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Response, Lea Brilmayer
Response, Lea Brilmayer
Florida State University Law Review
Professor Brilmayer responds to the commentaries of Professors Laycock, Tushnet, and George.
Asking The Right Questions, Lawrence C. George
Asking The Right Questions, Lawrence C. George
Florida State University Law Review
Professor George analyzes what he sees as Professor Brilmayer's major thesis: that neither modern choice of law nor equal protection principles provide a sound basis for jurisdictional doctrine. Concluding that she has failed to consider a possible Critical Legal Studies approach to the problems she poses, he suggests one.
Equality And The Citizens Of Sister States, Douglas Laycock
Equality And The Citizens Of Sister States, Douglas Laycock
Florida State University Law Review
Professor Laycock's commentary is written in response to Lea Brilmayer's article in this edition. Brilmayer and Laycock agree that states owe equal treatment to citizens of sister states, and that the obligation does not extend to the exercise of government power. But Laycock would derive these rules from constitutional text and structural needs of the federal union. He think that Brilmayer's broader political theory is only marginally relevant to their shared conclusion.
State V. Mid-Florida Growers, Inc., 505 So. 2d 592 (Fla. 2d Dca 1987), Jonathan Sjostrom
State V. Mid-Florida Growers, Inc., 505 So. 2d 592 (Fla. 2d Dca 1987), Jonathan Sjostrom
Florida State University Law Review
Constitutional Law-PUBLIC PERIL AND PRIVATE PROPERTY IN THE TAKINGS CLAUSE
California Federal Savings & Loan Association V. Guerra, 107 S. Ct. 683 (1987), Cathy Miller Seilers
California Federal Savings & Loan Association V. Guerra, 107 S. Ct. 683 (1987), Cathy Miller Seilers
Florida State University Law Review
Employment Law/Constitutional Law-STATE LAWS PERMITTING PREFERENTIAL TREATMENT OF PREGNANT EMPLOYEES UNDER THE PREGNANCY DISCRIMINATION ACT
The Court Confronts The Gerrymander, Josseph C. Coates, Iii
The Court Confronts The Gerrymander, Josseph C. Coates, Iii
Florida State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Aids Discrimination Under Federal, State, And Local Law After Arline, Robert P. Wasson, Jr.
Aids Discrimination Under Federal, State, And Local Law After Arline, Robert P. Wasson, Jr.
Florida State University Law Review
In School Board v. Arline, the United States Supreme Court determined that people who suffer from tuberculosis can be protected from employment discrimination by the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. Arline is certain to affect people afflicted with AIDS-related disorders who suffer discrimination. In this Article, Professor Wasson examines the Arline decision and the effect it will have on AIDS-related discrimination. Also, he examines provisions of the United States Constitution, acts of Congress, state law, and municipal ordinances, all of which might provide alternative measures of protection for those who suffer AIDS-related discrimination.
City Of Palm Bay V. Bauman, 475 So. 2d 1322 (5th Dca 1985), Wm. Andrew Hamilton
City Of Palm Bay V. Bauman, 475 So. 2d 1322 (5th Dca 1985), Wm. Andrew Hamilton
Florida State University Law Review
Constitutional Law-DRUG TESTING OF FLORIDA'S PUBLIC EMPLOYEES: WHEN MAY A PUBLIC EMPLOYER REQUIRE URINALYSIS?
Constitutional Stumbling Blocks To Legislative Tort Reform, Kenneth Vinson
Constitutional Stumbling Blocks To Legislative Tort Reform, Kenneth Vinson
Florida State University Law Review
Recent attempts by state legislators to reform the tort system have frequently been struck down by the courts on constitutional grounds. In this light, the author reviews the hostile judicial reactions to tort reform from the turn-of-the-century challenges to workers' compensation schemes through present day reform efforts. In the discussion of modern day efforts, the author focuses on attempts by the Florida Legislature to deal with the insurance crisis and then examines the Florida Supreme Court's use of state constitutional provisions to block these efforts. The author concludes that the judiciary should allow the legislature and the voters a freer …
Expensive Speech, Neil Skene
Expensive Speech, Neil Skene
Florida State University Law Review
SUING THE PRESS: LIBEL, THE MEDIA, AND POWER. By Rodney Smolla. New York: Oxford University Press. 1986. Pp. 277.
The Confrontation Clause And The Hearsay Rule: A Problematic Relationship In Need Of A Practical Analysis, Joel R. Brown
The Confrontation Clause And The Hearsay Rule: A Problematic Relationship In Need Of A Practical Analysis, Joel R. Brown
Florida State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Power To The People? A Critique Of The Florida Supreme Court's Interpretation Of The Referendum Power In Florida Land Company V. City Of Winter Springs, 427 So. 2d 170 (Fla. 1983), Patricia Leary
Florida State University Law Review
No abstract provided.