No. 4-0, January 2017
Index
- The New World of Electoral Politics and What it Means: an Introductory Essay
- Making America Equal Again: an Interview With Robert Ahdieh
- Stop-and-frisk Under President-elect Donald Trump's Administration
- A Call for Ethics and Civility in Governance and Litigation: Changing Culture and Increasing Accountability
- Conflicts of Interest and the President: Reviewing the State of Law in the Face of a Trump Presidency
- Recommendations for Improving the Health Care System-pharmacology
- U.s.-eu Trade Barriers and the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership Agreement
- Fcpa Enforcement and Compliance Under Trump
- Labor in the Trump Years
- Employment Limbo-a Labor and Employment Law Perspective on the Transition from Obama to Trump
- Government by Contract: the White House Needs Capacity to Account for the Legacy of 20th Century Reform
- Jury Practice in Post-truth America: a Cautionary Note
- Money Talks
- An Interview With Charles Holton
- Conservative Mythology and the Supreme Court
- Hindu American Immigration Reform Priorities for the Trump Administration
- The Workers' President
- An Interview With Wilma Liebman: Liebman Knows Labor Law - the Future of the National Labor Relations Board
- Considerations for the Next Administration: Criminal Justice Reform and Prisoner Reentry
- Marijuana on Trial: Who Decides?
- Against the Backdrop of President-elect Trump's Carrier Deal: the Breach of Fiduciary Duty Exposure Caused by Directing a Subsidiary to Undertake a Transaction for the Parent Company's Benefit
- Environmental Law in the Trump Administration
- Medicine Meets Wall Street
- The Impact of a Trump Presidency on Criminal Law
- A Wish-list from the Trenches of Health Information Technology
- A Civil Justice System That Works for Working People
- On Your First Day, President Trump, Please Repeal the Immunization of Gun Sellers Act
- Draining the Swamp Requires Robust Whistleblower Protections and Incentives
- Challenges to Health Care Reform in 2017
- Afterword: the Election, the Regulators, and the Regulated