Works published or forthcoming by Center staff and affiliates:
- “Restoring Chevron Deference by Statute,” (forthcoming)
- “Transcultural Courts,” International Journal of Procedural Law (forthcoming 2025)
- “The Supreme Court and Public Opinion,” 111 Iowa Law Review (forthcoming 2025)
- “Personal Jurisdiction and Federalism,” 103 Washington University Law Review 1 (2025)
- “Judicial Jurisdiction and Competence,” in Handbook on Comparative Civil Procedure 134 (Edward Elgar 2025) (with Sebastian Spinei)
- “The Complexities of Consent to Personal Jurisdiction,” 113 California Law Review (forthcoming 2025)
- “The Missing Millions: Cy Pres in Federal Securities Class-Action Settlements,” 74 Emory Law Journal 1 (2024) (with Joe Grundfest)
- “How Economic Downturns Affect Legal Markets,” 31 International Journal of the Legal Profession 247 (2024) (with Max Bilsborough)
- “Constitutional Allocations of Judicial Authority,” in 5 Comparative Procedural Law and Justice (International Association of Procedural Law 2024)
- “Why Do In-State Plaintiffs Invoke Diversity Jurisdiction?,” 49 Law & Social Inquiry 1283 (2024)
- “When Does State Law Affect Federal Jurisdiction?,” 43 Review of Litigation 117 (2024)
- “The Culture of Forum Shopping in the United States,” 57 The International Lawyer 307 (2024)
- “Preliminary Report on Class-Action Settlement Distributions in the Northern District of California” (2023) (white paper) (with Brandon Prince and Vaughn Walker)
- “Rule 4 and Personal Jurisdiction,” 99 Notre Dame Law Review 1 (2023)
- “The Making of the Supreme Court Rules,” 90 George Washington Law Review 866 (2022)
- “Personal Jurisdiction, Comparativism, and Ford,” 51 Stetson Law Review 187 (2022)
- “Article III and the Political-Question Doctrine,” 116 Northwestern University Law Review 681 (2021)
- “Cooperativism in the American Adversarial Tradition,” 40 Civil Justice Quarterly 283 (2021)
- “Videoconferencing and Legal Doctrine,” 51 Southwestern Law Review 9 (2021)
- “Texas v. Pennsylvania and the Political-Question Doctrine,” 2021 University of Illinois Law Review Online 141