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Why Police Should Protect Complainant Autonomy, Randall K. Johnson Jan 2019

Why Police Should Protect Complainant Autonomy, Randall K. Johnson

Faculty Works

This Essay does its work in, at least, three ways. First, it encourages better use of scarce public sector resources by calling for reform of the police complaint intake process. Next, this Essay identifies the causes of police complaint inefficiencies by critically-assessing how intake is done by the Chicago Police Department (CPD). Lastly, it provides guidance about how to achieve CPD intake reform by better protecting complainant autonomy. Complainant autonomy, at least in this Essay, is defined as a real party in interest’s (i.e. an injured citizen’s) right to control how its allegations are framed by a nominal plaintiff (i.e. …


Guns, Speech, And Breathing Space: Response To Andrew Jay Mcclurg's The Second Amendment Right To Be Negligent, Allen K. Rostron Jan 2016

Guns, Speech, And Breathing Space: Response To Andrew Jay Mcclurg's The Second Amendment Right To Be Negligent, Allen K. Rostron

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No abstract provided.


Medical Malpractice Claims In Mississippi: A Preliminary Analysis, Randall K. Johnson Jan 2015

Medical Malpractice Claims In Mississippi: A Preliminary Analysis, Randall K. Johnson

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This essay explains where medical malpractice claims are filed in Mississippi. It initially does so by collecting state circuit court data, which have been recently released by the Administrative Office of Courts. The essay, then, computes summary statistics. Lastly, it examines these statistics: in order to find out which county had the most medical malpractice claims.


Foreword – Institutional Responsibility For Sex And Gender Exploitation, Nancy Levit Jan 2014

Foreword – Institutional Responsibility For Sex And Gender Exploitation, Nancy Levit

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Organizations are increasingly being held accountable for sex and gender exploitation perpetrated by individuals who are associated with them. The idea of litigating toward gender justice by making institutional actors responsible for various forms of sex and gender discrimination unites the articles in this Symposium.

This Foreword begins by tracking the evolution of tort law from its early vindication of isolated individual claims to its much more recent incarnation as an instrument of social reform for collective interests. The second part addresses legal impediments that prevent redress of certain types of gendered harms — ranging from areas that are virtually …


Asking The First Question: Reframing Bivens After Minneci, Alexander A. Reinert, Lumen N. Mulligan Jan 2013

Asking The First Question: Reframing Bivens After Minneci, Alexander A. Reinert, Lumen N. Mulligan

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In Minneci v. Pollard, decided in January 2012, the Supreme Court refused to recognize a Bivens v. Six Unknown Federal Narcotics Agents suit against employees of a privately run federal prison because state tort law provided an alternative remedy, thereby adding a federalism twist to what had been strictly a separation-of-powers debate. In this Article, we show why this new state-law focus is misguided. We first trace the Court’s prior alternative-remedies-to-Bivens holdings, illustrating that this history is one narrowly focused on separation of powers at the federal level. Minneci’s break with this tradition raises several concerns. On a doctrinal level, …


'How's My Doctoring?' Patient Feedback's Role In Assessing Physician Quality, Ann Marie Marciarille Jul 2012

'How's My Doctoring?' Patient Feedback's Role In Assessing Physician Quality, Ann Marie Marciarille

Faculty Works

A society-wide consumer revolution is underway with the rise of online user-generated review websites such as Yelp, Angie’s List, and Zagat. Service provider reviews are now available with an intensity and scope that attracts increasing numbers of reviewers and readers. Health care providers are not exempt from this new consumer generated scrutiny though they have arrived relatively late to the party and as somewhat unwilling guests.

The thesis of this article is that online patient feedback on physicians is relevant and valuable even though it is also uncomfortable for health care providers. This is because the modern physician-patient relationship is …


Blurring The Boundary Lines Between Amateur And Professional Sports, Kenneth D. Ferguson Apr 2008

Blurring The Boundary Lines Between Amateur And Professional Sports, Kenneth D. Ferguson

Faculty Works

The NCAA expends substantial resources to insure that the distinction between amateur and professional sports is maintained in collegiate athletics. Preserving the boundary lines between amateur and professional sports is more than an attempt to ensure philosophical purity or a nostalgic quest for historic preservation. The boundaries between amateur and professional sports are maintained by legal doctrines in several areas.

Application of tort law to coaches' liability for conduct leading to injuries to athletes reflects and preserves the boundary lines between professional and amateur sports. Although the implied assumption of risk doctrine should preserve that distinction, some courts have applied …


The Logic Of Legal Remedies And The Relative Weight Of Norms: Assessing The Public Interest In The Tort Reform Debate, Irma S. Russell Oct 2007

The Logic Of Legal Remedies And The Relative Weight Of Norms: Assessing The Public Interest In The Tort Reform Debate, Irma S. Russell

Faculty Works

This article explores the background principles of consistency and proportionality in legal rules and remedies. It identifies the relative strength of the interests of individuals and the public as the key to justifying the remedies available in different areas of law. Understanding the normative guidance of particular legal rules reveals the strength of society's judgment of the interests at stake in different remedies. For example, the principle of consistency generally means that a legal doctrine applying an objective measure of one's interest must apply a like-kind measure to all interests considered, absent some explicit and justifiable basis for different formulations. …


Why Bivens Won't Die: The Legacy Of Peoples V. Cca Detention Centers, Lumen N. Mulligan Jan 2006

Why Bivens Won't Die: The Legacy Of Peoples V. Cca Detention Centers, Lumen N. Mulligan

Faculty Works

Interpreting recent Supreme Court precedent, the Tenth Circuit, in Peoples v. CCA Detention Centers, held that a federal prisoner confined in a privately run prison may not bring a Bivens suit against the employees of the private prison for violations of his constitutional rights when alternative state-law causes of action are available. The author first reviews the Supreme Court's evolving Bivens jurisprudence and turns next to an overview of the Tenth Circuit's opinion. Third, the author argues that, despite the Tenth Circuit's new approach, putative constitutional claims brought under state-law theories of recovery will often be re-federalized, producing uniform federal …


Unique Property: An Annotated Bibliography, Nancy Levit, Robert R. M. Verchick Jan 2004

Unique Property: An Annotated Bibliography, Nancy Levit, Robert R. M. Verchick

Faculty Works

This bibliography covers law review articles and supplemental A.L.R. entries published after 1997. We also include a handful of especially interesting pieces published in or before 1997, which we believe are just too good to pass up. A.L.R. entries, whose titles are usually self-explanatory, are cited, but not annotated. Similarly, articles that concern only a single case or a single state are cited, but not annotated.


Without Fear Or Favor: Judge James Edwin Horton And The Trial Of The Scottsboro Boys, Douglas O. Linder Jan 2000

Without Fear Or Favor: Judge James Edwin Horton And The Trial Of The Scottsboro Boys, Douglas O. Linder

Faculty Works

No abstract provided.


A Pragmatic Approach To Meaning In Defamation Law, Jeffrey E. Thomas Jan 1999

A Pragmatic Approach To Meaning In Defamation Law, Jeffrey E. Thomas

Faculty Works

No abstract provided.


Joinder Of Tort Claims In Divorce Actions, Barbara Glesner Fines Jan 1994

Joinder Of Tort Claims In Divorce Actions, Barbara Glesner Fines

Faculty Works

No abstract provided.


Annotated Torts Bibliography, Nancy Levit Jan 1994

Annotated Torts Bibliography, Nancy Levit

Faculty Works

No abstract provided.


Statements Of Fact, Statements Of Opinion, And The First Amendment, Jeffrey E. Thomas Jan 1986

Statements Of Fact, Statements Of Opinion, And The First Amendment, Jeffrey E. Thomas

Faculty Works

No abstract provided.


When Names Are Not News, They're Negligence: Media Liability For Personal Injuries Resulting From The Publication Of Accurate Information, Douglas O. Linder Jan 1984

When Names Are Not News, They're Negligence: Media Liability For Personal Injuries Resulting From The Publication Of Accurate Information, Douglas O. Linder

Faculty Works

No abstract provided.


Supplementing The Functional Test Of Prosecutorial Immunity, Anthony J. Luppino Jan 1982

Supplementing The Functional Test Of Prosecutorial Immunity, Anthony J. Luppino

Faculty Works

No abstract provided.


Recent Developments In Missouri Tort Law, William B. Anderson, Sean O'Brien Jan 1980

Recent Developments In Missouri Tort Law, William B. Anderson, Sean O'Brien

Faculty Works

No abstract provided.