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Full-Text Articles in Law

Can Law And Literature Be Practical? The Crucible And The Federal Rules Of Evidence, Martin H. Pritikin Dec 2012

Can Law And Literature Be Practical? The Crucible And The Federal Rules Of Evidence, Martin H. Pritikin

West Virginia Law Review

Counter-intuitively, one of the best ways to learn the practice-oriented topic of evidence may be by studying a work of fiction-specifically, Arthur Miller's The Crucible, which dramatizes the seventeenth-century Salem witch trials. The play puts the reader in the position of legal advocate, and invites strategic analysis of evidentiary issues. A close analysis of the dialogue presents an opportunity to explore both the doctrinal nuances of and policy considerations underlying the most important topics covered by the Federal Rules of Evidence, including the mode and order of interrogation, relevance, character evidence and impeachment, opinion testimony, and hearsay.


Preface Sep 2012

Preface

West Virginia Law Review

No abstract provided.


A Bakerian Response To Weinstein's Free Speech Theory, Anne Marie Lofaso Sep 2012

A Bakerian Response To Weinstein's Free Speech Theory, Anne Marie Lofaso

West Virginia Law Review

No abstract provided.


Baker Tribute, Anne Marie Lofaso Sep 2012

Baker Tribute, Anne Marie Lofaso

West Virginia Law Review

No abstract provided.


Formal Equality, Formal Autonomy, And Political Legitimacy: A Response To Ed Baker, James Weinstein Sep 2012

Formal Equality, Formal Autonomy, And Political Legitimacy: A Response To Ed Baker, James Weinstein

West Virginia Law Review

No abstract provided.