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Articles 1 - 7 of 7

Full-Text Articles in Law

Rule 11 Sanctions: The Special Problem Of Local Counsel, Steve Leben Jun 1989

Rule 11 Sanctions: The Special Problem Of Local Counsel, Steve Leben

Faculty Works

No abstract provided.


Survey Of Kansas Law: Administrative Law, Steve A. Leben Jan 1989

Survey Of Kansas Law: Administrative Law, Steve A. Leben

Faculty Works

No abstract provided.


Listening To Tribal Legends: An Essay On Law And The Scientific Method, Nancy Levit Jan 1989

Listening To Tribal Legends: An Essay On Law And The Scientific Method, Nancy Levit

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Much of jurisprudence is storytelling, recounting tales of what has gone before; improvising and crafting new stories of legal theory from old ones. Useful kernels are passed from one generation of legal thinkers to the next. Like tribal legends, the messages in many stories of jurisprudence can be understood only by a select audience. Legends often come with morals; theories of jurisprudence often impart prescription for living within the law. Jurisprudence, like legends, concerns fundamental issues, confronts cosmic questions and weaves in magic. Sometimes both possess humor as well.

Unfortunately, some modern versions of jurisprudential theories have become anecdotal. The …


Caseload Conundrum, Constitutional Restraint And The Manipulation Of Jurisdiction, Nancy Levit Jan 1989

Caseload Conundrum, Constitutional Restraint And The Manipulation Of Jurisdiction, Nancy Levit

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The quantity of litigation in the federal courts has reached unprecedented heights. While this 'crisis of volume' has attracted the attention of legislators and scholars, the judiciary has been left to divine self-help measures to reduce litigants' use of the federal courts. The federal bench that must manage this caseload explosion includes a cadre of recently appointed federal judges. Many of these judges embrace the New Federalism, an initiative to shift governmental power and responsibility back to the states.

This article posits that the combination of judicial overload and injudicious federalism is operating to shunt certain classes of litigants away …


The Movement To Assimilate The American Indians: Jurisprudential Study, John W. Ragsdale Jr Jan 1989

The Movement To Assimilate The American Indians: Jurisprudential Study, John W. Ragsdale Jr

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In 1934, the United States made a revolutionary shift in Indian policy. Laws were passed that ended most assimilation measures and began, instead, a preservation and promotion of tribalism. Why did this happen? What changes in American thought, politics and economy could precipitate such a reversal? Felix Cohen, a former special assistant to the Attorney General, and known as the "Blackstone of American Indian Law," noted: "Like the miner's canary, the Indian marks the shifts from fresh air to poison gas in our political atmosphere; and our treatment of Indians, even more than our treatment of other minorities, reflects the …


Current State Of The Savings And Loan Industry, William K. Black Jan 1989

Current State Of The Savings And Loan Industry, William K. Black

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No abstract provided.


Some Doubts Concerning The Selection Hypothesis Of George Priest, Douglas O. Linder Jan 1989

Some Doubts Concerning The Selection Hypothesis Of George Priest, Douglas O. Linder

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No abstract provided.