LARC Cardoso Law (Yeshida Univ)
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Cardozo Law News Brief: February 7, 2025
Highlights from the February 7, 2025 Cardozo Law News Brief include:
Cardozo\u27s P*LAW 2025 featured a week of student-led public service programming, coordinated by the Center for Public Service Law.
Professor Jessica Roth spoke to The New York Times and Politico about the possible dismissal of charges against NYC Mayor Eric Adams.
Professor Betsy Ginsberg was quoted in The Wall Street Journal on constitutional questions related to incarcerating Americans in El Salvador.
Professor Andrea Schneider spoke to Business Insider about Costco’s pay increases for non-union workers and the implications for labor negotiations.https://larc.cardozo.yu.edu/news-brief-2025/1009/thumbnail.jp
Cardozo Law News Brief: March 14, 2025
Highlights from the March 14, 2025 Cardozo Law News Brief include:
Professor Matthew Wansley spoke to The Washington Post about safety concerns with Zoox’s self-driving vehicles.
Professor Haiyun Damon-Feng wrote in Slate on the Trump administration\u27s immigration actions against children.
Professor Michael Herz discussed constitutional spending powers in Fortune.
Professor David Rudenstine published an op-ed in the New York Law Journal defending press freedoms.
Professor Lindsay Nash was interviewed by The New Yorker and Zeteo on immigration and due process rights.
Adjunct Professor Gary Galperin analyzed a pretrial motion in Business Insider.
Faculty scholarship updates include:
Professor Emmanuel Hiram Arnaud presenting on U.S. territorial criminal jurisdiction.
Professor Luís Carlos Calderón Gómez publishing “Coin Taxes” in U.C. Irvine Law Review.https://larc.cardozo.yu.edu/news-brief-2025/1005/thumbnail.jp
Cardozo Law News Brief: April 4, 2025
Highlights from the April 4, 2025 Cardozo Law News Brief include:
Professor Jessica Roth appeared on CNN’s AC360 to discuss the rule of law and legal representation under the Trump administration.
Professor Lindsay Nash spoke with CBS News about the arrest and detention of a Columbia student with no criminal charges.
Professor Luís Carlos Calderón Gómez commented on a SCOTUS religious freedom case in CNN, USA Today, Newsweek, and Bloomberg.
Professor Alexander Reinert was quoted in Gothamist on protecting sexual assault plaintiffs’ identities in court.
Faculty updates include:
Professor Calderón Gómez presenting at Columbia Law.
Professor Christine Kim contributing to TaxProf Blog.
Professor Jacob Noti-Victor winning a 2025 Antitrust Writing Award.
Professor Anthony Sebok delivering keynotes and lectures on liability and litigation finance.https://larc.cardozo.yu.edu/news-brief-2025/1003/thumbnail.jp
Cardozo Law News Brief: May 16, 2025
Highlights from the May 16, 2025 Cardozo Law News Brief include:
Professor Michael Herz spoke to National Law Journal about the limited impact of Trump’s executive order on regulatory prosecutions.
Professor Peter Markowitz was quoted in Gothamist on a judge’s decision to release a Bronx man detained by ICE.
Professor Haiyun Damon-Feng discussed racial bias in immigration policy in Bloomberg.
Professor Alexander Reinert appeared on NY1 to comment on the appointment of a remediation manager at Rikers Island.
Professor Zalman Rothschild’s 2022 study, Free Exercise Partnership, was cited in a New York Times opinion essay.https://larc.cardozo.yu.edu/news-brief-2025/1014/thumbnail.jp
Research Palooza
This year\u27s greatest career research resource fair !https://larc.cardozo.yu.edu/flyers-2025-2026/1011/thumbnail.jp
Muslim Law Students Association
Come learn about MSA, the events we are planning, and meet other Muslim students.https://larc.cardozo.yu.edu/flyers-2025-2026/1015/thumbnail.jp
Hegseth Under Scrutiny in Lethal Boat Strikes
Professor Gabor Rona Writes Letter to the Editor in The New York Times on Whether Trump\u27s Targeting of Alleged Drug Boats in Caribbean Is a War Crime
Illiberal Constitutionalism: Viable Alternative or Nemesis of the Modern Constitutional Ideal?
Illiberal constitutionalism has spread recently in various parts of the world, raising the question of whether it is a viable alternative to its liberal counterpart or a pathway to authoritarianism. “Liberal” and “illiberal” are contested terms, and liberal constitutions are compatible not only with philosophical liberalism but also with republicanism, pluralism, and certain kinds of liberal communitarianism. Contemporary examples of illiberal constitutionalism fall into three different types: communal-based, such as the one in Singapore; populist-based, such as that in Orban\u27s Hungary; and opportunistic, such as that invoked by Trump and Bolsonaro. Philosophically, illiberal constitutionalism works well with Karl Schmitt\u27s anti-liberal and anti-pluralist political theology. Ultimately, unlike its communal-based counterpart, the populist kind of illiberal constitutionalism fails to conform with the four pillars deployed by liberal constitutionalism and looms as a pathway to authoritarianism.https://larc.cardozo.yu.edu/faculty-chapters/1116/thumbnail.jp
Trump’s Retirement-Account Order Is a Solution in Search of a Problem
401(k) accounts are where most Americans put their financial assets. President Trump appears determined to prod them to invest those accounts in “alternative investments,” most prominently, private equity. To that end, in Executive Order 14330, the president ordered the Department of Labor (“DOL”) to “relieve the regulatory burdens and litigation risk that” allegedly deny 401(k) participants access to such investments
Ukraine: The Judicial Challenge
9:00 am-11:00 am: The Challenge of Putin’s Rewriting of History and Legitimizing the War Against Ukraine.
• Nicolas Werth (Memorial) Putin’s Grand Narrative, from the Great patriotic War to the Invasion of Ukraine
• Dmytro Vovk (Cardozo Law) The role of Russia\u27s weaponization of religion for the justification of the aggression against Ukraine and the international and national legal responses
• Nathaniel Raymond (Yale) The Deportation and Russification of Ukrainian Children
11:15 am-12:45 pm: A Legal Case Investigated in Co-Construction with Civil Society
• Shulamit Almog (University of Haïfa), Breaking the Walls of Silence: Seeking Justice for Victims of Conflict-Related Violence in Ukraine
• François Croquette (Amnesty International), Amnesty International’s Evidence Lab
12:45 pm-1:00 pm: Closing Remarks
Peter Goodrichhttps://larc.cardozo.yu.edu/flyers-2025-2026/1033/thumbnail.jp