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 2021
Information Age Technology, Industrial Age Laws, Elizabeth I. Winston
Liberalism and Disagreement in American Constitutional Theory, J. Joel Alicea
Looking Beyond the Profit and Into the Light: Consumer Financial Protection and the Common Good, Veryl Victoria Miles
Online Onboarding: Corporate Governance Training In The COVID-19 Era, Seth C. Oranburg and Benjamin P. Kahn
Reconstructing Malice in the Law of Punitive Damages, Marc O. DeGirolami
Securities Regulation and Social Media, Seth C. Oranburg
Statutory Jurisdiction and Constitutional Orthodoxy in McCulloch, Cohens, and Osborn, Kevin C. Walsh
The End of the Affair, Marc O. DeGirolami
The Miller Trilogy and the Persistence of Extreme Juvenile Sentences, Cara H. Drinan
Transaction Cost Economics, Labor Law, and the Gig Economy, Seth C. Oranburg and Liya Palagashvili
What Makes Property Liberal?, Adam J. MacLeod
Who Determines Majorness?, Chad Squitieri
Submissions from 2020
Church and State and Child Endangerment, Raymond C. O'Brien
Conversations on the Warren Court's Impact on Criminal Justice: In Re Gault at 50, Cara H. Drinan
Corporations Hybrid: A COVID Case Study on Innovation in Business Law Pedagogy, Seth C. Oranburg and David Tamasy
Encouraging Entrepreneurship and Innovation Through Regulatory Democratization, Seth C. Oranburg
First Amendment Traditionalism, Marc O. DeGirolami
Is the #MeToo Movement for Real? The Implications for Jurors’ Biases in Sexual Assault Cases, Mary Graw Leary
Marital Versus Nonmarital Entitlements, Raymond C. O'Brien
Public Rights After Oil States Energy, Adam J. MacLeod
The Faithful Justice, Kevin C. Walsh
The Traditions of American Constitutional Law, Marc O. DeGirolami
Submissions from 2019
Administrative Power and Religious Liberty at the Supreme Court, Mark L. Rienzi
Against the Tiers of Constitutional Scrutiny, J. Joel Alicea and John D. Ohlendorf
