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Articles 31 - 60 of 77

Full-Text Articles in Law

V.17-1, 2000 Masthead Jan 2000

V.17-1, 2000 Masthead

California Regulatory Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Legislative Committee Abbreviations Jan 2000

Legislative Committee Abbreviations

California Regulatory Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Department Of Corporations, Kelly Ann Debie Jan 2000

Department Of Corporations, Kelly Ann Debie

California Regulatory Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Board Of Podiatric Medicine, Monisha Ann Coelho Jan 2000

Board Of Podiatric Medicine, Monisha Ann Coelho

California Regulatory Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Respiratory Care Board, Jessica A. Neyman, J. D. Fellmeth Jan 2000

Respiratory Care Board, Jessica A. Neyman, J. D. Fellmeth

California Regulatory Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Veterinary Medical Board, Michelle J. Hubbard Jan 2000

Veterinary Medical Board, Michelle J. Hubbard

California Regulatory Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Board Of Optometry, Tatiana Rodriguez Jan 2000

Board Of Optometry, Tatiana Rodriguez

California Regulatory Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


California Architects Board, Karla Dawn Bell, J. D. Fellmeth Jan 2000

California Architects Board, Karla Dawn Bell, J. D. Fellmeth

California Regulatory Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Contractors' State License Board, Karla Dawn Bell, J. D. Fellmeth Jan 2000

Contractors' State License Board, Karla Dawn Bell, J. D. Fellmeth

California Regulatory Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Board Of Registration For Geologists And Geophysicists, Caroline J. Clark Jan 2000

Board Of Registration For Geologists And Geophysicists, Caroline J. Clark

California Regulatory Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Department Of Alcoholic Beverage Control, Peter Sansom Jan 2000

Department Of Alcoholic Beverage Control, Peter Sansom

California Regulatory Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Department Of Insurance, Ashley F. Hall-Hicklin, Michelle J. Hubbard, Jenny K. Li, J. D. Fellmeth Jan 2000

Department Of Insurance, Ashley F. Hall-Hicklin, Michelle J. Hubbard, Jenny K. Li, J. D. Fellmeth

California Regulatory Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Public Utilities Commission, Sapna Iyer, Rebecca A. Richards, Monisha Ann Coelho, J. D. Fellmeth Jan 2000

Public Utilities Commission, Sapna Iyer, Rebecca A. Richards, Monisha Ann Coelho, J. D. Fellmeth

California Regulatory Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Department Of Corporations, Shirley S. Prasad Jan 2000

Department Of Corporations, Shirley S. Prasad

California Regulatory Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Department Of Real Estate, Lisa J. Frisella Jan 2000

Department Of Real Estate, Lisa J. Frisella

California Regulatory Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


California Board Of Accountancy, Shirley S. Prasad, J. D. Fellmeth Jan 2000

California Board Of Accountancy, Shirley S. Prasad, J. D. Fellmeth

California Regulatory Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


State Bar Of California, Charlotte Wilder, J. D. Fellmeth Jan 2000

State Bar Of California, Charlotte Wilder, J. D. Fellmeth

California Regulatory Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Bureau Of State Audits, J. D. Fellmeth Jan 2000

Bureau Of State Audits, J. D. Fellmeth

California Regulatory Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


Legislative Analyst's Office, J. D. Fellmeth Jan 2000

Legislative Analyst's Office, J. D. Fellmeth

California Regulatory Law Reporter

No abstract provided.


The Sanctity Of Association: The Corporation And Individualism In American Law, Liam Seamus O'Melinn Jan 2000

The Sanctity Of Association: The Corporation And Individualism In American Law, Liam Seamus O'Melinn

San Diego Law Review

American society and law display a deep reverence for the group, as long as it assumes corporate or quasi-corporate form. This reverence is not fleeting; rather, it has deep historical roots. In fact, it was there before the republic came into being and it played a profound role in the founding of the nation. Moreover, these roots are not only traditional, but philosophical and religious as well. This Article explores those roots, with three goals in mind. First, to correct the mistaken notion that American law has historically demonstrated a commitment to the individual at the expense of the group, …


Is Lowering The Age At Which Juveniles Can Be Transferred To Adult Criminal Court The Answer To Juvenile Crime? A State-By-State Assessment Jan 2000

Is Lowering The Age At Which Juveniles Can Be Transferred To Adult Criminal Court The Answer To Juvenile Crime? A State-By-State Assessment

San Diego Law Review

The trend toward "get tough" policies concerning juveniles has swept through just about every state in the nation, affecting younger and younger minors. In Texas in 1997, not long after a tougher law was passed, a fourteen-year-old girl accused of murder became the youngest juvenile ever to stand trial as an adult in Tarrant County. Texas lowered the age from fifteen to fourteen in a 1995 revision of the state's juvenile justice code. In Michigan, an eleven-year-old boy, Nathaniel Abraham, became one of the youngest persons in the United States to be tried for murder as an adult; he allegedly …


Addiction And Causation, Michael Corrado Jan 2000

Addiction And Causation, Michael Corrado

San Diego Law Review

Is it possible for a compatibilist to capture the notion of a choice that is resistible but very, very hard to resist? And, along the same lines, is it possible for the compatibilist to capture the notion of degrees of responsibility, of greater or lesser moral responsibility? Of course, duress may lessen responsibility, and in general the aversiveness of the alternatives facing an agent may lessen her responsibility for an action: The more aversive the alternatives, the less responsible the agent-or at least the less inclined we are to punish the agent. That way of ranking responsibility is clearly intelligible …


Masthead Jan 2000

Masthead

San Diego Law Review

No abstract provided.


Has Affirmative Action Been Negated? A Closer Look At Public Employment, H Lee Sarokin, Jane K. Babin, Allison H. Goddard Jan 2000

Has Affirmative Action Been Negated? A Closer Look At Public Employment, H Lee Sarokin, Jane K. Babin, Allison H. Goddard

San Diego Law Review

First, this Article argues that affirmative action is right and necessary in certain circumstances. Second, it examines whether affirmative action has survived under current case law. Part II.A reviews the Supreme Court decisions that define the test of strict scrutiny in the public employment context. Part II.B discusses the current focus of the Court's debate on affirmative action. Part III looks at how strict scrutiny analysis and the Supreme Court's precedents are being applied by the lower federal courts. Part IV concludes that more guidance is needed from the Supreme Court on the first prong of the strict scrutiny analysis …


The Brandeis Legacy, Mary Murphy Schroeder Jan 2000

The Brandeis Legacy, Mary Murphy Schroeder

San Diego Law Review

Louis Brandeis was the greatest lawyer of the early twentieth century, and perhaps of the entire century. He was brilliant, driven, charismatic, and absolutely devoted to improving the lives of the common people of the United States. Put in more contemporary terms, he was committed to the notion that technological and economic advances should not widen the gap between the haves and the have-nots. His causes were the environment, citizenship, freedom of expression, quality of life in the workplace, protection against increasing power wielded by large corporations, and protection of individual privacy. All were issues that emerged at the beginning …


Toward A Theory Of Regulatory Takings For Intellectual Property: The Path Left Open After College Savings V. Florida Prepaid, Shubha Ghosh Jan 2000

Toward A Theory Of Regulatory Takings For Intellectual Property: The Path Left Open After College Savings V. Florida Prepaid, Shubha Ghosh

San Diego Law Review

This Article argues that an infringement of intellectual property rights by a state government constitutes a regulatory taking, requiring compensation to the intellectual property owner. The regulatory takings doctrine is a controversial one. Almost everyone agrees that if a state government physically takes property from its citizens, the government should compensate the owners. Nevertheless, the proposition that state regulation of its citizens' property requires compensation is not as easy to endorse. All regulation affects property in some way, either by reducing its value or by limiting its use. A requirement of compensation could potentially cripple the functioning of state governments. …


Introduction, Emily Sherwin Jan 2000

Introduction, Emily Sherwin

San Diego Law Review

Recent debate about theory in legal scholarship' has raised more questions about theory and law than it has answered. For example, just what is meant by "theory" in the context of law? Is there a form of theory that is uniquely "legal" theory, or is legal theory merely moral theory applied to law? If there is such a thing as legal theory, does the body of positive law, and particularly the decisions of judges, inform legal theory, or does theory inform law? What, if any, are the justifications for constructing theories of law?


Theories Of Areas Of Law, Michael Moore Jan 2000

Theories Of Areas Of Law, Michael Moore

San Diego Law Review

The topic of this symposium is "theories and the law." Since this is such an enormously broad topic, the first thing to do is to narrow it a bit. As I shall discuss it, the topic is not on the central topic of jurisprudence, which is the theory of law. My topic is theories within our law, rather than theories about the nature of law in general. Often we call such theorizing internal to the law we have, "internal jurisprudence," to be contrasted with an "external jurisprudence" that is about law as such. Within internal jurisprudence, there is still considerable …


Two Aspects Of Law And Theory, Ronald J. Allen Jan 2000

Two Aspects Of Law And Theory, Ronald J. Allen

San Diego Law Review

In the last quarter of the twentieth century, there was much ado about law and theory, or the relationship between law and theory, or legal theory, phrases that I take to be synonymous, two aspects of which I want to discuss briefly today. With an introductory sentence like that, the normal expectation would be that the next sentence would somehow work in the phrase "about nothing," and, not wanting to be unpredictable, thus casting doubt on somebody's behavioral theory, I will fulfill this expectation by saying that a fair amount of the ado about legal theory was indeed about nothing. …


What We Do When We Do What We Do And Why We Do It, Leo Katz Jan 2000

What We Do When We Do What We Do And Why We Do It, Leo Katz

San Diego Law Review

But what exactly am I talking about when I speak of symmetry and asymmetry in law and ethics? It may be clear enough what those notions mean in geometry, but how are they to be understood in law, or

for that matter in ethics, more generally? Let me start with symmetry- its meaning and the benefits of exploring it. Rather than try to define the

term, however, I will offer what I think is a pretty self-explanatory example of the phenomenon as it arises in law and ethics. It is an example that has fascinated me for quite some time: …