Stripping Citizenship: A Former ISIS Bride and Child are Unlikely Canaries in the Coal Mine

Stripping Citizenship:  A Former ISIS Bride and Child are Unlikely Canaries in the Coal Mine

Hoda Muthana, a woman who willingly became an ISIS bride, is not likely to inspire much sympathy in the US. The State Department asserted that Hoda was not a citizen, despite that she was born in the United States and that the State Department had previously recognized her as a citizen. As non-citizens, neither Hoda nor her son Adam had the right to return to the US; they remain in a Syrian detention camp with other former ISIS brides and their children. Few American citizens will shed tears over an ISIS bride losing her citizenship. However, it should disturb all of us how easily – and how quickly – it happened.

The Need for Ethnic and Gender Diversity Among Arbitrators

The Need for Ethnic and Gender Diversity Among Arbitrators

“I got 99 problems and arbitration panel diversity is one!” This is what famous rapper Jay-Z probably felt like changing his song lyrics to when he experienced, first-hand, the lack of diversity amongst arbitrators in the arbitration system. Jay-Z had a dispute that arose out of a deal previously made, which had a mandatory arbitration agreement forcing parties to settle the dispute in arbitration with the service provider AAA to facilitate the arbitration. When it came time to select 3 arbitrators, out of a 200-name list, only 3 names were considered people of color, and one of them had a conflict of interest making them ineligible to sit on the neutral panel. It is not a true choice if there are not enough diverse arbitrators to choose from and it is important to recognize the possible affect that a lack of diverse arbitrators sitting on a neutral panel can have on a binding decision, which is why tacking the issue of diversity among arbitrators is essential.

Section 1071: Small Bank Sabotage?

Section 1071: Small Bank Sabotage?

Over the past year, COVID-19 has devastated small businesses across the country. For small businesses owned by minorities and women, the economic impact has been particularly salient. Now, small businesses have another obstacle to face: Section 1071 of the Dodd-Frank Act. Though Section 1071 is well-intentioned and aims to identify inequities in small business lending, its effects may prove to do more harm than good.

Efforts to Modernize Antitrust

Efforts to Modernize Antitrust

In January 2007, the Economic Analysis Group at the Department of Justice Antitrust Division published a Discussion Paper entitled "Does Antitrust Need to be Modernized?" The paper reviewed whether "globalization and rapid technological change" necessitated changing federal antitrust laws. This Discussion Paper has proven prescient; it identified as a "key issue" the growing need for improving antitrust enforcement of alleged exclusionary conduct related to intellectual property.

"Alston" and What it Means for College Athletics and Antirust Law

"Alston" and What it Means for College Athletics and Antirust Law

In 2019, the Power Five FBS football conferences generated over $2.9 billion in revenue. The Big Ten Conference generated more than a quarter of that total, leading all over conferences in revenue generated at over $780 million. While the NCAA is in the process of evaluating rule changes that would allow student-athletes to engage in certain sponsorship agreements, student-athlete compensation has historically been limited to academic scholarships. But while both salaries and in-kind payments have increased significantly for coaches, "pay" to student-athletes has remained capped.