![SCOTUS](/sites/default/files/styles/thumbnail_285_160/public/images/news/generic/scotus-panorama.jpg?itok=mIEM-XZJ)
Veterans Groups Urge Supreme Court to Preserve Class Actions
Multiple national veterans’ organizations, law professors, and stakeholders filed amicus briefs in support of a petition by the Veterans Legal Services Clinic to take up a case to preserve the possibility of collective action by groups of veterans in the U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims.
![View of the Yale campus and New Haven through a window at Sterling Law Building](/sites/default/files/styles/thumbnail_285_160/public/images/news/generic/building_window_with_yale_and_new_haven_view.jpg?itok=FNfPnRvd)
Liman Center Welcomes 2023–2024 Liman Fellows
The Liman Center announces its newest fellows, who will spend a year working in public interest law at organizations around the country.
![Windows and a stone railing on the brick facade of Sterling Law Building](/sites/default/files/styles/thumbnail_285_160/public/images/news/generic/building_exterior_windows_and_roof.jpg?h=b3660f0d&itok=Ypau9CtH)
Professor Bâli Co-Edits Book on Decentralization in Middle East and North Africa
A new book co-edited by Professor Aslı Ü. Bâli ’99 and Omar M. Dajani ’97 looks at the law and politics surrounding government reform in an area that has long struggled with identity conflict.
![Five students Yale Law School’s 2023 Jessup International Law Moot Court CompFive students — Ali Hakim ’24, Thomas Poston ’24, Alaa Hachem ’24, Justin Cole ’23 and Matei Alexianu ’23 — smile and stand shoulder to shoulder before a gray marble-patterned wall.](/sites/default/files/styles/thumbnail_285_160/public/images/news/yls_2023_jessup_team.jpg?itok=TYwy6Pij)
Yale Law School Team Wins Northeast Moot Court Title, Heads to Internationals
A team from Yale Law School will advance to the international rounds of the world’s largest moot court competition after defeating the reigning world champions in U.S. finals this month.
![a golden piggy bank](/sites/default/files/styles/thumbnail_285_160/public/images/news/gold_piggybank.jpg?itok=7Rpqlqey)
How Not to Break the Bank
Work by Professors Yair Listokin and Natasha Sarin point out some of the flaws in the current banking regulatory system and steps that should be considered moving forward.
![yls-windows-058.jpg](/sites/default/files/styles/thumbnail_285_160/public/images/news/generic/yls-windows-058.jpg?h=b3660f0d&itok=4-jo0PG-)
Handbook Helps Navigate Non-Prosecution Policies for Sex Work
The Yale Global Health Justice Partnership (GHJP) and the Sex Workers Project (SWP) of the Urban Justice Center have jointly released a handbook on district attorneys’ policies of non-prosecution of sex work-related charges.
![150605-building-006.jpg](/sites/default/files/styles/thumbnail_285_160/public/images/news/generic/150605-building-006.jpg?itok=8JreTxIe)
Law School Co-Hosts Law and Economics Conference in Jerusalem
Yale Law School and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem will jointly host a March 19 conference that presents new scholarship in law and economics.
![Ashlee Fox ’25, Amy Jeon ’24, David Chiu, Doménica Merino ’24, Isabelle Zaslavsky ’24](/sites/default/files/styles/thumbnail_285_160/public/images/news/sfalp-team-march-2023.jpg?itok=nnSZFBnV)
SFALP Files New Case Against Direct Marketing Company
Students in the San Francisco Affirmative Litigation Project clinic worked with the San Francisco City Attorney on a case against a direct marketing company accused of impersonating government actors in order to trick small businesses into buying its products.