Fordham Law Professor James Brudney was quoted in this Law360 article about how the federal appeals courts have continued to back the National Labor Relations Board’s legal interpretations—even as they have set out varying views of the deference they owe after the U.S. Supreme’s decision last year to set a stricter standard for agency reviews. Read “Circuits’ Respect For NLRB Continues Post-Chevron” on Law360.
Author: Newsroom
In this CNBC article, Fordham Law Professor Zephyr Teachout explains why she believes Senator Elizabeth Warren’s proposed bill to target price gouging by the market’s biggest companies—named The Price Gouging Prevention Act of 2025—is a “very common sense piece of legislation” and is in line with the state price gouging laws around the country. Zephyr Teachout, a Fordham Law professor and antitrust expert who has run for office in New York State, called it a “very common sense piece of legislation,” and said it is in line with the state price gouging laws around the country. “One way to understand…
In the first episode of ‘Looking Back, Moving Forward’—a new podcast series from Ms. Studios hosted by Carmen Rios—Fordham Law Professor Julie C. Suk discusses the misogyny embedded in institutions, the shortcomings of the U.S. Constitution, and the kind of change women need to achieve true equality. Suk is the author of We the Women: The Unstoppable Mothers of the Equal Rights Amendment (Skyhorse Publishing, 2020). “If we were, in fact, not discriminating and not perpetuating anti-democratic or oppressive dynamics, you would expect gender parity in decision-making positions to emerge naturally. The fact that we don’t see that should lead us…
Fordham Graduate School of Social Service Professor Lauri Goldkind, Ph.D., and Fordham Law Associate Professor Aniket Kesari, Ph.D., are working to ensure the Bronx has an effective digital infrastructure in place to thrive in a new era of artificial intelligence. What should communities prioritize in their digital infrastructure as the world continues to rapidly innovate, particularly with advancements in artificial intelligence (AI)? Should it be governance and policy-making, which guide us toward frameworks and responsible AI use? Or should we focus on the trust, relationships, and collaboration that make innovation meaningful? The Bronx AI Access Initiative (BAi2) has set out…
In this Bloomberg Law op-ed, Fordham Law Dean Emeritus Matthew Diller discusses Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s concurrence that centers on the question of how federal courts should bring about national uniformity in the absence of nationwide injunctions. He also says the Supreme Court is on course to rely more on its “shadow docket” and erode the country’s trust in the rule of law. There’s a lot to unpack in the US Supreme Court’s decision in Trump v. CASA, which focuses on the authority of federal courts to issue universal injunctions to government policies. Lawyers and lower courts are scrambling to figure out its impact…
Jotwell, the Journal of Things We Like (Lots) (edited by editor-in-chief Michael Froomkin and sponsored by the University of Miami School of Law), examined Does Textualism Constrain Supreme Court Justices?, a 2025 Fordham Law Legal Studies Research Paper (No. 5122933) co-written by Fordham Law Professor James Brudney. Jotwell states that the paper, which analyzes justices’ use of textual canons and legislative history, “provides much-needed empirical testing of one of textualist interpretive philosophy’s key claims.” Enter Professors Brudney and Baum, who marshal an impressive dataset of 660 statutory decisions involving labor and employment law statutes decided between 1969 and 2024 in order to…
As announced on ContractsProf Blog, Fordham Law Professor Ethan J. Leib and Temple Law Professor Guy A. Rub have released “The Open-Source Contract Law Casebook” with co-authors University of Minnesota Law Professor Matthew Bodie, Fordham Law Associate Dean for Academic Affairs Pamela Bookman, Rutgers Law Professor Tal Kastner, and FSU College of Law Professor Jake Linford. We’re excited to release a project we’ve been working on (with our co-authors: Matthew Bodie, Pamela Bookman, Tal Kastner, and Jake Linford) for some time: The Open-Source Contract Law Casebook. If you teach contracts and are looking for more affordable materials for your students or…
Bloomberg Law Podcast Host June Grasso speaks to Leon Fresco, a partner at Holland & Knight, Harold Krent, a professor at the Chicago-Kent College of Law and Susan Scafidi, Susan Scafidi, founder and director of Fordham Law’s Fashion Law Institute, about the top legal stories of the week—including Lululemon’s lawsuit against Costco. Listen to “Weekend Law: Citizenship, SCOTUS Stats & Lululemon” on Bloomberg Law Podcast. Read the transcript.
On the latest episode of Bloomberg Law Podcast with host June Grasso, Susan Scafidi, founder and director of Fordham Law’s Fashion Law Institute, discusses Lululemon suing Costco, accusing it of copying its designs. Listen to “Lululemon Sues Costco Over Alleged Dupes” on Bloomberg Law Podcast. Read the transcript.
Fordham Law Adjunct Professor Jerry H. Goldfeder, director of Fordham Law School’s Voting Rights and Democracy Project, wrote about whether Andrew Cuomo and Curtis Sliwa will continue their campaigns for New York City Mayor, in this amNY op-ed. With the Democratic mayoral primary finally behind us, one would think that New York City voters can finally take a breath. It seems, however, that the November general election is already upon us. Will Andrew Cuomo continue his campaign? Will Republican candidate for mayor Curtis Sliwa take a job in President Trump’s administration? I have no idea, but I will tell you…