Volume 2017, No. 6

Articles:
Federalism Hedging, Entrenchment, and the Climate Challenge by William W. Buzbee
Economic Analysis of Labor Regulation by Hiba Hafiz
Atlas Nods: The Libertarian Case for a Basic Income by Miranda Perry Fleischer & Daniel Hemel

Comment:
Not Just a Fantasy: The Real Benefits of Daily Fantasy Sports Legislation for Wisconsin by Brian C. Miller

Volume 2017, No. 5

Articles:
The Foundations of Constitutional Theory by Andrew Coan
One Person, No Votes: Unopposed Candidate Statutes and the State of Election Law by Noah B. Lindell
Crimmigration-Counterterrorism by Margaret Hu

Comment:
The Doctor Will See You Now-From 100 Miles Away: Navigating Physician Non-Compete Agreements in the Age of Telemedicine by Greta Mattison Megna

Volume 2017, No. 4

Articles:
Business, Corruption, and Human Rights: Towards a New Responsibility for Corporations to Combat Corruption by David Hess
The Tragedy of Elephants by Branden D. Jung
Winning the Battle, Losing the War?: Assessing the Impact of Misclassification Litigation on Workers in the Gig Economy by V.B. Dubal

Note:
Lewis v. Epic: An Employee Arbitration Odessey by Andrew J. Fabianczyk

Negotiating Environmental Federalism: Dynamic Federalism as a Strategy for Good Governance

I begin with great thanks to the Wisconsin Law Review for the opportunity to be a part of this timely and important conversation about executive power and administrative governance. I have been invited here to share my work on negotiated federalism, which explores the way that good multiscalar governance is often the product of intergovernmental bargaining among decision makers at various levels of government. As I have described in this work, negotiations are sometimes conducted purposefully, in statutorily prescribed ways, and elsewhere more serendipitously or even inadvertently, as a byproduct of the wider political process. The privileged constitutional status of the federal and state governments brings special attention to the negotiations that take place among state and federal actors, but similar dynamics apply in negotiations involving local, regional, national, and international actors. And while all three branches of government participate in different forms of negotiated governance (some more and less obvious), the executive branch features especially prominently in these efforts.

For this symposium, I would like to distill a few important points from my research about the need for negotiated governance and the options for accomplishing it.

WLR Welcomes 2017-18 2L Associates

The Wisconsin Law Review is pleased announce its new 2L associates. Congratulations to you all, and we look forward to meeting you at Orientation.   Monique Arrington Andrew Benson Aaron Bibb Hannah Boeck Maria Bucci Domonic …

Volume 2017, No. 3

Articles:
Debunking the Stranger-in-the-Bushes Myth: The Case for Sexual Assault Protection Orders by Shawn E. Fields
Tampon Taxes, Discrimination, and Human Rights by Bridget J. Crawford & Carla Spivack
The Uneasy Case for Patent Federalism by Roger Allan Ford

Comment:
Clearing the Path from Trailhead to Summit with a Leave No Trace Law by Samuel Case

Volume 2017, No. 2

Symposium Issue: Modern Federal Judicial Selection

Articles:
Filling the Seventh Circuit Vacancies by Carl Tobias
Majority Rule and the Future of Judicial Selection by Michael J. Gerhardt & Richard W. Painter
Cooperative Judicial Nomination During the Obama Administration by David Fontana
Is There Really a Diversity Conundrum? by Theresa M. Beiner
How Political Ideology Undermines Racial and Gender Diversity I Federal Judicial Selection: The Prospects for Judicial Diversity in the Trump Years by Kevin R. Johnson
Diversity, Qualification, and Ideology: How Female and Minority Judges Have Changed, or Not Changed, Over Time by Maya Sen
A Tale of Two Justices: Brandeis, Marshall, and Federal Court Judicial Diversity by Linda Sheryl Greene

Volume 2017, No. 1

Address:
Our Justice System at an Inflection Point by William C. Hubbard

Articles:
“Captured Boards”: The Rise of “Super Directors” and the Case for a Board Suite by Kobi Kastiel & Yaron Nili
The Case for Symmetry in Antidiscrimination Law by Naomi Schoenbaum

Note:
Let This Jardines Grow: The Case for Curtilage Protection in Common Spaces by Kathryn E. Fifield

Comment:
TIF-for-Tax: Upholding TIF’s Original Purpose and Maximizing Its Use as a Catalyst for Community Economic Development by Bryon Eagon

The International Criminal Liability of United States Government Lawyers Authorizing Torture

Mary H. Hansel

In a matter of weeks, the International Criminal Court (ICC) is expected to open a full-fledged investigation into the “war crimes of torture and related ill-treatment, by United States military forces deployed to Afghanistan and in secret detention facilities operated by the Central Intelligence Agency.” Pursuant to the principle of complementarity, the ICC cannot take the case if the United States has conducted its own investigation and decided against prosecution “unless the decision resulted from the unwillingness or inability of the State genuinely to prosecute.”