Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Law Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 14 of 14

Full-Text Articles in Law

Francis A. Allen: 'Confront[Ing] The Most Explosive Problems' And 'Plumbing All Issues To Their Full Depth Without Fear Or Prejudice', Yale Kamisar Dec 1986

Francis A. Allen: 'Confront[Ing] The Most Explosive Problems' And 'Plumbing All Issues To Their Full Depth Without Fear Or Prejudice', Yale Kamisar

Articles

Frank Allen began his distinguished teaching career more than thirty-five years ago - at a time when, at more law schools than we like to remember, "the basic criminal law course was routinely assigned to the youngest and most vulnerable member of the faculty or to that colleague suspected of mild brain damage and hence incompetent to deal with courses that really matter."' That those of us who taught criminal law years later were warmly received by our colleagues is in no small measure a tribute to the quality of mind and character and intellectual energy of people like Allen, …


An Overview Of Health Law Research And An Annotated Bibliography, Richard A. Danner, Claire M. Germain Apr 1986

An Overview Of Health Law Research And An Annotated Bibliography, Richard A. Danner, Claire M. Germain

Cornell Law Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Jury Instructions: A Bibliography. Part I: Civil Jury Instructions, Cheryl R. Nyberg, Carol Boast Jan 1986

Jury Instructions: A Bibliography. Part I: Civil Jury Instructions, Cheryl R. Nyberg, Carol Boast

Librarians' Articles

Pattern jury instructions are used by trial judges to explain the law to jurors in language that they can understand and that provide consistency from one trial to another. This bibliography contains references to 156 recent and dated compilations of civil jury instructions. An index to acronyms for civil jury instructions is included.


Jury Instructions: A Bibliography. Part Ii: Criminal Jury Instructions, Cheryl R. Nyberg, Jane Williams, Carol Boast Jan 1986

Jury Instructions: A Bibliography. Part Ii: Criminal Jury Instructions, Cheryl R. Nyberg, Jane Williams, Carol Boast

Librarians' Articles

Pattern jury instructions are used by trial judges to explain the law to jurors in language that they can understand and that provide consistency from one trial to another. This criminal jury instructions bibliography of 169 entries is a companion to a previous bibliography on civil jury instructions. An index to acronyms for both criminal and civil jury instructions is also included.


Review Of State Legislative Sourcebook, Paul M. Birch Jan 1986

Review Of State Legislative Sourcebook, Paul M. Birch

Law Faculty Publications

Review of Hellebust, Lynn. State Legislative Sourcebook--1986: A Resource Guide to Legislative Information in the Fifty States.


Judicial Criticism, James Boyd White Jan 1986

Judicial Criticism, James Boyd White

Articles

Today I shall talk about the criticism of judicial opinions, especially of constitutional opinions. This may at first seem to have rather little to do with our larger topic, "The Constitution and Human Values," but I hope that by the end I will be seen to be talking about that subject too. In fact I hope to show that in what I call our "criticism" our "values" are defined and made actual in most important ways.


A Book Review--Or What You Never Wanted To Know About Bibliographies, Penny Hazelton Jan 1986

A Book Review--Or What You Never Wanted To Know About Bibliographies, Penny Hazelton

Book Reviews

No abstract provided.


Salute To A Great Legislative Draftsman: Elmer A. Driedger, Q. C., Reed Dickerson Jan 1986

Salute To A Great Legislative Draftsman: Elmer A. Driedger, Q. C., Reed Dickerson

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


Crises? What Crisis?, Jack M. Beermann Jan 1986

Crises? What Crisis?, Jack M. Beermann

Faculty Scholarship

Bureaucracy is a favorite target for criticism from the left and the right. Bureaucratization of an organization is claimed to cause excessive reliance upon rigid rules or the absence of rules altogether.' Few people want to be part of a large bureaucracy and fewer still want to depend on a bureaucracy for important benefits or policymaking. In recent years, the business of the federal judiciary has increased dramatically. Congress has attempted to meet the rising caseload by increasing the number of federal judges and assistants. As the federal court system becomes more and more like administrative bureaucracies, the question has …


An Overview Of Health Law Research And An Annotated Bibliography, Richard A. Danner, Claire M. Germain Jan 1986

An Overview Of Health Law Research And An Annotated Bibliography, Richard A. Danner, Claire M. Germain

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Research In Judicial Administration: A Judge's Perspective, Conference On Judicial Administration Research, Roger J. Miner '56 Jan 1986

Research In Judicial Administration: A Judge's Perspective, Conference On Judicial Administration Research, Roger J. Miner '56

Federal Court System and Administration

No abstract provided.


An Overview Of Health Law Research And An Annotated Bibliography, Richard A. Danner, Claire M. Germain Jan 1986

An Overview Of Health Law Research And An Annotated Bibliography, Richard A. Danner, Claire M. Germain

UF Law Faculty Publications

This analysis and the following bibliography are designed to meet the needs of researchers attempting to locate information in the field of health law. The analysis is written from the perspective of law librarians, but the same information retrieval problems apply to health administrators, hospital and medical counsel, and academic lawyers interested in health law and administration.


Book Review. Legal Information Management Index, Linda K. Fariss Jan 1986

Book Review. Legal Information Management Index, Linda K. Fariss

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


Book Review, Richard B. Collins Jan 1986

Book Review, Richard B. Collins

Publications

No abstract provided.