Georgia Law Review

Georgia Law Review

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Georgia Law Review is the flagship publication of the University of Georgia School of Law. Georgia Law Review’s mission addresses two principal goals.

Established in 1966, Georgia Law Review is the flagship publication of the University of Georgia School of Law. Staffed entirely by second- and third-year law students, the Law Review is Georgia Law’s only general subject-matter publication. Law Review publishes one volume–comprised of four quarterly issues–annually, and it has recently launched a Symposium issue. Dedicated to publishing quality a

Privacy is Not Dead: Expressively Using Law to Push Back Against Corporate Deregulators and Meaningfully Protect Data Privacy Rights | Published in Georgia Law Review 04/26/2023

In his Note, Alexander F. Krupp, Georgia Law '23, advocates for robust privacy legislation that takes full advantage of the expressive function of the law to meaningfully protect individual data privacy rights from corporate deregulators.

Privacy is Not Dead: Expressively Using Law to Push Back Against Corporate Deregulators and Meaningfully Protect Data Privacy Rights | Published in Georgia Law Review By Alexander F. Krupp. This Note advocates for robust privacy legislation that takes full advantage of the expressive function of the law to meaningfully protect individual data privacy rights from corporate deregulators.

A Fourteenth Century Solution to a Twenty-First Century Problem: Using Qui Tam Legislation to Limit Executive War Power | Published in Georgia Law Review 04/25/2023

In his Note, Vol. 57 Executive Articles Editor Nicholas R. Lewis argues that qui tam legislation should be used to limit expansive executive war power, and offers a framework to do so through existing laws or new legislation.

A Fourteenth Century Solution to a Twenty-First Century Problem: Using Qui Tam Legislation to Limit Executive War Power | Published in Georgia Law Review By Nicholas R. Lewis. This Note argues that qui tam legislation should be used to limit expansive executive war power, and offers a framework to do so through existing laws or new legislation.

Stay Schemin': Tax Court's Recent Ruling on Credit Card Rewards and the Impact This Ruling Has on Future Rewards Programs | Published in Georgia Law Review 04/24/2023

In his Note, Hunter Davis, Georgia Law '23, examines the Tax Court's recent consumer loyalty rewards case—Anikeev v. Commissioner—and the question of which governmental entity should address the taxability of credit card rewards.

Stay Schemin': Tax Court's Recent Ruling on Credit Card Rewards and the Impact This Ruling Has on Future Rewards Programs | Published in Georgia Law Review By Hunter Davis. This Note examines the Tax Court's recent consumer loyalty rewards case—Anikeev v. Commissioner—and the question of which governmental entity should address the taxability of credit card rewards.

You're Out!: Three Strikes Against the PLRA's Three Strikes Rule | Published in Georgia Law Review 04/19/2023

In his Note, Kasey Clark, Georgia Law '23, explains issues with the "three strikes rule" in the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA) and advocates for courts to dismantle the rule after years of legislative inaction.

You're Out!: Three Strikes Against the PLRA's Three Strikes Rule | Published in Georgia Law Review By Kasey Clark. This Note explains issues with the "three strikes rule" in the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA) and advocates for courts to dismantle the rule after years of legislative inaction.

Unacceptable Risk: The Failure of Georgia's "Guilty but Intellectually Disabled" Statute and a Call for Change | Published in Georgia Law Review 04/18/2023

In his Note, Vol. 57 Senior Managing Editor Logan Purvis reviews the history of Georgia's law for determining intellectual disability, the Supreme Court's rulings and guidance on the issue, and proposes changes to the law to remedy prejudice.

Unacceptable Risk: The Failure of Georgia's "Guilty but Intellectually Disabled" Statute and a Call for Change | Published in Georgia Law Review By Logan Purvis. This Note reviews the history of Georgia's law for determining intellectual disability, the Supreme Court's rulings and guidance on the issue, and proposes changes to the law to remedy prejudice.

Faithful Ex*****on in the Fifty States | Published in Georgia Law Review 04/04/2023

In Vol. 57 Issue 2, Zachary S. Price documents the variation in prosecutorial authority nationwide and argues that these varied positive laws should govern whether categorical nonenforcement violates a duty of faithful ex*****on.

Faithful Ex*****on in the Fifty States | Published in Georgia Law Review By Zachary S. Price. This Article documents the variation in prosecutorial authority nationwide and argues that these varied positive laws should govern whether categorical nonenforcement violates a duty of faithful ex*****on.

Standing on the Shoulders of LLCs: Tax Entity Status and Decentralized Autonomous Organizations | Published in Georgia Law Review 04/03/2023

In Vol. 57 Issue 2, Samuel D. Brunson discusses the explosion of decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs), their growth and development in relation to LLCs, and the obligations that come with their tax entity status.

Standing on the Shoulders of LLCs: Tax Entity Status and Decentralized Autonomous Organizations | Published in Georgia Law Review By Samuel D. Brunson. This Article discusses the explosion of decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs), their growth and development in relation to LLCs, and the obligations that come with their tax entity status.

Constitutional Text, Founding-Era History, and the Independent-State-Legislature Theory | Published in Georgia Law Review 03/31/2023

In his Article, Dan T. Coenen studies founding-era history and Constitutional text to evaluate the independent-state-legislature theory, concluding that it does not comport with a proper reading of the Constitution.

Constitutional Text, Founding-Era History, and the Independent-State-Legislature Theory | Published in Georgia Law Review By Dan T. Coenen. This Article studies founding-era history and Constitutional text to evaluate the independent-state-legislature theory, concluding that it does not comport with a proper reading of the Constitution.

Biased but Reasonable: Bias Under the Cover of Standard of Care | Published in Georgia Law Review 03/27/2023

In Vol. 57 Issue 2, Maytal Gilboa argues that "biased-but-reasonable" medical treatment evades liability under negligence law and proposes using the loss of chance doctrine to eliminate evidentiary hurdles and incentivize the elimination of bias.

Biased but Reasonable: Bias Under the Cover of Standard of Care | Published in Georgia Law Review By Maytal Gilboa. This Article argues that "biased-but-reasonable" medical treatment evades liability under negligence law and proposes using the loss of chance doctrine to eliminate evidentiary hurdles and incentivize the elimination of bias.

03/24/2023

Thank you to Dr. Amanda Reid, Dan Burke, Sharon Cop, Asaf Lubin, Gregory Dickinson, Rebecca Hamilton, Monika Ehrman, Roy Hadley, and Matthew Grocoff, who spoke at today's symposium.
An additional thank you to all who attended as well as our Executive Symposium Editors, Savannah Grant and Tripp Keeffe.

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