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LIRA@BC Law

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The Alledger

Beginning in 1981 and continuing into the mid-1990s, The Alledger was the student newspaper of the Boston College Law School. The Alledger published both serious and satirical articles on topics related to student life at the law school. Frequent topics include the arrival and departure of faculty m...

Boston College Law Review is Boston College Law School's flagship scholarly publication. The Review, ranked in the top 25 law journals by Washington & Lee, publishes eight issues each year featuring articles and essays by prominent authors addressing legal issues of national interest. In addit...

Boston College Law Library collects the publications of Law School faculty, and, when possible, makes them available through this collection. Organized by year and tagged with authors and subject areas, this resource reflects the school and the library’s commitment to open access while at the same t...

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How the law contributes to economic inequality is the subject of renewed attention, but the legal dimensions of geographic inequality have received much less scrutiny. At its core, geographic inequality is a function of how the national income gets spatially divided between capital and labor. Wh...

The Supreme Court’s 1969 decision in Brandenburg v. Ohio introduced a new paradigm for evaluating incitement by looking at whether the speech was intended to induce imminent lawless action by third parties and whether such action was likely to occur. The tripartite test offered by the Court, however...

We are living in a time of labor unrest, and the National Labor Relations Board’s (“NLRB” or “the Board”) ability to address new sources of strife in the modern workplace is imperiled. The U.S. Supreme Court’s major questions doctrine has already struck down agency actions involving the environment ...