Wikimedia Commons May 19, 2022 Roe v. Wade Draft Bodes Ill for Air, Wetlands and EPA Derrick Z. Jackson Fellow
Wikimedia Commons March 1, 2022 It’s About Damn Time to Have a Black Woman on the US Supreme Court Guest Commentary
Olivier Lantzendorffer/iStock.com February 28, 2022 The Supreme Court Could Block Climate Change Protections Rachel Cleetus Policy Director
Joe Ravi/CC-BY-SA 3.0 February 22, 2022 Supreme Court Decision Could Defang EPA, Threaten Air and Water Kristy Dahl Principal Climate Scientist
US Census Bureau October 21, 2020 Supreme Court Allows Census to Be Cut Short—and Considers Defying 150 Years of Precedent Taryn MacKinney Former Contributor
Tingey Injury Law Firm/Unspalsh October 15, 2020 Will Confirming Judge Barrett be the Death of Chevron Deference? Guest Commentary
Photo: Wikimedia July 1, 2019 The Supreme Court’s Partisan Gerrymandering Decision is Justice Scalia’s Last Laugh Michael Latner Former UCS Fellow
Photo: Quinn Dombrowski/Flickr May 31, 2019 Court Records Reveal Plan to Use Census for Racial Discrimination Michael Latner Former UCS Fellow
Public domain March 28, 2019 Equality, More or Less: How the Supreme Court Might Fix Gerrymandering Michael Latner Former UCS Fellow
Photo: Lorie Shaull July 6, 2018 President Trump’s Supreme Court Pick: What’s at Stake for Science and the Environment? Ken Kimmell Former President
Michael Fleshman/Flickr June 12, 2018 Supreme Court Ignores Science, Enables Voter Purging, But Data May Have Final Say Michael Latner Former UCS Fellow
The Roberts Court, June 1, 2017. Seated, from left to right: Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Anthony M. Kennedy, Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Jr., and Justices Clarence Thomas and Stephen G. Breyer. Standing, from left to right: Justices Eleana Kagan, Samuel A. Alito, Sonia Sotomayor, and Neil M. Gorsuch. Photograph by Franz Jantzen, Supreme Court Curator's Office. May 25, 2018 Did My Tea Leaves Reveal the Supreme Court’s Upcoming Gerrymandering Ruling? Michael Latner Former UCS Fellow
January 10, 2018 The Science of Sovereignty: Two Cases Show How the Future of Voting Rights Depends on the Integrity of Data Michael Latner Former UCS Fellow