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Stanford Law School Professor Julian Nyarko, who focuses much of his scholarship on algorithmic fairness and computational methods, has been at the forefront of many of these inquiries over the last several years. [read post]
17 Mar 2024, 6:00 am by Lawrence Solum
IntroductionNormative legal theory is concerned with the ends and justifications for the law as a whole and for particular legal rules. [read post]
16 Mar 2024, 9:31 pm by Justin Hendrix
Another canard Stanford dispels relates to supposed statements by Renee DiResta, research manager at Stanford University (and a board member of Tech Policy Press). [read post]
15 Mar 2024, 3:17 am by Rob Robinson
Notably, Stanford scholars point out potential repercussions on complementary markets, modestly masking the AI landscape’s profound contours. [read post]
Hank Greely, the Deane F. and Kate Edelman Johnson Professor of Law and the director of the Center for Law and the BiosciencesOn a recent episode of the Stanford Legal podcast, Hank Greely (BA ’74), the Deane F. and Kate Edelman Johnson Professor of Law and the director of the Center for Law and the Biosciences, explained why he thinks the Alabama decision is not likely to have a significant long-term impact on IVF. [read post]
26 Feb 2024, 3:37 am by SHG
Stanford’s Professor McConnell recalled a recent exchange in one of his classes. [read post]
24 Feb 2024, 10:15 am by Tom Smith
Michael Eisenberg, the study’s author, told Stanford Medicine’s blog Scope. [read post]
23 Feb 2024, 4:00 am by Eric Segall
In 2018, Professor Jud Campbell, now of Stanford University, wrote a pathbreaking article in the Yale Law Journal demonstrating that our current first amendment doctrine is almost exclusively based on common law constitutionalism, not text or history. [read post]
22 Feb 2024, 2:04 pm by Josh Blackman
[The issues, arguments, and evidence raised by Mikhail have already been addressed by extant scholarship, including our scholarship. [read post]
22 Feb 2024, 9:38 am by Neil H. Buchanan
Oppenheimer had also gone to the effort of reading quite a few of my columns here on Dorf on Law, including my writings about the Stanford Law incident last year in which a far-right federal judge auditioned to be the next Supreme Court diva (which I summarized here, with links therein to all five of my original columns). [read post]
21 Feb 2024, 5:51 pm by Daphne Keller
  This is the second in a hopefully finite series of blog posts about the legal issues in the NetChoice cases, in which platforms raise First Amendment challenges to social media laws in Texas and Florida. [read post]
20 Feb 2024, 9:01 pm by Joanna L. Grossman and Sarah F. Corning
In a bizarre ruling, the Alabama Supreme Court recently held that frozen embryos are children for purposes of the state’s wrongful death statute. [read post]
20 Feb 2024, 2:16 pm by Josh Blackman
[The issues, arguments, and evidence raised by Mikhail has already been addressed by our scholarship. [read post]
20 Feb 2024, 5:50 am by Maggie Mills
As a result, seizures cannot be lawful countermeasures, no matter how much we might wish they were. [read post]
18 Feb 2024, 10:00 am by Gene Takagi
Perhaps he was murdered more directly, but the details don’t matter: The Russian state killed him. [read post]
17 Feb 2024, 3:39 am by SHG
Remember the Stanford Law debacle when DEI Dean Tirien Steinbach chose to attack invited speaker Judge Kyle Duncan and applaud the students who disrupted his presentation? [read post]
15 Feb 2024, 11:41 pm by Lawrence Norden
” Alex Stamos, former director of one of the leading election-disinformation tracking operations, the Stanford Internet Observatory, noted that “since this investigation has cost the university now approaching seven [figure] legal fees, it’s been pretty successful, I think, in discouraging us from making it worthwhile for us to do a study in 2024. [read post]