Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Business Organizations Law (6)
- Intellectual Property Law (4)
- Legal Education (3)
- Legal Ethics and Professional Responsibility (3)
- Constitutional Law (2)
-
- Contracts (2)
- Elder Law (2)
- Family Law (2)
- Human Rights Law (2)
- Indigenous, Indian, and Aboriginal Law (2)
- International Law (2)
- National Security Law (2)
- Antitrust and Trade Regulation (1)
- Civil Rights and Discrimination (1)
- Comparative and Foreign Law (1)
- Courts (1)
- Criminal Law (1)
- Criminal Procedure (1)
- Dispute Resolution and Arbitration (1)
- Energy and Utilities Law (1)
- Fourteenth Amendment (1)
- Fourth Amendment (1)
- International Trade Law (1)
- Jurisprudence (1)
- Labor and Employment Law (1)
- Law and Gender (1)
- Medical Jurisprudence (1)
- Other Law (1)
- Property Law and Real Estate (1)
- Keyword
-
- Intellectual property (3)
- LLC (3)
- CIA (2)
- L3C (2)
- Legal ethics (2)
-
- Limited liability company (2)
- Low profit limited liability company (2)
- Negotiation (2)
- Program related investment (2)
- Socially beneficial investing (2)
- Surrogate (2)
- Tax exempt organizations (2)
- Trademark dilution (2)
- "low profit limited liability company" (1)
- "responsible investing" (1)
- "social entrepreneurship" (1)
- 8th circuit (1)
- Accountability (1)
- Advance Directives (1)
- Age discrimination (1)
- Artificial intelligence (1)
- Assisted reproductive technology (1)
- Attorney and client (1)
- BATNA (1)
- Bill of Rights (1)
- Bioethics (1)
- Black sites (1)
- Board of directors (1)
- Brady (1)
- CIPA (1)
Articles 31 - 35 of 35
Full-Text Articles in Law
Lawyers In Character And Lawyers In Role, Kate Kruse
Lawyers In Character And Lawyers In Role, Kate Kruse
Faculty Scholarship
Legal ethicists have long been fascinated by the relationships between lawyers’ roles in an adversary system of justice and the character, attitudes, or dispositions that best suit the practice of law. Leonard Riskin’s scholarship has explored how lawyers’ practice of mindfulness can improve their legal practice, and his claim in this body of work – that the practice of mindfulness helps to develop the internalized trait of mindfulness – ties his scholarship to the work of legal ethicists who have endeavored to develop character-based theories of legal ethics. Riskin’s analysis of how lawyers might incorporate mindfulness into law practice also …
Artificial Intelligence: Robots, Avatars And The Demise Of The Human Mediator, David Allen Larson
Artificial Intelligence: Robots, Avatars And The Demise Of The Human Mediator, David Allen Larson
Faculty Scholarship
As technology has advanced, many have wondered whether (or simply when) artificial intelligent devices will replace the humans who perform complex, interactive, interpersonal tasks such as dispute resolution. Has science now progressed to the point that artificial intelligence devices can replace human mediators, arbitrators, dispute resolvers and problem solvers? Can humanoid robots, attractive avatars and other relational agents create the requisite level of trust and elicit the truthful, perhaps intimate or painful, disclosures often necessary to resolve a dispute or solve a problem? This article will explore these questions. Regardless of whether the reader is convinced that the demise of …
An Escape Route From The Medellin Maze, Anthony S. Winer
An Escape Route From The Medellin Maze, Anthony S. Winer
Faculty Scholarship
Many in the United States who follow international law have tracked the course of the Supreme Court's 2008 Medellin case' especially closely, both before and after the Court's issuance of the decision. The case concerned the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations (the "Vienna Convention, "Convention" or "VCCR"), which imposes certain obligations on the authorities of a State Party when they imprison a national of another State Party. Among these duties is the obligation to inform the foreign prisoner that the Convention affords the prisoner the right to communicate, while in prison, with consular officials from the prisoner's home country. Authorities …
Acceptable Deviance And Property Rights, Mark A. Edwards
Acceptable Deviance And Property Rights, Mark A. Edwards
Faculty Scholarship
Compliance with - or deviance from - law is often dependent upon the law’s convergence with - or divergence from - normative sensibilities. Where the legality and social acceptability of behavior diverge, some deviance is socially acceptable. Property rights evolve in response to changes in normative sensibilities. Constructing a model of acceptable deviance and applying it to property rights, we can predict and actually observe the evolution of property rights in response to changes in normative sensibilities in areas as diverse as file-sharing, foreclosures, the use of public space, and fishing rights. We can also predict and observe stresses in …
The Accidental Elder Law Professor, A. Kimberley Dayton
The Accidental Elder Law Professor, A. Kimberley Dayton
Faculty Scholarship
This Article discusses my somewhat unusual and erratic path to becoming an Elder Law professor. My story, told more or less in chronological order, is a first-person narrative of one woman’s journey to achieve, if not academic renown, then at least personal satisfaction in the realm of the legal academy. It does not aspire to convey ponderous wisdom about the best way to teach Elder Law or the importance of scholarly productivity as a measure of one’s legitimacy. On the contrary, I hope the Article will illustrate that, in the same way the field of Elder Law has grown and …