On January 28, 2012, the Economist did something it hadn’t done in 70 years: it launched a weekly section focused on a single country—in this case,...
Early last year, Richard Pildes, Sudler Family Professor of Constitutional Law, learned that his friend Robert Bauer, a confidant of President Obama and the White House...
If you graduated from NYU School of Law more than 10 years ago, it’s likely that you think of commercial law courses as essentially focused on...
Statistics about housing abound, but often they’re skewed or designed to reinforce—rather than test—current beliefs among policymakers and a population that by and large is obsessed...
The international interest rate–rigging scandal currently ensnaring at least a dozen banks—and the fact that regulators might have known about it—stokes suspicions that corporate malfeasance is...
When Chen Guangcheng landed at Newark-Liberty International Airport in New Jersey after his dramatic exit from Beijing, he took a short drive to Greenwich Village. A...
For Professor of Clinical Law Bryan Stevenson, March 2012 came in like a lion and went out with a roar. He began the month giving a...
Henry Holt announced in July that it will publish the memoirs of Chen Guangcheng, a self-taught Chinese lawyer, in fall 2013. Chen’s story promises suspense and...