Shame, Guilt, Violence, and Shakespeare: In a new book, David A.J. Richards and James Gilligan reveal what Shakespeare’s plays teach about the motivations for and perpetuation of violence in the criminal legal system and beyond Featured News April 18, 2022 Faculty Ideas
New Balance: Can contract law address inequality? Kevin Davis and Mariana Pargendler find examples in three developing countries. Featured News April 8, 2022 Faculty Ideas
Escaping the ‘Novelty Trap’: Existing intellectual property law can make it more challenging for developing countries to innovate, Rochelle Dreyfuss writes. Featured News March 29, 2022 Faculty Ideas
Broken Tools: Vincent Southerland illuminates the problem of bias in the criminal legal system's use of algorithmic tools Featured News March 14, 2022 Faculty Ideas
The Law of Memes: Amy Adler and Jeanne Fromer argue that memes, which raise questions about conventional notions of copyright law, have considerable legal and cultural significance Featured News January 19, 2022 Faculty Ideas
Eating to Win: Scott Hemphill spotlights an antitrust problem for highly innovative industries: anticompetitive acquisitions of nascent competitors Featured News December 20, 2021 Faculty Ideas
Measuring Consumer Uncertainty: NYU researchers suggest more nuanced tools to gauge the marketplace confusion caused by similar trademarks Featured News December 1, 2021 Faculty Ideas
Retooled Economies: Cynthia Estlund’s most recent book proposes strategies for a world in which automation could dramatically reduce employment Featured News November 12, 2021 Faculty Ideas
A Voice for Global Justice: César Rodríguez-Garavito addresses climate change as a human rights issue. Featured News September 9, 2021 Centers Faculty Global Ideas