The faculty at the Columbus School of Law have published articles in a wide variety of legal and non-legal disciplines. This repository collection includes a selection of some of the many articles authored by our faculty. A more complete bibliography of faculty scholarship is available at the link below.
Submissions from 2024
Critical Theories, Justice, And the Rule of Law, Adam J. MacLeod
Freedom to Give, Devise, and Bequeath, Raymond C. O'Brien
Group Ownership and The Ends of Legal Fictions, Adam J. MacLeod
Judicial Power and Potential Unconstitutionality: A Scholastic Perspective, Kevin C. Walsh
Placing Legal Context In Context, Chad Squitieri
The First Amendment, Discrimination, and Public Accommodations at Common Law, Adam J. MacLeod
The Lost History of Judicial Restraint, Derek A. Webb
The Very Idea of Tradition in the Law, Marc O. DeGirolami
Treating the Administrative as Law: Responding to the “Judicial Aggrandizement” Critique, Chad Squitieri
Why Equity Follows the Law, Adam J. MacLeod
Submissions from 2023
Assisted Suicide, Forced Cooperation, and Coercion: Reflections on a Brewing Storm, Lucia A. Silecchia
Common Sense or Sensibility: Vaccine Hesitancy, Parens Patriae, and the Common Good, George P. Smith II
Creating a Trust Through Delegation, Raymond C. O'Brien
"Engines of the Ruling Party": The Establishment Clause and the Power Politics of "Managing Diversity", Robert A. Destro
Establishment as Tradition, Marc O. DeGirolami
Is, Ought, and the Limited Competence of Experts, Adam J. MacLeod
Mysterizing Religion, Marc O. DeGirolami
Opus as the Core of Property, Adam J. MacLeod
Parental Rights: In Search of Coherence, Elizabeth Kirk
Personal Jurisdiction and the Fairness Factor(s), Megan La Belle
Practice-Based Constitutional Theories, J. Joel Alicea
Private Caregiver Presumption for Elder Caregivers, Raymond C. O'Brien
Property and Moral Responsibilities: Some Reflections on Modern Catholic Social Theory, Lucia A. Silecchia
Proposing a Model Antilapse Clause, Raymond C. O'Brien
“Recommend . . . Measures”: A Textualist Reformulation Of The Major Questions Doctrine, Chad Squitieri
