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‘Louisiana Law Review’ selects 16 Junior Associates for publication in Volume 82, names Board of Editors

The Louisiana Law Review Volume 81 Board of Editors has announced the 16 Junior Associates selected for publication in Volume 82, noting the decision process was extremely difficult this year due of the number of well-written student pieces.

Since 1938, the Louisiana Law Review has served as Louisiana’s flagship legal journal and has become a vibrant forum for scholarship in comparative and civil law topics. It currently ranks in the top 200 student-edited journals, and among the top 50 journals for the highest number of cases citing to a law review. Louisiana Law Review scholars have been recognized around the world for their contributions to both common and civil law doctrine. Publication in the journal is an incredible honor, and LSU Law congratulate those selected for publication:

  • Heidi Bieber – Leaving it up to Chance: Problems with the H-2B Statutory Cap on Visas
  • Madeleine Breaux – Omnipotent Doctrine of Law: The Ministerial Exception after Our Lady of Guadalupe School v. Morrissey-Berru
  • Andrew Chenevert – Tipping the Cap to Practical and Equitable Considerations: Should the Fifth Circuit Apply 11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(6)’s Cap to Non-rent Damages?
  • Gabrielle Domangue – Permitting Gross Ups for Title VII Back Pay Awards: A Gross Tax Issue
  • Natalie Earles – The Great Escape: Exploring Chapter 11’s Allure to Mass Tort Defendants
  • Sara Grasch – Resolving Louisiana’s Precarious Position on the Sale of Movable Things by Precarious Possessors
  • Olivia Guidry ­– Res Judica-duh! The Preclusion Revolution: Does Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure Article 425 Operate as a Claim Preclusion Device that Allows Defendants to Avail Themselves of Judgments to Which They Were Not a Party?
  • Emma Looney – You Can Go Your Own Way: The Failings of Teague v. Lane and Why Louisiana Should Create Its Own Retroactivity Standard
  • Cullen McDonald ­– The Qui Tam Question: Proper Pleading Requirements for Relators Under the FCA
  • Victoria Montanio ­– Finally, Some Clarity: Why Statutory Withholding Orders are not Final Orders of Removal Under the Nasrallah v. BarrAnalysis
  • Chaz Morgan – TOPSy-Turvy: The Taylor Opportunity Program for Students Homeschool Discrimination Contradiction
  • Brad Oster – Reigning In Regulatory Overreach: FERC’s Role In Bankruptcy
  • Harper Street – Breaking the Chains of a Habitually Draconian Penal System: An Examination of Louisiana’s Habitual Offender Statute with Recommendations for Continued Reform
  • Casey Thibodeaux – It’s What You Said and How You Said It: The NLRB’s Attempt to Separate Employee Misconduct from Protected Activity in General Motors LLC
  • Christopher Vidrine – The Zoom Paradox: Schrodinger’s Witness
  • Andrew Young – Enough with this B-S Standard: Resolving Louisiana Courts’ Problematic Application of a Burden-Shifting Standard in Slip-and-Fall Cases Against Medical Institutions

The Volume 81 Board of Editors also announced the Junior Associates selected to serve on the Volume 82 Board of Editors, including:

  • Editor-in-Chief: Olivia Guidry
  • Managing Editor: Kennedy Beal
  • Articles Editors: Emma Looney, Andrew Chenevert
  • Production Editors: Victoria Montanio, Casey Thibodeaux
  • Executive Senior Editor: Sara Grasch
  • Senior Editors: Madeleine Breaux, Justine Ware, Christopher Vidrine, Patrick McDonald, Andrew Young
  • Online Editor: Gabrielle Domangue
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