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Feature Comment: Don’T Let Post-Employment Conflicts Derail Your Contract Award, Jessica Tillipman, Bryan Dewan Jan 2024

Feature Comment: Don’T Let Post-Employment Conflicts Derail Your Contract Award, Jessica Tillipman, Bryan Dewan

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Often referred to as “revolving door” restrictions, the U.S. Government has devised numerous laws, policies and procedures designed to combat unethical or anti-competitive conduct that may stem from a Government employee’s decision to leave federal service. The laws range from ethics restrictions designed to minimize the appearance of impropriety while a federal employee endeavors to leave the Government, to criminal laws, which seek to punish conflicts of interest and improper conduct that may occur after Government service concludes.

In addition to the ethical and criminal considerations that must be taken into account when navigating the Government’s myriad post-Government employment restrictions, …


Policy Brief: Congress Should Reject The Lummis-Gillibrand Stablecoin Bill Because It Would Endanger Consumers, Investors, And Our Financial System, Arthur E. Wilmarth Jr. Jan 2024

Policy Brief: Congress Should Reject The Lummis-Gillibrand Stablecoin Bill Because It Would Endanger Consumers, Investors, And Our Financial System, Arthur E. Wilmarth Jr.

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

On April 17, 2024, Senators Cynthia Lummis (R-WY) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) introduced a bill entitled “The Lummis-Gillibrand Payment Stablecoin Act.” The bill’s declared purpose is to create “a clear regulatory framework for payment stablecoins that will protect consumers, enable innovation and promote U.S. dollar dominance while preserving the dual banking system.”

Contrary to its stated purpose, the Lummis-Gillibrand bill would establish a weak and deeply flawed regulatory regime for stablecoins, thereby exposing consumers, investors, and our financial markets to grave dangers. The bill would allow stablecoins, which are volatile, deposit- like instruments, to be offered to the public without …


Compensation Under The Microscope: What Has Gone Wrong With Oregon's Wrongful Compensation Statute?, Jeffrey Gutman Jan 2024

Compensation Under The Microscope: What Has Gone Wrong With Oregon's Wrongful Compensation Statute?, Jeffrey Gutman

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Oregon’s legislature passed one of the country’s most recent wrongful conviction compensation statutes in 2022. Not surprisingly, it borrows statutory structure and language from existing statutes that follow a litigation model in which a plaintiff files a claim for compensation in court and a judge (or jury) decides the case. In the nearly two and half years since passage, only three Oregon exonerees, of 27 listed on the National Registry of Exonerations who are potentially eligible, have received compensation, and two of those were compensated by settlement before even filing a complaint. The storyline of the Oregon statute is one …


The Sentinel Stirs: Government Procurement Law After Loper Bright Enterprises, Christopher R. Yukins, Kristen Ittig, Nicole Williamson Jan 2024

The Sentinel Stirs: Government Procurement Law After Loper Bright Enterprises, Christopher R. Yukins, Kristen Ittig, Nicole Williamson

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Administrative law – and by extension, government procurement law – is in a period of transition in the United States. The judiciary, sometimes alarmed by the perceived excesses of the administrative state, is reexamining the deference traditionally afforded agency interpretations of law. As part of that transition, the Supreme Court in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo (June 2024) overruled the test it first established in Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council (1984), which held that if a statute was ambiguous, the courts would defer to an agency’s reading of that statute so long as the agency’s interpretation was reasonable. This …


Regulating Producers By Randomizing Consumers, Michael B. Abramowicz Jan 2024

Regulating Producers By Randomizing Consumers, Michael B. Abramowicz

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Consumer law aims to empower consumers with accurate information and to protect them from misinformation. For complex goods and services, however, mandated disclosure laws and other consumer law tools have had only limited success in helping consumers project their satisfaction and costs. Market responses, such as ratings, have limitations that have prevented them from compensating adequately for consumer law’s shortcomings. This Article describes how regulators could improve measurements of quality and cost by borrowing a tool from drug law: randomization. In designated markets, consumers who accept an incentive to volunteer would be randomized among two or more choices, and the …


China's Anti-Secession Law: Background, Legal Significance, And Recent Developments, Donald C. Clarke Jan 2024

China's Anti-Secession Law: Background, Legal Significance, And Recent Developments, Donald C. Clarke

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

What is the significance of China’s 2005 Anti-Secession Law (ASL) specifically as a legal document? In other words, how if at all is it different for any practical purpose from a policy announcement? Would anything be different if it did not exist at all? What was the point of having the National People’s Congress issue it instead of, for example, the State Council (whose Taiwan Affairs Office in 2022 issued a White Paper)? What was the point of calling it a law, instead of something like “An Announcement to Taiwanese Compatriots,” as the NPC Standing Committee had done in 1979? …


The Implications Of Section 230 For Black Communities, Spencer A. Overton, Catherine Powell Jan 2024

The Implications Of Section 230 For Black Communities, Spencer A. Overton, Catherine Powell

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act generally immunizes online platforms such as Facebook, YouTube, Amazon, and Uber from liability for third-party user content (e.g., posts, comments, videos) and for moderation of that content. This article addresses an important issue overlooked by both defenders and critics of Section 230: the implications of the law and proposed reforms for Black communities. By relieving tech platforms of most legal liability for third-party content, Section 230 helps facilitate Black social activism, entrepreneurship, and artistic creativity. Further, Section 230 also relieves platforms of most legal liability for content moderation, which boosts platforms’ freedom to …


The Intentional Pursuit Of Purpose: Nurturing Students’ Authentic Motivation For Practicing Law, Katya S. Cronin Jan 2024

The Intentional Pursuit Of Purpose: Nurturing Students’ Authentic Motivation For Practicing Law, Katya S. Cronin

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

“Why do you want to pursue a career in the law?” Nearly every aspiring attorney answers this question as part of their law school application personal statement. They pour their hopes, dreams, and challenges into the answer to this question—their formative struggles, deeply held values, and resolve to make the world a better place as legal practitioners. Soon after starting law school, however, law students turn their attention from core aspirations to immediate concerns. Forgotten and slowly choked by the thorns of competition, prestige, and external validation, law students’ internal sense of self and purpose begin to wither away until, …


A Quartet Of Decisions That Cripple Agencies, Richard J. Pierce Jr Jan 2024

A Quartet Of Decisions That Cripple Agencies, Richard J. Pierce Jr

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Professor Pierce summarizes the four major administrative law decisions that the Supreme Court issued at the end of its 2023-2024 Term and predicts their effects.


Guardians Of Ethics For The Profession Of Arms: Judge Advocates Assisting Commanders To Choose The Harder Right Over The Easier Wrong, Lisa M. Schenck Jan 2024

Guardians Of Ethics For The Profession Of Arms: Judge Advocates Assisting Commanders To Choose The Harder Right Over The Easier Wrong, Lisa M. Schenck

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This article provides an explanation of the unique and critical role of members of the Service Judge Advocate General’s Corps, not only as attorneys providing legal services to commanders, staff, personnel, and family members, but also as Guardians of Ethics for the military, the Profession of Arms. Moreover, military lawyers are key leaders who are responsible to lead or guide others to the right ethical decision. And when Judge Advocates are not present at the table to provide sage, educated, measured, advice—or fail to speak up and address potential ethical issues that arise or they are ignored— military leaders do …


Copyright And The Training Of Human Authors And Generative Machines, Robert Brauneis Jan 2024

Copyright And The Training Of Human Authors And Generative Machines, Robert Brauneis

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

There are many limitations on copyright of which human authors can and do take advantage as they are learning. However, there is no blanket fair use immunity for use of copyrighted works to educate human authors, even though those authors typically do not go on to create substantially similar works. Human authors typically end up paying, directly or indirectly, for most of the copyrighted works from which they learn. Should it be different when human beings use copyrighted works to train generative AI models? This article concludes that it should not, in spite of two prominent arguments to the contrary. …


Disability, Race, And Immigration: The Intersectional Impact Of Policing, Tania N. Valdez Jan 2024

Disability, Race, And Immigration: The Intersectional Impact Of Policing, Tania N. Valdez

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Law enforcement officers commonly must respond to situations in which a person is experiencing acute symptoms of a mental illness. Yet from the first moment of police involvement, these community members face the possibility of negative outcomes. Consequences include officers' use of excessive force leading to injury or death, criminal arrest and prosecution that results in deprivation of liberty, separation from the community, and the creation of a permanent criminal record that affects other rights.

Although potential violence and criminalization are important reasons to avoid relying on police during mental health events, another key consideration is often ignored in the …


Durability, Flexibility And Plasticity In The U.N. Convention On The Law Of The Sea, Sean Murphy Jan 2024

Durability, Flexibility And Plasticity In The U.N. Convention On The Law Of The Sea, Sean Murphy

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

The overall resilience of the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea during the forty years since its adoption in 1982—its durability, its flexibility and its plasticity in the face of myriad challenges that have unfolded over time—is largely attributable to certain design features within the Convention, to a willingness to ‘bend’ the Convention toward practical outcomes when necessary, and to the foresight of the drafters in closely tying the Convention to other agreements and standards, as well as to the general field of international law, so that the Convention might evolve as the world evolves. There are risks …


Firearms And The Homeowner: Defending The Castle, The Curtilage, And Beyond, Cynthia Lee Jan 2024

Firearms And The Homeowner: Defending The Castle, The Curtilage, And Beyond, Cynthia Lee

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

In the spring of 2023, a series of back-to-back shootings shook the nation. A Black teenager in Missouri trying to pick up his two younger siblings went to the wrong door and rang the doorbell. The homeowner came to the door with a gun and, without saying a word, fired two shots at the Black teenager, hitting him in the face and the arm. A few days later, a Caucasian woman and her friends in upstate New York, looking for a party, drove up the wrong driveway. The homeowner came out of his house with a shotgun and fired two …


Bystanders To A Public Health Crisis: The Failures Of The U.S. Multi-Agency Regulatory Approach To Food Safety In The Face Of Persistent Organic Pollutants, Katya S. Cronin Jan 2024

Bystanders To A Public Health Crisis: The Failures Of The U.S. Multi-Agency Regulatory Approach To Food Safety In The Face Of Persistent Organic Pollutants, Katya S. Cronin

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (“PFAS”) are devastating our food systems and our health. Recent studies link even small exposure to PFAS to a host of adverse health outcomes, including cancer, autoimmune diseases, thyroid disease, liver damage, childhood obesity, infertility, and birth defects.

Food consumption is a primary route of PFAS exposure. PFAS are omnipresent at dangerous levels in our marine and agricultural environments, including in water, soil, fertilizers, compost, and air. From there, they can find their way into virtually every plant, fish, animal, and animal product, and ultimately (in the greatest concentration) into the consumer. In addition, PFAS-laden food …


A Transatlantic Analysis Of Eu And U.S. Strategies In “Green Procurement", Marta Andhov, Christopher R. Yukins Jan 2024

A Transatlantic Analysis Of Eu And U.S. Strategies In “Green Procurement", Marta Andhov, Christopher R. Yukins

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

As governments the world over move to reduce global warming, public procurement has become an increasingly important means of leveraging governments’ vast purchasing power to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions through “green” or environmentally sustainable procurement. This article reviews emerging strategies in green procurement in the European Union and the United States. The article notes that those green procurement strategies are remarkably consistent on both sides of the Atlantic, from sector-specific preferences for low-carbon products to eco-labels to life-cycle cost analyses which take into account broader environmental impacts. On both sides of the Atlantic, however, parallel problems have emerged as …


The Future Of Jurisdiction, Paul S. Berman Jan 2024

The Future Of Jurisdiction, Paul S. Berman

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

A new paradigm for conceptualizing the doctrine of personal jurisdiction is long overdue. In the 19th century the U.S. Supreme Court established a firm territorialist approach to jurisdiction befitting a geographically spread-out country with many local micro-economies. The more flexible “minimum contacts” test articulated in 1945 by International Shoe v. Washington ushered in a 20th century vision responding to increased automotive transportation and national industrial production. But now, at least three decades into the Internet and information economy era, the U.S. Supreme Court has yet to land on a coherent jurisdictional framework for the new century.

It’s not for want …


The New Gender Perspective: The Dawn Of Intersectional Autonomy In Women’S Rights, Rosa Celorio Jan 2024

The New Gender Perspective: The Dawn Of Intersectional Autonomy In Women’S Rights, Rosa Celorio

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

International human rights jurisprudence has increasingly mandated state action which integrates a gender perspective, taking into consideration the discriminatory norms, harmful social practices, stereotypes, and violence that women have and still suffer. A range of supranational bodies have issued case decisions promoting the adoption of gender-sensitive legislation, policies, programs, and the establishment of administration of justice systems well-trained and equipped to address women’s rights violations.

This article discusses how the conception of this gender perspective has evolved over time and is now centered on the pursuit of autonomy for women. Autonomy is presented as a key ingredient to ensure due …


Protecting The U.S. National Security State From A Rogue President, Laura T. Dickinson Jan 2024

Protecting The U.S. National Security State From A Rogue President, Laura T. Dickinson

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

The presidency of Donald Trump revealed weaknesses in the U.S. constitutional structure and its legal rules, weaknesses that had been covered over for most of our history because presidents of all political parties voluntarily obeyed norms of behavior that kept the presidency within the bounds of constitutional democratic governance. Unfortunately, there is no guarantee that such norms have been permanently restored. Thus, scholars, policymakers, and judges must consider now how to protect the rule of law from a rogue president, rather than waiting for the next crisis to occur. This Article provides a comprehensive set of achievable reforms targeted specifically …


Policy Brief: On Remand In Cantero, The Second Circuit Should Uphold New York's Interest-On-Escrow Law And Reject Bank Of America's Preemption Claim, Arthur E. Wilmarth Jr. Jan 2024

Policy Brief: On Remand In Cantero, The Second Circuit Should Uphold New York's Interest-On-Escrow Law And Reject Bank Of America's Preemption Claim, Arthur E. Wilmarth Jr.

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

In Cantero v. Bank of America, N.A., 144 S. Ct. 1290 (2024), the Supreme Court vacated and remanded a decision of the Second Circuit Court of Appeals. Bank of America argued that the National Bank Act (NBA) preempted New York General Obligation Law (NYGOL) § 5-601, thereby exempting the bank from any duty to comply with the New York statute. The Second Circuit agreed with the bank’s preemption claim.

NYGOL § 5-601 requires national banks and other mortgage lenders operating in New York to pay at least 2% annual interest on funds deposited by borrowers in mortgage escrow accounts. …


Plenary Power: Teaching The Immigration Law Of The Territories, Cori Alonso-Yoder Jan 2024

Plenary Power: Teaching The Immigration Law Of The Territories, Cori Alonso-Yoder

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Immigration law dominates national headlines and policy debates while immigrant communities struggle to secure legal representation. Law students are increasingly aware of these issues, often bringing lived experiences of the immigration system into the classroom. As immigration law professors seek to engage these students with doctrinal and clinical coursework, they often struggle to incorporate policy priorities and executive actions that shift with the political winds. In this tumult, many immigration law professors fail to realize that there is an entire body of U.S. immigration law they are not teaching-the immigration law of the U.S. territories. Indeed, many professors may not …


The Overton Window And Privacy Enforcement, Alicia Solow-Niederman Jan 2024

The Overton Window And Privacy Enforcement, Alicia Solow-Niederman

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

On paper, the Federal Trade Commission’s consumer protection authority seems straightforward: the agency is empowered to investigate and prevent unfair or deceptive acts or practices. This flexible and capacious authority, coupled with the agency’s jurisdiction over the entire economy, has allowed the FTC to respond to privacy challenges both online and offline. The contemporary question is whether the FTC can draw on this same authority to curtail the data-driven harms of commercial surveillance or emerging technologies like artificial intelligence.

This Essay contends that the legal answer is yes and argues that the key determinants of whether an agency like the …


The Supreme Court’S Opinion In Sec V. Jarkesy Has The Potential To Be Extremely Destructive, Richard J. Pierce Jr Jan 2024

The Supreme Court’S Opinion In Sec V. Jarkesy Has The Potential To Be Extremely Destructive, Richard J. Pierce Jr

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

In this essay, Professor Pierce describes the legal framework within which the Supreme Court decided whether an agency could adjudicate a class of disputes prior to its 2024 opinion in SEC. v Jarkesy and then explains why the reasoning in Jarkesy has the potential to require federal courts to adjudicate many thousands of regulatory disputes that they lack the expertise and resources to adjudicate in a competent manner.


The Centennial Of Meyer And Pierce: Parents’ Rights, Gender-Affirming Care, And Issues In Education, Ira C. Lupu Jan 2024

The Centennial Of Meyer And Pierce: Parents’ Rights, Gender-Affirming Care, And Issues In Education, Ira C. Lupu

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This paper was prepared for a Symposium marking the centennial of the Supreme Court’s decisions in Meyer v. Nebraska (1923) and Pierce v. Society of Sisters (1925). At their inception, Meyer and Pierce reflected constitutional principles of economic freedom and parental control of their children’s education. Part I traces the path of ideas put in motion by Meyer and Pierce. These include the decline of their economic freedom component and the broader grounding of their doctrines of parental authority. Eventually, the chameleon-like legacy of Meyer and Pierce stretched to include First Amendment concerns of religious exercise and knowledge acquisition, as …


Review Essay: Marta Cartabia And Nicola Lupo, “The Constitution Of Italy: A Contextual Analysis” (2023), Francesca Bignami Jan 2024

Review Essay: Marta Cartabia And Nicola Lupo, “The Constitution Of Italy: A Contextual Analysis” (2023), Francesca Bignami

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

In this review essay, I showcase aspects of Marta Cartabia’s and Nicola Lupo’s The Constitution of Italy that set it apart from standard texts and that make it an excellent resource on Italian government and public law. Then, I focus on two elements of the Italian constitutional order that are discussed in the book and that are unique when seen in comparative context—the non-hierarchical organization of the Italian judiciary and the salience of social rights. I argue that future research on these aspects of the Italian case could make an important contribution to cutting-edge debates in the field of comparative …


Extraterritoriality, Francesca Bignami, Giorgio Resta Jan 2024

Extraterritoriality, Francesca Bignami, Giorgio Resta

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This chapter argues that the competing American ballot-box and European fundamental rights paradigms of regulatory law have marked the specific domain of digital regulation. These regulatory paradigms and their associated state interests are projected extraterritorially through the market power of Silicon Valley, on the one hand, and the privacy rights of European Union (EU) regulators, on the other hand. This chapter also analyzes recent developments in the EU, where there is now a state effort to make digital markets and, relatedly, an emerging preference for some data localization to promote both fundamental rights and economic and security interests. In China, …


We Need A New Glass-Steagall Act To End The Toxic Symbiosis Between Universal Banks And Shadow Banks, Which Professor Corrigan Has More Fully Revealed, Arthur E. Wilmarth Jr. Jan 2024

We Need A New Glass-Steagall Act To End The Toxic Symbiosis Between Universal Banks And Shadow Banks, Which Professor Corrigan Has More Fully Revealed, Arthur E. Wilmarth Jr.

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Patrick Corrigan’s recent article highlights the abuses of securitization by universal banks during the subprime lending boom that led to the Global Financial Crisis of 2007–09 (GFC). Professor Corrigan’s article focuses on what Zoltan Pozsar and other researchers have called “internal” shadow banking—namely, the origination and securitization of hazardous loans by universal banks through nonbank affiliates, including broker-dealer subsidiaries and off-balance- sheet securitization vehicles. I agree with Professor Corrigan that the enormous credit risks generated by universal banks and their “internal” shadow banking affiliates played a major role in precipitating the GFC.

Professor Corrigan’s article gives less attention to what …


Food Procurement: An Essential Ingredient To Mitigating Climate Change And Enhancing Public Health, Chloë Waterman, Rachel Clark, Steven L. Schooner Jan 2024

Food Procurement: An Essential Ingredient To Mitigating Climate Change And Enhancing Public Health, Chloë Waterman, Rachel Clark, Steven L. Schooner

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This short article addresses a critical, but often underappreciated, aspect of the evolving suite of efforts to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions: food and agriculture systems, which account for at least a quarter of GHG emissions and more methane emissions than any other sector. The article invites government leadership to become more intentional in focusing on sustainable food procurement as a key strategy to mitigate climate change. The authors argue that public food procurement can – and should – be leveraged to generate a wide range of cascading social benefits beyond mitigating climate change and improving public health, including worker …


Congressional Testimony: Problems With The Sec's Climate Disclosure Proposal, Lawrence A. Cunningham Jan 2024

Congressional Testimony: Problems With The Sec's Climate Disclosure Proposal, Lawrence A. Cunningham

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This Congressional testimony, requested by the House Financial Services Committee, identifies the fatal flaws embedded in the SEC's controversial climate disclosure rule, To summarize some primary problems, the Proposal:

  • disregards evidence that most individual investors buy stocks primarily to save, not to influence climate policy;
  • does not address the millions of individual American investors who need the SEC’s protection as they save for education, homes, retirement, and philanthropy; and
  • ignores conflicts of interest between large asset managers and their beneficiaries—ordinary Americans—who have different preferences and goals.

In addition, the Proposal mandates irrelevant and burdensome disclosures that would harm investors by: …


Why Sustainable Procurement? Read All About It, Steven L. Schooner Jan 2024

Why Sustainable Procurement? Read All About It, Steven L. Schooner

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

As procurement professionals (knowingly or unknowingly) await regulations promulgated in an effort to adapt to and mitigate climate change, significant opportunities exist within current federal regulations and policy to affect change. For now, the burden to stimulate innovation falls upon procurement professionals, individually, and collectively. In that context, information is power. What better place to start than with a good book?

With an eye towards informing productive conversations across the federal acquisition community about evolving expectations, practices, and policies in sustainable procurement, this article suggests some reading from the massive and diverse body of work related to climate change.

This …