In this article, Ben Rininger discusses recent requests that FTC Chair Lina Khan recuse herself in FTC adjudications and enforcement actions involving Big Tech companies. Rininger argues that the ideologies and theories of legal interpretation and economics that federal regulators profess should not provide grounds for recusal.
Dressing-Up Professionalism: How Legal Professionalism Reinforces Social Power Structures through Attire and How Civility Could Help Us Change
In this article, Tori DeLaney explores how redefining civility might help the legal profession deemphasize the elitist, racist, and gendered expectations ingrained in its attire standards while recognizing both civility and attire in the profession were founded on oppressive and exclusionary ideals.
The Fate of Comment 8: Analyzing a Lawyer’s Ethical Obligation of Technological Competence
This excerpt introduces Lisa Rosenof's Student Comment, which addresses the merits of an ethical rule requiring lawyers to maintain technological competency. Lisa's Student Comment was published in Volume 90, Issue 4 of the University of Cincinnati Law Review.
