Overturning ‘Roe v. Wade’ Could Lead to Birth Control Restrictions
Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché says the legal landscape will “explode overnight” if Roe v. Wade is overturned. Read more.
Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché says the legal landscape will “explode overnight” if Roe v. Wade is overturned. Read more.
A Fifth Circuit decision that greatly reduces the SEC’s power has significant implications for administrative law, other regulatory agencies, and the scope of the federal government itself, says Prof. Craig Green. Read more.
Should undated mail-in ballots be counted in the PA GOP Senate race? David McCormick has asked the court to say yes, and Prof. Craig Green says the Voting Rights Act supports his claim. Read more.
Radnor Township has passed an ordinance barring police from arresting abortion providers or patients should an abortion ban become law in PA. Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché says it will come down to buy-in from law enforcement. Read more.
Americans enjoy a right to interstate travel that could be disrupted by states that try to prohibit their citizens from accessing abortion care across state lines, says interim Dean Rachel Rebouché. Read more.
PA GOP Senate candidates Mehmet Oz and David McCormick are headed to court over mail-in ballots with missing dates. Prof. Craig Green says that by law, ballots must be counted unless the missing information is “material” to their vote. Read more.
With abortion control likely to return to the states, interim Dean Rachel Rebouché says that state measures like those in California and Connecticut, designed to protect providers and visiting patients, will become increasingly important. Read more.
Interim Dean Rachel Rebouché and co-author Linda McClain connect the dots between access to abortion and gender equality in this op-ed for The Hill. Read more.
Was conservative opposition to Chevron deference after Obama’s re-election a harbinger of today’s partisan Supreme Court? Prof. Craig Green’s scholarship, cited in this Politico article, makes the case. Read more.
If abortion regulation is returned to the states, interim Dean Rachel Rebouche says that interstate conflict will become “a feature, not a bug. Read more.