The CJEU’s judgment in C-448/23 Commission v Poland rejects national identity and ultra vires review as limits to EU law. The post examines whether the ruling shows a qualitative
shift in the Union’s constitutional architecture and the emergence of a European "supreme" authority. [...]
Last July, government officials embraced a brazen new interpretation of immigration law. Under this new interpretation, a statute designed to govern detention at the border
would also mandate the detention of any noncitizen inside the country who entered without inspection without any possibility of bond, regardless of how long they [...]
We expose the anatomy of the governmental machinery that the Department of Homeland Security uses to (1) conduct immigration arrests on the streets of Minneapolis and St. Paul,
(2) transport individuals in unmarked vehicles with masked agents to the Whipple Federal Building at Fort Snelling, (3) detain individuals in grossly inhumane conditions [...]
Signup to receive the Early Edition in your inbox here. A curated weekday guide to major news and developments over the last 24 hours. Here’s today’s news: IRAN President
Trump told Axios yesterday that he is considering sending a second aircraft carrier strike group to the Middle East to prepare for military action if negotiations [...]
The new issue of the Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy is out. You will find articles on birthright citizenship by Ilan Wurman and Keith Whittington, plus a shorter
piece by yours truly. [...]