Constantine Yannelis, ‘Adam Smith, Human Capital and the Wealth of Nations’

ABSTRACT
This essay examines Smith’s insights into human capital as a primary driver of the wealth of nations. Adam Smith is celebrated as the founder of classical economics, yet his foundational role in articulating the principles of human capital is frequently overlooked. Writing in 1776, Smith predated the formal coining of ‘human capital’ by centuries, yet he clearly identified human skills, education, and health as analogous physical capital. Smith compared educated individuals to expensive machinery, and analyzed how specialization and training drive productivity, and showed prescient understanding of market dynamics such as supply, demand, and wage premiums. Smith further showed sophisticated views regarding the merits of public education. Although a proponent of markets, he acknowledged externalities in education and supported limited public intervention. By synthesizing Smith’s observations with modern economic frameworks, this work argues that Smith is an intellectual progenitor of human capital theory, recognizing that a nation’s prosperity depends fundamentally on the cultivation of human abilities.

Yannelis, Constantine, Adam Smith, Human Capital and the Wealth of Nations (April 1, 2026).

Borg and Sant, ‘Data scraping for scientific research purposes: legal bases under the GDPR’

ABSTRACT
In research contexts, data scraping enables systematic collection of large-scale, real-world digital data. This article examines data scraping for research that is publicly funded or carried out in pursuit of public interest objectives, from the perspective of data protection law. It focuses on the GDPR requirement to identify a legal basis in order to ensure lawful processing. The analysis assesses the appropriateness of reliance on the lawful bases in Article 6(1), and possible derogations in Article 9(2) GDPR. It then considers (i) whether the said processing could benefit from the GDPR’s derogations for scientific research and (ii) whether exemptions relating to academic expression under Article 85 GDPR apply. The article concludes that the GDPR does not currently provide a readily-available legal basis for research carried out in the public interest. It argues that future sector-specific legislation could provide legal certainty and reconcile the protection of personal data with the advancement of scientific research in an increasingly digital environment. The findings underscore the need for harmonised interpretations and best practices that balance transparency and accountability with the legitimate pursuit of scientific progress, thereby promoting a coherent and ethically responsible approach to the use of online data in research.

Roxanne Meilak Borg and Mireille M Sant, Data scraping for scientific research purposes: legal bases under the GDPR, International Review of Law, Computers & Technology. Published online: 16 April 2026.

Sarah Morath, ‘Our Microplastic Problem’

ABSTRACT
This article explores the growing threat of and the legal response to microplastic pollution. Microplastics – plastic particles less than five millimeters in size – are pervasive, persistent, and chemically diverse, making them particularly difficult to regulate using existing environmental statutes. Federal approaches, such as the Clean Water Act and Toxic Substances Control Act, offer limited relief, while macro-scale proposals like the Break Free from Plastic Pollution Act remain stalled. In response, this article advocates for ‘micro-solutions’ – targeted, state and local interventions that collectively address microplastic pollution across the plastic lifecycle. These include bans on intentionally added microplastics, filtration mandates for appliances, stormwater management strategies, and industry-specific regulations. Drawing lessons from climate and PFAS litigation, the article also examines the increasing use of consumer protection and public nuisance claims against plastic producers. In highlighting these bottom-up strategies, the article provides a roadmap for meaningful progress in the absence of sweeping federal or international reform.

Morath, Sarah, Our Microplastic Problem (March 15, 2026).

Joshua Yuvaraj, ‘Recentering Creativity in Copyright’

ABSTRACT
Copyright discourse often centers around creativity; as a rationale for copyright, and as a threshold for copyright to subsist in songs, books, art and other creative works. Yet creativity remains an ethereal concept: if we do not know what it means, we cannot evaluate whether copyright law is promoting it, nor can we properly understand what it means for a work to be ‘creative’ where that is required for copyright to subsist. An emerging strand of copyright discourse seeks to respond by examining scientific insights into the cognitive process of creativity to highlight how copyright law should be reshaped to cultivate it. In this paper I develop that scholarship with an ontological analysis of copyright’s relationship with creativity. Drawing on a recent meta-theory of creativity research, I demonstrate how creativity is phenomenological; that is, sociocultural and environmental factors are as important to creativity as individual cognitive processes. I then show that copyright law does not easily cohere with this phenomenological view of creativity: it has no role in some elements and is structured as to stymy others. While this analysis adds a further basis to the argument that we should not consider copyright law as a creativity-promoting legal framework, I use social contract theory to show that copyright can be regarded as having a secondary, facilitative role in the phenomenon of creativity. This analysis provides the theoretical framework for further research in three areas: (a) it challenges copyright expansionism; (b) it encourages examination of avenues to promote creativity beyond copyright law; and (c) it suggests the provision of property rights in respect of intellectual creations under copyright law should be revisited.

Yuvaraj, Joshua, Recentering Creativity in Copyright, IP Theory, volume 15, issue 2, article 4 (2026).

Pamela Samuelson, ‘The Scope of Software Copyrights Revisited’

ABSTRACT
This Article reviews the highs and lows of US copyright case law construing software copyright scope over the nearly 50 years since copyright protection was first extended to computer programs. When the amendment was passed in 1980, initial expectations were that the scope of copyright in computer programs would be quite thin; some early cases, however, interpreted that scope rather broadly. Subsequent decisions resisted this trend, as courts sought to refine the analysis of software copyright scope, applying the doctrines of merger and scenes a faire, as well as § 102(b), to filter out unprotectable elements. Fair use also has played a role in delimiting the scope of software copyright, most recently in the Supreme Court’s Google LLC v Oracle America, Inc decision.

Samuelson, Pamela, The Scope of Software Copyrights Revisited (April 3, 2026), UC Berkeley Public Law Research Paper (forthcoming); Stanford Technology Law Review (forthcoming).

Orts and Schafhäutle, ‘Corporate Fiduciary Duties and the Climate and Biodiversity Crisis’

ABSTRACT
This Article argues that addressing one of the most urgent environmental challenges facing humanity today – the global climate and biodiversity crisis – calls for a transformation at the heart of corporate law: its fiduciary duties. After demonstrating how current corporate fiduciary duties are implicated in this crisis, we argue for reform of fiduciary duties operating at two levels: those governing directors and officers of business corporations, and those governing institutional investors and asset managers. We then distinguish between two general kinds of corporate fiduciary duties: permissive and mandatory. We contend that corporate law should accommodate a more expansive understanding of fiduciary duties by either explicitly permitting climate- and biodiversity-related considerations or requiring their translation into measurable actions. Such an expanded view of fiduciary duties would allow or, in some cases, require corporate directors and officers, as well as institutional investors and asset managers, to consider environmental risks and impacts and to identify strategic opportunities to mitigate or adapt to them, while continuing to advance long-term economic performance. We conclude by outlining existing corporate fiduciary duty frameworks that include broader environmental considerations and identifying the expanding landscape of non-financial disclosure, reporting, and due diligence regimes as a promising direction for their further development.

Orts, Eric and Schafhäutle, Sandra G, Corporate Fiduciary Duties and the Climate and Biodiversity Crisis (March 24, 2026).

Luna, Ballesteros and Dorantes, ‘Development of a Smart Contract for the Transfer of Copyrights in an Artwork Linked to an NFT’

ABSTRACT
Non-fungible tokens (NFTs) are transforming the commercialisation of digital art by establishing unique blockchain identifiers that ensure authenticity and certify subsequent transactions. However, the transfer of control over an NFT does not automatically include the transfer of the associated copyrights, thereby creating legal uncertainty as to what rights are actually acquired. This interdisciplinary project between engineering and law proposes the design of a smart contract, based on the ERC-721 standard, to manage the transfer of property rights linked to digital artworks represented as NFTs. The accompanying legal contract incorporates essential clauses covering the identification of the parties, a description of the artwork and its link to the token, pricing, royalties, and the terms of rights transfer. The proposal seeks to integrate blockchain technology with existing legal frameworks, offering an innovative solution that strengthens legal certainty in the transfer of copyright within digital environments.

William Fernando Martínez Luna, Ana María Moreno Ballesteros and Edgar José Ruiz Dorantes, Development of a Smart Contract for the Transfer of Copyrights in an Artwork Linked to an NFT, Laws, 2026, 15(2), 32. Published: 16 April 2026.

Maria Glover, ‘The Civil Justice Business’

ABSTRACT
Civil justice is a lofty set of ideals. Access to justice, no matter a party’s sophistication. Holding wrongdoers accountable, no matter their power. Achieving regulation of wrongdoing across the wide swath of substantive laws in an American ‘litigation state’.

Civil justice is also a business – now on both sides of the ‘v’. A new litigation finance industry has arisen: Institutional investors provide claimants with capital, in exchange for eventual profit. This industry approaches civil justice as a market, claims as assets, and case outcomes as returns on investment. And when civil justice looks like a business, it raises a host of concerns.

Current attempts to regulate this new civil justice actor – oriented formally or functionally around the prohibitions of ancient constructs and atomized civil justice rules and doctrines – largely aim towards preventing civil justice from becoming a business. These approaches constrain judges and lawmakers to a binary set of regulatory choices, deny the complex realities of modern civil justice, and hinder engagement with foundational civil justice concerns.

This Article develops a comprehensive framework for engaging with the civil justice business at the level of its core problematics. It conceptualizes and constructs along the lines of a series of critical relationships involved in claimant-funded litigation, drawing from modern strains of contract theory along relational lines. Applied to the three most heated debates in litigation finance – disclosure, claim control, and mass-dispute funding – the framework generates targeted regulatory pathways for judges, legislators, and scholars that depart markedly from dominant proposals.

More broadly, the analysis here synthesizes and extends prior work toward a unified theory of civil justice as realized law. This account centers on the civil justice system’s capacity to live up to its foundational ideal; to give substantive legal rights real meaning – or to leave them without it. Evaluated against this account, litigation finance – when constrained and clarified by this Article’s relational framework – can be harnessed to further those commitments. Importantly, situating litigation finance alongside and within these core civil justice commitments charts a course for harnessing all civil justice innovations, not just the ‘civil justice business’ in focus here, to effectuate the business of civil justice.

Glover, Maria, The Civil Justice Business (April 15, 2026), 101 New York University Law Review (forthcoming 2026); Georgetown University Law Center Research Paper Forthcoming (2026); Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works, 2697.

Scott Fruehwald, ‘Theory-Induced Blindness in Legal Scholarship: A Critical Thinking Solution’

ABSTRACT
The truth matters, and, consequently, how scholars seek the truth matters. Scholars often use theory as a framework to help them attain the truth. Accordingly, a scholar’s theoretical approach must be accurate; it must not be tainted in any way. ‘Theory-induced blindness’ taints truth-seeking. Theory-induced blindness has contaminated legal scholarship in many ways.

This article will examine theory-induced blindness in legal scholarship and demonstrate how it has affected the truth of that scholarship on both ends of the ideological spectrum. Part II will introduce the basics of theory-induced blindness. Parts III-VII will present examples of theory-induced blindness in Classical Legal Thought, writing legal history, traditional law and economics, post-modern legal scholars’ social constructionist arguments, and two professors’ defense of learning style theory. Finally, the conclusion will discuss the best solution for avoiding theory-induced blindness–evaluating theories with critical thinking.

Fruehwald, Scott, Theory-Induced Blindness in Legal Scholarship: A Critical Thinking Solution (January 11, 2026).

Nwabueze and White, ‘Privacy law and the dead – a reappraisal (part II)’

ABSTRACT
In an earlier article, we argued that post-mortem privacy is not sufficiently protected in England and Wales. In this article, we draw from Boonin’s posthumous harm thesis and posthumous wrong thesis to develop a framework and rationale for justifying the recognition and enforcement of a privacy right post-mortem. Essentially, our theoretical framework suggests that, just as a living person can be harmed by an act that does not have any effect on their conscious experience, such as the frustration of their desires, the dead can also suffer unfelt harm. We test and illustrate the analytical and explanatory power of this theoretical framework with a USA post-mortem privacy case and five relevant practical examples. Furthermore, we examine some important cases in England and Wales, and some cases from the ECtHR, to show how the use of our framework could lead to the recognition and justification of a privacy right post-mortem.

Remigius N Nwabueze and Matthew White, Privacy law and the dead – a reappraisal (part II), Journal of Media Law. Published online: 15 April 2026.

See also: Nwabueze and White, ‘Privacy law and the dead – a reappraisal