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Full-Text Articles in Law
Zen And The Art Of Tort Litigation, Anne Bloom
Zen And The Art Of Tort Litigation, Anne Bloom
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
Legal analysis in tort litigation should encourage deeper engagement with the plaintiffs pain and suffering. Focusing more on understanding the causes and experience of human suffering-the Zen approach-will advance traditional tort goals of compensation and deterrence, as well as provide the plaintiff with a more positive litigation experience. This Article argues that current practices in tort litigation place too much emphasis on bodily harm and expert testimony, and unnecessarily position the plaintiff as a victim. Alternatively, a Zen approach recognizes that the body and mind are linked, places greater weight on direct, experiential testimony, and acknowledges the complexity and fluidity …
Essay: Can Human Rights Practice Be A Critical Project - A View From The Ground, Lucie White, Jeremy Perelman
Essay: Can Human Rights Practice Be A Critical Project - A View From The Ground, Lucie White, Jeremy Perelman
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
Critics have condemned human rights advocacy as being a deeply problematic solution to the sub-subsistence poverty that plagues the post-colonial Global South. This Essay discusses the efforts of four economic and social rights advocates working in Africa. Each succeeded by working within, but unconfined by, the approaches of the traditional human rights advocacy framework. The innovative strategies the advocates deployed may promote progressive institutional innovation in the provision of social welfare benefits. Still, single instances of innovation may not have an enduring impact on either extreme poverty or global inequality, the problems facing the Global South.
What Is Civil Justice, Jason M. Solomon
What Is Civil Justice, Jason M. Solomon
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
This Article first explores the meaning of the term "civil justice" as it is used in both academic and popular discourse. It then examines the idea of civil justice by looking at three key examples: (1) the U.S. tort system (specifically governing auto accidents); (2) the no-fault regimes of New Zealand, U.S. workers' compensation, and the 9/11 Victim Compensation Fund; and (3) the phenomenon of apologies, instead of compensation, as remedies in medical malpractice cases. The Article concludes that an important component of civil justice is the ability of a person to hold accountable one who has wronged her.
Dialectic Of Injury And Remedy, Marc Galanter
Dialectic Of Injury And Remedy, Marc Galanter
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
We are here to discuss injuries without remedies. I want to begin the discussion by considering the very complex relations between these two notions. My argument is: (1) Each is a cultural construction-but no less real for that. Both injury and remedy can, at a given moment in a given society, be regarded as positive and measurable. But if we step back, extend our time horizon, and widen our view beyond a given legal system, we see (a) that these notions are inextricably bound up not only with theories of justice but also with images of personal wholeness and social …
Fear Of Cancer, S. Lochlann Jain
Fear Of Cancer, S. Lochlann Jain
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
While the cancer rate and related statistics remain remarkably high, people rarely consider the actual suffering of people living with and dying from cancer as the real sacrifice for, and structural result of, the everyday use of carcinogens such as those in gasoline, pesticides, and cosmetics. On the heels of the recently published President's Cancer Panel Report, "Reducing Environmental Cancer Risk: What We Can Do Now," this Article aims to better understand why "fear of cancer" litigation has failed to accomplish its intended purpose-to distribute the costs of known and potentially toxic chemicals-and examines how the relevant law justifies this …
Too Big To Remedy - Rethinking Mass Restitution For Slavery And Jim Crow, Kaimipono David Wenger
Too Big To Remedy - Rethinking Mass Restitution For Slavery And Jim Crow, Kaimipono David Wenger
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
Slavery and Jim Crow inflicted horrific harms on Blacks in America. Official silence aggravated that harm, as neither victims nor their descendants received monetary restitution, nor even (until very recently) any official apology. Reparations advocates have repeatedly called for compensation to slave descendants. But how exactly does society compensate for slavery?
Of course, compensation for mass injustice is always difficult to calculate and administer. Slavery puts the normal concerns of mass compensation into sharp relief and adds a whole new set of unique concerns for courts, legislators, and scholars.
In this Article, I use slavery and Jim Crow harms as …
Further Empirical Insights And Findings On The Eighth Circuit, Robert Steinbuch
Further Empirical Insights And Findings On The Eighth Circuit, Robert Steinbuch
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
While empirical research is often eschewed in legal analysis, it can provide a firm basis on which to predict judicial decisions. As a follow-up to An Empirical Analysis of Reversal Rates in the Eighth Circuit During 2008, this Article provides further insights into the correlation between a district judge's political affiliation and the rate at which the judge is reversed. Correlation, whether with or without a causal connection, is a critical predictor of a case's success on appeal. Further objective research is encouraged beyond the Eight Circuit. Such research should concentrate not on dissenting rates, but on isolating the …
Body Polluted: Questions Of Scale, Gender, And Remedy, Dayna Nadine Scott
Body Polluted: Questions Of Scale, Gender, And Remedy, Dayna Nadine Scott
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
This Article offers a critique of tort remedies grounded in feminist theory of the body. It demonstrates how tort law is invested in a notion of an individuated legal subject, which fails to capture the critical interconnectedness of bodies in a social, political, historical, and colonial context. Taking the "injury" of endocrine disruption in a Canadian Aboriginal community as an example of a contemporary pollution harm, the analysis considers various torts on a conceptual level, and what they might offer the Aamjiwnaang First Nation in the way of remedies. In each case, what the tort can do depends on how …
Redefining Commonality For Consumer Class Actions Under California Business And Professions Code Sections 17200 And 17500, Roxana Mehrfar
Redefining Commonality For Consumer Class Actions Under California Business And Professions Code Sections 17200 And 17500, Roxana Mehrfar
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
This Note explores California's Unfair Competition Law and critiques how courts have applied the commonality requirement for class certification of Unfair Competition Law claims. In particular, this Note considers the Unfair Competition Law in light of the combined effects of Proposition 64's standing requirements and the California Supreme Court's decision in In re Tobacco II Cases, which limited the scope of Proposition 64. This Note also provides a general background of the liability standards for each prong of the Unfair Competition Law, examines the federal preemption defense, and proposes a new standard for commonality.
Lumping As Default In Tort Cases: The Cultural Interpretation Of Injury , David M. Engel
Lumping As Default In Tort Cases: The Cultural Interpretation Of Injury , David M. Engel
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
Empirical studies of the tort law system suggest that "lumping," or decisions by victims to do without adequate remedies, should be regarded as the predominant response to injury in American society and elsewhere. Yet research on lumping remains conceptually impoverished and gives insufficient attention to the cultural frameworks victims use to interpret their experiences and determine their responses. This Article presents the stories of injury victims in Thailand and compares their common-sense understandings of torts and tort law to those of injured Americans. It argues that analyses of lumping in America as well as Asia should take into account the …
Automobile Injuries As Injuries With Remedies: Driving, Insurance, Torts, And Changing The Choice Architecture Of Auto Insurance Pricing, Jennifer B. Wriggins
Automobile Injuries As Injuries With Remedies: Driving, Insurance, Torts, And Changing The Choice Architecture Of Auto Insurance Pricing, Jennifer B. Wriggins
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
While mandatory auto insurance laws virtually guarantee the availability of remedies for auto injuries, other types of physical injuries, including those resulting from domestic violence, lack similar protections. By providing a broad array of compensation mechanisms to auto accident victims, the law encourages people to drive more. The rationale underlying that public policy has, however, eroded. Environmental degradation, public health problems, and other costs require overhauling the system. This Article recommends two changes to the auto insurance system aimed at encouraging people to drive less.
Imagined Rights Without Remedy: The Politics Of Novel Legal Claims, Geroge Lovell
Imagined Rights Without Remedy: The Politics Of Novel Legal Claims, Geroge Lovell
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
Remedies for civil rights violations are only practically available where government officials choose to empower institutions that can protect those rights. When the Civil Rights Section (CRS) of the U.S. Department of Justice was formed in 1939, almost no federal civil rights law or institutional capacity existed to protect civil rights. This Article uses citizens' letters to the CRS to explore the politics of the CRS's limited and experimental strategy of using litigation to expand federal civil rights protections. Although the scope of civil rights law has expanded greatly since the inception of the CRS, the CRS experience may still …
Assault And Battery On Property, Gowri Ramachandran
Assault And Battery On Property, Gowri Ramachandran
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
Both criminal and tort law seek, in part, to respond to the harm inflicted on persons' organic, human, continuous bodies, through hitting, offensive groping, rape, stabbing, gunshots, vehicular homicide, and more. But could there be such a thing as assault and battery on a person's inorganic, non-human, discontinuous body? A battery on one's prosthetic arm, on one's wheelchair, on one's cochlear implant? Even a battery on one's iPhone or computer, which some users have provocatively begun to call an "exobrain"? This Article investigates whether there is any use in employing metaphors such as "exobrain," "battery on a wheelchair," and the …
What Happened To Unjust Enrichment In California - The Deterioration Of Equity In The California Courts, Douglas L. Johnson, Neville L. Johnson
What Happened To Unjust Enrichment In California - The Deterioration Of Equity In The California Courts, Douglas L. Johnson, Neville L. Johnson
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
Under common law, the principles ofequity have always demanded the recognition of the right of individuals to seek recovery under the theory of unjust enrichment. Recovery under this doctrine is so deeply embedded into Western Society that it continues to be a core element in legal education and is codified in the Restatement Third of Contracts. Despite this rich tradition, an alarming divergence in decisions among California courts is deteriorating unjust enrichment as an independent cause- of-action, leaving many Californians who have been taken advantage of, unprotected. This Article examines the historical underpinnings of unjust enrichment and the confusion among …
Hui V. Castaneda: Beyond Cruel And Unusual, Adele Kimmel, Arthur Bryant, Amy Radon
Hui V. Castaneda: Beyond Cruel And Unusual, Adele Kimmel, Arthur Bryant, Amy Radon
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
When immigration detainee Francisco Castaneda died of penile cancer in 2008 after what appeared to be intentional neglect by federal health officials, his family members became plaintiffs in a lawsuit that Castaneda had filed against the United States and several federal Public Health Service (PHS) officers and employees. The suit alleged medical negligence by the United States and constitutional violations by the PHS officials. The PHS officials claimed immunity from suit, and the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously held that the family could not sue the federal officials directly and that the only available remedy was through a suit against the …
Protecting Absent Stakeholders In Foreclosure Litigation: The Foreclosure Crisis, Mortgage Modification, And State Court Responses, Andrew J. Kazakes
Protecting Absent Stakeholders In Foreclosure Litigation: The Foreclosure Crisis, Mortgage Modification, And State Court Responses, Andrew J. Kazakes
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
No abstract provided.
The War Of Art, Not The Art Of War: Von Saher V. Norton Simon Museum Of Art At Pasadena And The Continuing Fight To Retrieve Nazi-Looted Art In California, Tsolik Kazandjian
The War Of Art, Not The Art Of War: Von Saher V. Norton Simon Museum Of Art At Pasadena And The Continuing Fight To Retrieve Nazi-Looted Art In California, Tsolik Kazandjian
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
No abstract provided.
Class Retreat From Mass Deceit: Assessing Class Action Compatibility With Truth In Lending Act Rescission, Jeffrey A. Payne
Class Retreat From Mass Deceit: Assessing Class Action Compatibility With Truth In Lending Act Rescission, Jeffrey A. Payne
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
No abstract provided.
Issues In Appraisal Regulation: The Cracks In The Foundation Of The Mortgage Lending Process, J. Kevin Murray
Issues In Appraisal Regulation: The Cracks In The Foundation Of The Mortgage Lending Process, J. Kevin Murray
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
No abstract provided.
Is Life The Same As Death?: Implications Of Graham V. Florida, Roper V. Simmons, And Atkins V. Virginia On Life Without Parole Sentences For Juvenile And Mentally Retarded Offenders, Natalie Pifer
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
No abstract provided.
Police Misconduct And Liability: Applying The State-Created Danger Doctrine To Hold Police Officers Accountable For Responding Inadequately To Domestic-Violence Situations, Milena Shtelmakher
Police Misconduct And Liability: Applying The State-Created Danger Doctrine To Hold Police Officers Accountable For Responding Inadequately To Domestic-Violence Situations, Milena Shtelmakher
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
No abstract provided.
Trimming Confrontation's Claws: Navigating The Uncertain Jurisprudential Topography Of The Post-Melendez-Diaz Confrontation Clause, Oliver M. Gold
Trimming Confrontation's Claws: Navigating The Uncertain Jurisprudential Topography Of The Post-Melendez-Diaz Confrontation Clause, Oliver M. Gold
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
No abstract provided.
Introduction: Why Didn't The Courts Stop The Mortgage Crisis?, Lauren E. Willis
Introduction: Why Didn't The Courts Stop The Mortgage Crisis?, Lauren E. Willis
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
No abstract provided.
Good Cop, Bad Cop: Market Competitors, Udap Consumer Protection Laws, And The U.S. Mortgage Crisis, James J. Pulliam
Good Cop, Bad Cop: Market Competitors, Udap Consumer Protection Laws, And The U.S. Mortgage Crisis, James J. Pulliam
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
No abstract provided.
United We Stand, Disparate We Fall: Putting Individual Victims Of Reverse Redlining In Touch With Their Class, Andrew Lichtenstein
United We Stand, Disparate We Fall: Putting Individual Victims Of Reverse Redlining In Touch With Their Class, Andrew Lichtenstein
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
No abstract provided.
The U.S. Court Of Appeals For The Federal Circuit: Its Critical Role In The Revitalization Of U.S. Patent Jurisprudence, Past, Present, And Future, Donald R. Dunner
The U.S. Court Of Appeals For The Federal Circuit: Its Critical Role In The Revitalization Of U.S. Patent Jurisprudence, Past, Present, And Future, Donald R. Dunner
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
No abstract provided.
In Memoriam: David P. Leonard, Victor J. Gold
In Memoriam: David P. Leonard, Victor J. Gold
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
No abstract provided.
In Memoriam: David P. Leonard, Roger C. Park
In Memoriam: David P. Leonard, Roger C. Park
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Federal Circuit As An Institution: On Uncertainty And Policy Levers, S. Jay Plager
The Federal Circuit As An Institution: On Uncertainty And Policy Levers, S. Jay Plager
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
No abstract provided.
Inequitable Conduct, David Mcgowan
Inequitable Conduct, David Mcgowan
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
No abstract provided.