At the Blog
On Monday, we brought you our spring scouting report on some of the hottest new LPE and LPE-adjacent articles. People are calling it “sold gold and ton heavy,” a “fabulous list,” and “roughly 1.2 million words of scholarship that I now need to find time to read.”
On Wednesday, Andrew Miller argued that as personalized pricing and consumer profiling spread, hidden patterns of advantage and disadvantage threaten to undermine the shared conditions that make collective action possible.
In LPE Land
Shaun Ossei-Owusu has a new book, Law on Trial: An Unlikely Insider Reckons with Our Legal System, which examines how legal education and the legal profession exacerbate social inequality.
This coming Wednesday, May 6, the American Bar Foundation will feature Aziz Rana (in-person and virtually) on “The Breakdown of the American Constitutional Compact.” Registration is free and details can found here.
At the Roosevelt Institute, Kate Andrias and Alexander Hertel-Fernandez have a new report, Democratic Abundance: An Abundance That Works for Workers.
In the Yale Law Journal, Jordan Cozby has a new student note, Federalism’s Labor-Law Exception.
At the Vanderbilt Policy Accelerator, Brian Shearer has a new academic article and white paper arguing that Americans are being overcharged by $150 billion annually to insure their homes, autos and businesses.