Oregon Law Review

Oregon Law Review Continuing to advance legal scholarship as the oldest continuously published law journal in the Pacific Northwest.

Oregon Law Review was founded in 1921 by the faculty at the University of Oregon School of Law. It is the oldest continuously published law journal in the Pacific Northwest and has been run by students since 1967. Contributors to the Review have included scholars, practitioners, judges, and even Justices of the US Supreme Court. With each issue we publish, the Oregon Law Review staff seeks to adva

nce legal scholarship with innovative, top-quality articles. Now in its 100th year, the Review publishes two issues annually.

In, " : Social Media and Tax Enforcement," Michelle Lyon Drumbl articulates a concern that the use of social media minin...
09/28/2021

In, " : Social Media and Tax Enforcement," Michelle Lyon Drumbl articulates a concern that the use of social media mining may pose a greater harm to low-income taxpayers relative to other types of taxpayers, in part because it is easier for the IRS to direct automated resources at the types of issues involved in examining those returns.

Read the full Article here: https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26234

In "Outed by Advertisements: How LGBTQ Internet Users Present a Case for Federal Data Privacy Legislation," Noah Ashman ...
09/13/2021

In "Outed by Advertisements: How LGBTQ Internet Users Present a Case for Federal Data Privacy Legislation," Noah Ashman addresses the phenomenon of “outing” for the LGBTQ community through the lens of online data storage and argues that a more uniform data privacy scheme is necessary to mitigate the problem.

The full Comment can be read here: https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26239

Immigration in today’s political discourse is extremely divisive, and a prevailing reason for this is the structure of t...
08/31/2021

Immigration in today’s political discourse is extremely divisive, and a prevailing reason for this is the structure of the immigration system. Gilbert Alexander Cotto-Lazo offers solutions in "Give Me Your Tired, Your Poor, Your Huddled Masses: An Overview of the Immigration System and Chevron Deference."

Read the Article here: https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26237

In "Mitigating Housing Instability During a Pandemic," Michelle D. Layser, Edward W. De Barbieri, Andrew J. Greenlee, Tr...
08/17/2021

In "Mitigating Housing Instability During a Pandemic," Michelle D. Layser, Edward W. De Barbieri, Andrew J. Greenlee, Tracy A. Kaye, and Blaine G. Saito analyze the pathways by which unmitigated housing instability could impede the success of public health strategies during the COVID-19 pandemic and provide a historically grounded evaluation of the housing policy response.

Read the full Article here: https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26238

In "The Gift That Keeps on Taking: How the TCJA Undermines Societal Health," Reece Petrik focuses on how recent changes ...
08/02/2021

In "The Gift That Keeps on Taking: How the TCJA Undermines Societal Health," Reece Petrik focuses on how recent changes to the standard deduction under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 have altered the charitable behaviors of U.S. citizens. Petrik argues that these changes will likely cause greater income inequality and worse health outcomes for some of the most vulnerable portions of the U.S. population.

The full Comment can be found here: https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/25977

OLR is proud to share our Volume 100 masthead. Please join us in congratulating our new staff editors! We look forward t...
07/19/2021

OLR is proud to share our Volume 100 masthead. Please join us in congratulating our new staff editors!

We look forward to our 100th year, and commit to striving to advance legal scholarship as the oldest continuously published law journal in the Pacific Northwest.

Be sure to check out Oregon Law Review's latest articles in Vol. 99 (2020). https://fal.cn/3cHon Articles include:The Gi...
03/31/2021

Be sure to check out Oregon Law Review's latest articles in Vol. 99 (2020). https://fal.cn/3cHon

Articles include:

The Gift That Keeps on Taking: How the TCJA Undermines Societal Health by Reece Petrik

When the Friendly Skies Are Not So Friendly: The Proper Venue for Prosecuting In-Flight Crime by Jordan Couey

Resolving the “Willfulness” Conundrum: Romag Fasteners, Inc. v. Fossil, Inc., a Case Note by Jack Mannis

Storytelling and Relevancy by Stefan H. Krieger & Jonathan D. Krieger

Taking (Animal-Based) Meat and Ethics off the Table: Food Labeling and the Role of Consumers as Agents of Food Systems Change by Nicole E. Negowetti

Default Culpability Requirements: The Model Penal Code and Beyond by Scott England

03/30/2021

Congratulations to the 2021-22 Oregon Law Review Managing Board! https://fal.cn/3dyJK

Editor in Chief -- Kaitlyn Lindaman
Operations Editor -- Natalie Fisher
Notes and Comments Editor -- Grace Kaesermann

Executive Editors:
Zoë Habekost
John Kaplan
Billie Jo Risheim

Managing Editors:
Mathew Bain
Katy Molloy
Mandi Summers

Articles Editors:
Francesco Fischer
Lindsey Hagmaier
Patrick Strickler

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Eugene, OR
97403

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