilitating European colonialism and imperial expansion. International law has constructed racial difference and deployed racialized hierarchies to determine who would be permitted to migrate to various parts of the world and what their rights and responsibilities would be in those locations, as well as the status of those already living in the territories at issue. Genealogical inquiry makes it clear that the imposition of racialized hierarchies, the construction of indigeneity, and the restrictions placed (or not …


Member Masthead, Georgia State University Law Review Mar 2023

Member Masthead, Georgia State University Law Review

Georgia State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


First Inside Page, Georgia State University Law Review Mar 2023

First Inside Page, Georgia State University Law Review

Georgia State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Overcoming The Presumption Of The Deceitful Debtor, Rebecca Rhym Mar 2023

Overcoming The Presumption Of The Deceitful Debtor, Rebecca Rhym

Georgia State University Law Review

Congress codified presumed consumer debtor abuse into the Bankruptcy Code with the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005. Since then, distrust of low- and middle-class debtors has permeated the legal system, evidenced most visibly by how easily legislators are swayed by creditor lobbyists’ rhetoric. This distrust has also reached our courts, where judges invoke the doctrine of judicial estoppel to bar debtor-plaintiffs from pursuing tort claims undisclosed in bankruptcy petitions. Instead of addressing societal problems underlying the high number of bankruptcy filings, like financial literacy and predatory lending, this Note argues that lawmakers and courts are perpetuating …


The Lawyer's Duty Of Tech Competence Post-Covid: Why Georgia Needs A New Professional Rule Now—More Than Ever, Julia Webb Mar 2023

The Lawyer's Duty Of Tech Competence Post-Covid: Why Georgia Needs A New Professional Rule Now—More Than Ever, Julia Webb

Georgia State University Law Review

The American Bar Association (ABA) promulgates the Model Rules for Professional Conduct (Model Rules), which prescribe the behavior with which lawyers must comply in demonstrating competency to practice law. In 2012, the ABA updated Comment 8 to Model Rule 1.1 to require maintaining competence in the “benefits and risks associated with relevant technology,” also known as a lawyer’s “duty of technological competence.” A decade later, the majority of state bar associations have adopted and implemented this language. Georgia, however, remains among the last ten states that have not yet formally adopted the duty of technological competence. The COVID-19 pandemic forced …


Cover Page, Georgia State University Law Review Mar 2023

Cover Page, Georgia State University Law Review

Georgia State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Copyright Page, Georgia State University Law Review Mar 2023

Copyright Page, Georgia State University Law Review

Georgia State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Faculty Masthead, Georgia State University Law Review Mar 2023

Faculty Masthead, Georgia State University Law Review

Georgia State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Table Of Contents, Georgia State University Law Review Mar 2023

Table Of Contents, Georgia State University Law Review

Georgia State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


When Does A Non-Fungible Token (Nft) Become A Security?, Brian Elzweig, Lawrence J. Trautman Mar 2023

When Does A Non-Fungible Token (Nft) Become A Security?, Brian Elzweig, Lawrence J. Trautman

Georgia State University Law Review

Non-fungible tokens (NFTs) gained prominence in the news cycle during March 2021 when $69 million was paid in a cryptocurrency known as Ether for a unique digital art piece titled Everydays: The First 5000 Days. Regulating NFTs is complicated because the technology encompasses varied applications. Therefore, it is the particular use of a given NFT that will determine its appropriate regulatory regime. For example, NFTs may take the form of collectibles, data associated with a physical item, financial instruments, or permanent records associated with a person, such as marriage licenses or property deeds. Just like digital art in the form …