Conference for Arms Law Scholars
Have your paper critiqued by experts from all perspectives at the 2026 Firearms Law Works-in-Progress Conference
Have your paper critiqued by experts from all perspectives at the 2026 Firearms Law Works-in-Progress Conference
The more the government intervenes in the market, the more New York parents pay for child care.
Over 100,000 students use the state’s portable education funds for private schools and homeschooling.
As the district's struggle to clear snow drags on, the case for public infrastructure maintenance becomes weaker.
We don’t have to treat everything as political, even if politics has a meddlesome hand in everything.
A Texas jury found Adrian Gonzales not guilty of endangering children by failing to confront the gunman at Robb Elementary School.
The real squeeze comes from government-distorted markets, not economic decline.
So holds a court, reversing student Guy Christensen's "disenrollment." The student also wrote, responding to the murder of two Israeli embassy employees in D.C. outside the Capital Jewish Museum, "I do not condemn the elimination of those two Zionist officials."
State lawmakers should be more skeptical of overly broad laws, too.
An Eleventh Circuit panel concludes (by a 2-1 vote) that this is likely the right result.
New "gender ideology" rule has predictable results
Adrian Gonzales is on trial for acts of "omission" that prosecutors say amounted to 29 felony counts of child endangerment.
Plus: Thank capitalism for the best parts of college football bowl season
New York schools need more choice and better curricula, but the city's new mayor wants to take choices away.
From college sports to league expansion, politicians are going to have plenty of sway over sports next year.
The more the government intervenes in the market, the more New York parents pay for child care.
When the media say the middle class is in decline, they're technically right—because people are getting richer.
Plus: College Football Playoff complaints and an awful NFL officiating blunder.
The appeals court ruled that administrators violated Stuart Reges' First Amendment rights when they investigated and threatened to punish him for constitutionally protected speech.
"[I]n the public university setting, student disagreement with a professor's academic speech on an issue of public concern cannot alter the Pickering analysis in the government's favor."
In Compact, Jacob Savage exhaustively documents discrimination in the name of equity.
Larry Bushart's lawyers argue that his arrest for constitutionally protected speech violated the First and Fourth amendments.
Your chance to apply to be a law school dean!
Plus: Fix the NBA Cup by blowing it up, World Cup ticket prices or lotteries, and more.
Depression and anxiety are declining, adding yet more complications to the anti-smartphone and anti–social media narratives.
Plus: Chile elects a right-winger, Jimmy Lai gets convicted, midair collision narrowly averted, and more...
Sarah McLaughlin reveals how foreign governments pressure American universities through speech codes and satellite campuses, and examines the broader threat international authoritarianism poses to free expression.
But there's a silver lining—sort of.
Plus: Are college football bowl games dead, and can the playoff be fixed?
Yet the facts in the article would equally have supported the headline, "Elite Private Colleges Apparently Hurt College-Bound Women, Trump May Stop That."
One claim is that CMU's Chief Diversity Officer illegally recorded meeting with student and the accused professor—and then apparently "asserted her Fifth Amendment rights when ... asked her if she did so or if she had a pattern or practice of recording student meetings, without their consent, in the scope of her duties."
If you get into an elite college, you probably don't have a learning disability.
What the controversy over a failing grade for a bad essay reveals about the true purpose of higher education.
New data display the failures of the expanded Discovery Program.
FTC staff support the proposal by the Texas Supreme Court to allow for alternative means of accreditation.
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