January 31, 2025
“For younger trans lawyers, I know how important it is to see versions of yourself reflected in different spaces,” says Chase Strangio ’10, who made history in December as the first openly transgender person to argue before the Supreme Court. Read more in the ABA Journal.
January 28, 2025
Check out Kris Franklin’s review of the second edition of Professor Jeremy Paul’s Getting to Maybe in the latest issue of the Journal of Legal Education.
January 28, 2025
TIME profiles Professor Richard Daynard, president of Northeastern Law’s Public Health Advocacy Institute, and his pioneering efforts to hold the sports betting industry accountable for gambling addiction. The article highlights his decades-long work in public health litigation, drawing parallels to his successful legal battles against Big Tobacco. It also offers a fascinating glimpse into his early years, tracing the experiences that shaped his passion for public health litigation.
January 27, 2025
“In the whack-a-mole post-Dobbs world, every state can interpret its own parameters of state preemption,” writes Professor Martha Davis in her latest piece for the State Court Report.
January 23, 2025
Podcast Alert: Professor Alexandra Roberts joined A Fashion Law Dinner Party with Felicia Caponigri to unpack "dangerous dupes" and the legal nuances of influencers’ communication. Don’t miss this insightful discussion!
January 23, 2025
Professor Hemanth Gundavaram, cofounder and director of Northeastern Law’s Immigrant Justice Clinic, tells The Boston Globe that regardless of the legality, the point of the Trump administration’s immigration order could be to simply instill fear in local leaders.
January 16, 2025
“To me, the proliferation of Chinese apps is showing the limits of an app-by-app designation under (the law), and also the US government’s limited ability to control how US citizens use the internet and on which forum they choose to express themselves,” Professor Elettra Bietti tells CNN Business.
January 16, 2025
“A Trump executive order restricting birthright citizenship would merely be the latest in a long and ugly history of failed attempts to persuade the Supreme Court to ignore the sweeping breadth of the Fourteenth Amendment’s citizenship clause,” writes Professor Rachel Rosenbloom in an op-ed for TIME.
January 14, 2025
“The #MeToo movement marked the start of a reckoning in the entertainment industry and the Combs prosecution feels like the latest chapter in that story,” Professor Alexandra Roberts tells Women’s Wear Daily.
January 14, 2025
Professor Sharmila Murthy's article, “Disrupting Utility Law for Water Justice,” has been selected for inclusion in the 17th edition of the Environmental Law and Policy Annual Review (ELPAR).
January 14, 2025
In new report on protecting public health in the courts, the Act for Public Health partnership calls for a variety of action steps, including research, education, coordination with allies and an increased focus by public health on the nomination and election of judges.
January 14, 2025
Northeastern Law’s Public Health Advocacy Institute recently filed a lawsuit accusing Abbott Laboratories of misleading parents and caregivers about the nutritional value of its sugar-filled toddler milk.