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2023: In the News
 
 - Levine: How your DMV photo could wind up in a lineup
 - Hughes says SCOTUS will ultimately decide Georgia's voting districts
 - Sag: That ChatGPT bedtime story probably violates trademark law
 - Levine: Poll workers will be powerful witnesses at Trump's GA trial
 - Nevitt: Can we move away from fossil fuels?
 - Simon: Giuliani likely can’t discharge $148 million jury award
 - Jacobi: SCOTUS is failing us in 3 essential ways
 - Volokh, former clerk, remembers Sandra Day O’Connor
 - Volokh on impact of Colorado's ruling on Trump candidacy
 - Nevitt: An assessment of the UN Climate Conference
 - Acevedo on whether Trump's speech is protected or criminal
 - Acevedo on how Giuliani will pay $148 million judgment
 - Hughes on DEA threat to GA medical marijuana law
 - Hughes: New GOP voting map doesn't reflect Georgia population
 - Ajunwa: Biden’s AI executive order needs teeth
 - Simon: Purdue case spotlights corporate bankruptcy legal dodge
 - Volokh reflects on O'Connor's legacy, impact at SCOTUS
 - Hughes on Georgia's new court-ordered voting districts
 - Hughes on how new voting districts may affect Georgia's Black voters
 - Carter: GA ranks #12 for most children in foster care
 - Volokh on use of Young Thug's lyrics as evidence
 - Hughes comments on court-ordered redistricting in GA, AL
 - Levine discusses limits of free speech for Trump, codefendants
 - Meier on hostages, possible truce in Middle East
 - Broyde on new SCOTUS code of conduct
 - Jacobi on Trump trials, gag orders, free speech
 - Carter: Most states, unlike Georgia, ban life without parole for teens
 - Smith on scope and pleas in GAG elections RICO case
 - Carter: Ossoff's DFACS investigation is sincere
 - Bagley on benefit sharing principles for DSI
 - Meier comments on Israel's pursuit of Hamas
 - Ajunwa: AI's power and bias need governing
 - Barth discusses church autonomy doctrine in Oklahoma case
 - Carter: GA foster care needs more creative solutions
 - Ajunwa on what Biden's AI order accomplishes
 - Levine: The effect of pleas and apologies in election tampering cases
 - Levine: Powell, Ellis 'in the room where it happened'
 - Carter: GA welfare system has 'multiple failure points'
 - Lawrence comments on social media addiction lawsuits
 - Smith: Lawyers know advantages of pleading early
 - Volokh: GA abortion ban opponents unlikely to succeed on appeal
 - Levine: This is how RICO prosecutions work
 - Volokh: Why GA Supreme Court upheld abortion 'heartbeat' law
 - Levine: Attorneys who pleaded in Trump case are valuable witnesses
 - Levine: RICO defendants who plead early have more to offer state
 - Jacobi: Gag orders are valid for criminal defendants, including Trump
 - Nash: Third plea in GA elections trial could start domino effect
 - Smith: Plea deals get prosecutors closer to Trump's alleged crimes
 - Levine: Codefendants' pleas mean Trump gets no preview of state’s case
 - Smith: Powell's plea agreement not surprising
 - Levine: Flipped defendants in Trump case more valuable as witnesses
 - Sag: Copyright doesn't recognize computer systems as authors
 - Ajunwa warns of 'algorithmic blackballing' in AI hiring systems
 - Carter on SNAP delays: Care for the most vulnerable
 - Meier: Hamas has committed war crimes
 - Volokh: Taxes, adult entertainment, and the First Amendment
 - Georgiev: Beware of greenwashing in company climate disclosures
 - Meier: How can Israel safely rescue hostages
 - Nevitt: The Environmental Law of the Border Wall
 - Ludsin: Both sides in Middle East conflict are committing war crimes
 - Carter comments on Georgia's harsh juvenile offender laws
 - Georgiev: Asset managers don't focus on executive pay
 - Jennings: UAE banks' lending practices would raise flags in U.S.
 - Lawrence on political impact of government shutdown
 - Sag: AI terms in strike deal a victory for writers
 - Jacobi's SCOTUS forecast for guns, gerrymandering, agencies, First Amendment
 - Levine: Wood subpoena doesn’t necessarily mean he's flipped
 - Smith on gag order, proposal to sever trials for Trump codefendants
 - Smith: Cop City and Georgia's home rule doctrine
 - Levine comments on news coverage of GA Trump cases
 - Smith: Cop City case could allow voters to challenge unpopular laws
 - Nash: Meadows was right to appeal denial to remove to federal court
 - Sag: Using sock puppet accounts to swipe videos is illegal
 - Smith: Federal court ambiguity surrounds Cop City ballot initiative
 - Smith explains how Hatch Act applies to GA election case
 - Levine: Executive branch has no authority to supervise GA elections- CNN 
 - Levine: Why Willis didn’t pursue charges against Graham in Trump probe
 - Ajunwa: US employers still have all the power in the workplace
 - Sag: What AI art is 'human enough' to earn copyright?
 - Smith on uncharted territory and the insurrection clause
 - Nash on potential chaos of trying Trump codefendants together
 - Sag: AI output isn't original expression, nor does it merit copyright
 - Nash: How Meadows' testimony could help prosecutors
 - Ajunwa: How AI allows businesses to quantify workers
 - Jacobi: Roberts steers when SCOTUS justices interrupt each other
 - Nash: Meadows hopes for a more favorable jury pool
 - Nash: Move to federal court might result in Trump judge presiding
 - Levine: Why Trump codefendants have called for speedy trials
 - Broyde: There’s an easy solution for SCOTUS ethics problems
 - Cloud: Trump’s booking, release were unusually quick
 - Levine breaks down Trump trial timeline
 - Smith: How speedy trials apply with multiple defendants, jurisdictions
 - Acevedo: Trump co-defendants may ask to sever trials
 - Nash: Meadows' motion to move to federal court not frivolous
 - Smith explains conditions of Trump's bond agreement
 - Nevitt: The Military Advantage of a Climate Emergency Declaration
 - Cloud: Prosecutors need proof Trump knew he lost
 - Acevedo: Bond agreement helps streamline booking for Trump
 - Levine explains factors in setting Trump's $200K bond
 - Smith: Be more discerning in granting Beltline tax breaks
 - Smith explains key differences in Georgia, federal RICO laws
 - Nash explains Meadows' petition to move to federal court
 - Smith: Meadows' motion to dismiss conspiracy charges may be 'a steep climb'
 - Volokh on teacher fired under Georgia’s ‘divisive concepts’ law
 - Nash: Meadows' motion to remove to federal court has some merit
 - Levine: In alleged Georgia conspiracy, Trump ‘is at the center of everything’
 - Levine: Trying 19 conspiracy defendants by March? Not realistic
 - Jacobi: Holding Trump accountable even more important than jail time
 - Levine on how to find unbiased jurors for Trump's GA trial
 - Cloud: Even if re-elected, Trump can't stop GA prosecution
 - Levine: Fulton DA's indictment 'painstakingly detailed'
 - Smith: Georgia RICO Act has lower threshold to establish pattern of criminality
 - Acevedo: One of Trump's codefendants will likely cooperate with prosecution
 - Cloud: Willis' past use of RICO 'absolutely logical'
 - Barron: America has never been colorblind
 - Simon on why big pharma uses 'Texas Two-Step' bankruptcy
 - Cloud: Willis has a strong track record in RICO prosecution
 - Nevitt: Declaring climate emergency 'a specific legal tool'
 - Simon: Sacklers get 'all of the benefit, none of the costs' in bankruptcy deal
 - Smith explains grand jury process in GA Trump investigation
 - Smith: Referendum on training center could transform voters' ability to influence policy
 - Cloud: Georgia RICO case against Trump will likely include alleged false statements
 - Levine: Special counsel ignores Trump's baiting, focuses on case
 - Barron: Trump team effort to disqualify prosecutor and judge 'extraordinary'
 - Das Acevedo: Telling the Story of the Sabarimala Battle
 - Sag: Silverman's lawsuit is 'most compelling' AI copyright case thus far
 - Nevitt: Why Tuberville is blocking military Senate confirmations
 - Broyde: Israel needs a written constitution
 - Ajunwa on AI, employer surveillance and 'The Quantified Worker'
 - Levine: Public defenders can use social media to catalyze change
 - Smith: Lower federal courts currently have more ethics rules than Supreme Court
 - Jacobi: Especially for judges, impartiality and optics matter
 - Hughes: Over-the-counter birth control important for women without healthcare
 - Jacobi on Jackson’s first term SCOTUS impact
 - Hutchinson: Colleges can consider racial experience but not race
 - Montague comments on Atlanta affordable housing plan
 - Quinn’s research illustrates high court's shifts, alliances, direction
 - Volokh: SCOTUS finds Biden overstepped authority on student loan forgiveness
 - Volokh: SCOTUS rules you can't be forced to create messages you disagree with
 - Volokh: SCOTUS LGBTQ ruling aligns with free speech fundamentals
 - Jacobi: Justice Jackson considers human impact of SCOTUS decisions
 - Holbrook: 303 Creative decision opens door to discrimination
 - Affirmative action isn't a free pass, Hutchinson says
 - Smith: Why SCOTUS decisions are delayed
 - Jacobi: SCOTUS split in Moore v. Harper shows shift to right
 - Jacobi unpacks SCOTUS: oral arguments, subtext, and snark
 - Nevitt: Can law adapt to meet climate change?
 - Smith comments on petition to put Cop City funding on ballot
 - Jacobi: Hold the champagne, SCOTUS isn't done yet
 - Hughes: SCOTUS decision on vote dilution could affect Georgia PSC
 - Levine discusses 'public voice of the defender'
 - Georgiev comments on SEC cyberattack disclosure rule
 - Bedzow on end-of-life care, MAID, and physician leadership
 - Smith: Venue choice shows federal prosecutors' confidence in Trump charges
 - Barron: New Trump indictment won’t affect Fulton DA's timeline
 - Hughes: In wake of SCOTUS ruling, Georgia may have to redraw voting maps
 - Barron explains Trump's federal national security charges
 - Hughes: SCOTUS ruling on Alabama voting rights will impact Georgia
 - Hughes: SCOTUS may further gut Voting Rights Act
 - Jacobi on SCOTUS ethics, accountability, and appearances
 - Sag: Why Hollywood fears generative AI
 - Cloud: Georgia's RICO law allows other jurisdiction violations in Trump case
 - Farley 11L featured in Practical Law's 'Careers in Law'
 - Broyde: SCOTUS recusal decisions need judicial review
 - Hughes: DeSantis' legislative agenda disconcerting, repressive
 - Bagley: Diversity Pilots Initiative coming to Emory Law
 - Nash: Be cautious in scrutiny of judges' behavior prior to the bench
 - Jacobi: How SCOTUS views ethics, power, and quid pro quo
 - Acevedo: In the battle for tenure, words matter
 - Hughes: Don't conflate Black history with CRT
 - Hughes: FDA should approve OTC oral contraception
 - Levine: 'Fake electors' likely more valuable as witnesses in Georgia Trump probe
 - Georgiev: US bosses enjoyed big pay rises in 2022 despite falling stock market
 - Levine: Prosecutor's posted policy on Hispanics should shock us all
 - Bedzow: New fertility science deserves nuanced consideration
 - Sag: A future of thinking differently about data
 - Emory law professor speaks on the continued impact of Emmett Till's murder, how his accuser wasn't indicted
 - Sybblis: Caribbean countries still grapple with colonialism's legacies
 - Volokh: A (very) slight win over the administrative state
 - Hughes: SCOTUS decision on Mifepristone means 'business as usual'
 - Hughes: SCOTUS upholding Texas judge's ruling would have been stunning
 - Jacobi: Thomas' excuses for million-dollar vacations 'don't pass the smell test'
 - Nash: GA Supreme Court administers a wrist slap to judicial ethics commission
 - Levine: GA DA oversight bill 'feels like political theater'
 - Hughes: Texas judge's ruling sets dangerous precedent for FDA-approved drugs
 - Shepherd: Emory should call out Glenn UMC’s homophobia
 - Georgiev: New SEC rule gauges CEO pay vs. performance
 - Volokh: SCOTUS stay on Mifeprostone isn’t final word on abortion
 - Smith: People want to know about political influence at SCOTUS
 - Nevitt | The legal crisis in the climate crisis
 - Holbrook: White House seeks middle ground on trans student-athletes
 - Carter: Child mental healthcare crisis 'far exceeds foster care'
 - Levine: Trump's falsified records in furtherance of another crime, creates felony
 - Levine: What impact does Trump's NY indictment have on Georgia case?
 - Levine: No crossover in GA, DC, NY Trump cases
 - Levine: GA law aims to punish prosecutors
 - Jacobi op-ed | Justices, heel thyself
 - Jacobi: Female SCOTUS justices still interrupted more often, but Barrett less
 - Georgiev comments on climate risk as Puerto Rico rebuillds grid
 - Smith discusses possible outcomes in Georgia Supreme Court abortion case
 - Georgiev: Companies wary of climate litigation risk
 - Satz: Threat of danger from mentally ill massively overestimated
 - Georgiev comments on JP Morgan clawback attempt
 - Bagley: Who owns the phrase 'Are you a Grady baby?'
 - Levine: Prosecutors have always used discretion in filing cases
 - Hutchinson on Selma: Freedom requires continuous action
 - Romig: For final legal docs, ChatGPT isn’t the answer
 - Smith explains high bar set for qualified immunity challenge
 - Georgiev explains Carter's presidential blind trust
 - Cloud: Grand juror interviews don't make for happy prosecutors
 - Sag: Apple's use of narrators' voices to train AI likely legal
 - Sag: ChatGPT has no concept of truth and 'will totally lie to you'
 - Smith: Creating separate white police force anti-democratic
 - Johnson: FTX collapse highlights need for crypto regulation
 - Nevitt on gas leaf blowers: loud, dirty, plus 'horrific’' climate impact
 - Farley: Russian conscription in occupied Ukraine is a war crime
 - Sag: ChatGPT cannot give you Shakespeare
 - Levine: Why mandatory minimum sentences don't work
 - SEC commissioner cites Georgiev research on public-private markets
 - Sag: Fair use, style, transformation affect AI art copyright
 - New scholarship will diversify environmental study, practice
 - Smith: Other state's rulings on abortion may influence Georgia's
 - Smith: DA's investigative powers may trump state legislative rules
 - Smith: Georgia’s fetus tax credit contains a lot of unknowns
 - Bobinski: New scholarship starts path to diversify environmental law
 - New Emory scholarship aims to diversify environmental practice
 - Sag on Malibu Media's legal woes: 'I welcome their demise.'