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Shepardizing English Law, Stephen E. Young Jan 1998

Shepardizing English Law, Stephen E. Young

Scholarly Articles

Young explores the use of noter-up resources for English legal materials, with an emphasis on case law and statutory citators. He also describes the online tools that can be used as citator services.


Reconceiving The Role Of Section 8(B)(1)(A): 1947–1997: An Essay On Collective Empowerment And The Public Good, Roger C. Hartley Jan 1998

Reconceiving The Role Of Section 8(B)(1)(A): 1947–1997: An Essay On Collective Empowerment And The Public Good, Roger C. Hartley

Scholarly Articles

The Taft-Hartley section 8(b)(1)(A)s union discipline cases are linked to the impending collapse of collective bargaining in two ways. At one level, they have helped cause it by denying union majorities an important tool to enforce solidarity during economic disputes with employers and thereby have contributed to the loss of worker empowerment. At another level, the union discipline cases reflect certain shifts in national sentiments with respect to the role of unions and collective bargaining in general and the accommodation of collective bargaining to the competing claims of individuals and employers in particular. This paper is about both linkages.


Regulating Risk Not Function, Heidi Mandanis Schooner Jan 1998

Regulating Risk Not Function, Heidi Mandanis Schooner

Scholarly Articles

This Article examines our current scheme of bank regulation through an analysis of banks' securities activities -- how such activities are currently regulated and how they might be regulated in the future.

Part I summarizes the major restrictions on banks' securities activities, emphasizing recent regulatory initiatives aimed toward expanding banks' participation in the securities business.

Part II examines the application of the federal securities laws to banks' securities activities. (While banks enjoy some exemptions from the federal securities laws, they are subject to many of the most important provisions.) In addition, Part II sets forth the division of responsibility for …


Control Freaks, John H. Garvey Jan 1998

Control Freaks, John H. Garvey

Scholarly Articles

Last year, in Washington v. Glucksberg, the Supreme Court decided that the Constitution does not afford us a right to commit assisted suicide. I endorse this conclusion. I might less modestly say that it endorses me, for the Court's understanding of freedom is similar to the one I propose in What Are Freedoms For?, and the theory it rejects is the one I am most concerned to combat.


Catholic Judges In Capital Cases, John H. Garvey Jan 1998

Catholic Judges In Capital Cases, John H. Garvey

Scholarly Articles

No abstract provided.


Regulation Of Unethical Billing Practices: Progress And Prospects, Lisa G. Lerman Jan 1998

Regulation Of Unethical Billing Practices: Progress And Prospects, Lisa G. Lerman

Scholarly Articles

During the last ten years billing fraud by lawyers has been recognized as a serious problem that undermines clients' trust of lawyers and the reputation of the profession as a whole. It used to be thought that lawyers who wanted to steal their clients' money would just take money out of the trust account. In recent years it has become clear that dishonest lawyers' methods of misappropriation are far more diverse than that.

The focus of this paper is on billing misconduct by lawyers who contract with their clients to bill by the hour. I will not talk about lawyers …


Is Roe V. Wade Obsolete?, Robert A. Destro Jan 1998

Is Roe V. Wade Obsolete?, Robert A. Destro

Scholarly Articles

No abstract provided.


Foreword: The ‘Right To Marry’ In The Decisions Of The United States Supreme Court, Robert A. Destro Jan 1998

Foreword: The ‘Right To Marry’ In The Decisions Of The United States Supreme Court, Robert A. Destro

Scholarly Articles

Given the importance of Loving in American constitutional law, we were somewhat surprised to learn that no commemorative conferences or symposia had been planned to mark the thirtieth anniversary of the decision. We designed our conference, "Law and the Politics of Marriage: Loving v. Virginia After 30 Years," to fill that gap.

The conference was held at The Catholic University of America's Columbus School of Law, 19-21 November 1997, and was co-sponsored by three institutions, each having a unique and abiding interest in the subject matter: The Catholic University of America, the Howard University School of Law, and the J. …


Single Gender Marriage: A Religious Perspective, Raymond C. O'Brien Jan 1998

Single Gender Marriage: A Religious Perspective, Raymond C. O'Brien

Scholarly Articles

This Article will offer a religious perspective which is a response to the legal arguments in favor of single-gender marriage. Three arguments will be made: first, that the religious perspective identified and associated with the Roman Catholic tradition offers a fundamental basis for family life that has been proven to be beneficial to society as a whole, and to the message of revelation consigned to Christians by Jesus Christ; second, inasmuch as the religious perspective is being contradicted by judicial interpretation rather than through legislative process, a tyranny of judicial activism has and is subverting a public policy consensus; and …


Fairness, Responsibility, And Efficiency In The Bankruptcy Discharge: Are The Commission’S Recommendations Enough?, Veryl Victoria Miles Jan 1998

Fairness, Responsibility, And Efficiency In The Bankruptcy Discharge: Are The Commission’S Recommendations Enough?, Veryl Victoria Miles

Scholarly Articles

No abstract provided.


Natural Law, Homosexual Conduct, And The Public Policy Exception, Raymond B. Marcin Jan 1998

Natural Law, Homosexual Conduct, And The Public Policy Exception, Raymond B. Marcin

Scholarly Articles

The specific focus of this conference is on the problems posed by the imminent recognition of homosexual marriages in one or more jurisdictions. The question posed by the "laws of nature" exception to the inter-jurisdictional marriage recognition principle is whether legally endorsed homosexual marriages, involving (as they must) societal approval and endorsement of homosexual conduct, are contrary to natural law. This paper will explore the classic natural law theory of Saint Thomas Aquinas and the reasons why that theory condemns homosexual conduct as being contrary to the law of nature.


Re-Examining Truth In Lending: Do Borrowers Actually Use Consumer Disclosures?, Ralph J. Rohner Jan 1998

Re-Examining Truth In Lending: Do Borrowers Actually Use Consumer Disclosures?, Ralph J. Rohner

Scholarly Articles

No abstract provided.


Wto And Un Law, Antonio F. Perez Jan 1998

Wto And Un Law, Antonio F. Perez

Scholarly Articles

This Article argues that the U.S. and EC views of the national security interests exceptions reflect competing conceptions of the WTO legal order. Under the first, the WTO is viewed as merely an agreement between states governing a limited issue area, the disciplining of protectionist policies, under which other issue areas are reserved to sovereign state decisionmaking or, alternatively, whatever other international institutions states have separately granted competence for management of the issue. Under this view, the United States might well argue that its Helms-Burton sanctions are outside the jurisdiction of the WTO and instead within the jurisdiction of the …


Patient Dumping: Implications For The Elderly, George P. Smith Ii Jan 1998

Patient Dumping: Implications For The Elderly, George P. Smith Ii

Scholarly Articles

Before 1986, the Common Law provided that physicians and hospitals had no duty to admit or treat persons who sought their care except in limited circumstances. Congress enacted The Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA) to curb this so-called patient-dumping problem. EMTALA provides, essentially, that Medicare-participating hospitals must treat all patients who arrive in emergency conditions.

This article first discusses the patient-dumping problem and how EMTALA has provoked many hospitals to curtail their emergency facilities in order to avoid treating indigent and uninsured patients. The Article then proceeds to analyze the specifics of EMTALA’s main statutory provision, Section …


Progress For Pilgrims: An Analysis Of The Holy See-Israel Fundamental Agreement, Geoffrey R. Watson Jan 1998

Progress For Pilgrims: An Analysis Of The Holy See-Israel Fundamental Agreement, Geoffrey R. Watson

Scholarly Articles

This Article asks whether international human rights law obliges states to admit foreign pilgrims, and if so, whether the existence of such an obligation should influence interpretation of the Fundamental Agreement. Part I of this Article takes up a logically prior question: whether the Fundamental Agreement is a legally binding treaty, and whether it should be interpreted in accordance with treaty law. The Article rejects recent suggestions that one or both parties lack the capacity to make treaties, and it concludes that the Agreement is a binding treaty that should be interpreted in accordance with the Vienna Convention on the …


Disclosure And Corporate Morality: Beginning A Dialogue, David A. Lipton Jan 1998

Disclosure And Corporate Morality: Beginning A Dialogue, David A. Lipton

Scholarly Articles

No abstract provided.


Pinning The Blame & Piercing The Veil In The Mists Of Metaphor: The Supreme Court’S New Standards For The Cercla Liability Of Parent Companies & A Proposal For Legislative Reform, Lucia A. Silecchia Jan 1998

Pinning The Blame & Piercing The Veil In The Mists Of Metaphor: The Supreme Court’S New Standards For The Cercla Liability Of Parent Companies & A Proposal For Legislative Reform, Lucia A. Silecchia

Scholarly Articles

This article tackles the complex question of the liability of parent corporation for the CERCLA misadventures of their subsidiaries. In 1998, the United States Supreme Court tried to resolve this complex question. In many respects, this decision was a significant step in the right direction, and the article begins by analyzing the Court’s opinion. However, the article then identifies three significant questions left open after Best foods. In light of these open questions, the article proposes a legislative proposal to further refine the parent-subsidiary allocation of liability to better serve CERCLA’s broad remedial goals and to clarify the expectations of …


Harnessing The Human Genome Through Legislative Restraint, George P. Smith Ii Jan 1998

Harnessing The Human Genome Through Legislative Restraint, George P. Smith Ii

Scholarly Articles

The awesome predictive power of genetic medicine promises great advancements in not only the treatment of identifiable conditions but the prevention of their pathological manifestations. At the same time, the release and dissemination of this genetic or medical information poses a distinct risk of loss of privacy and stigmatization to carriers of genetic disorders. In order to safeguard the individual right of autonomy, privacy, confidentiality and informed consent-yet accommodate the legitimate interests of employers and insurers to obtain medical information relevant to their professional needs and economic responsibilities a balance must be struck legislatively at the federal and state levels …


The Fundamental Agreement Between The Holy See And The State Of Israel: A Symposium, Marshall J. Breger Jan 1998

The Fundamental Agreement Between The Holy See And The State Of Israel: A Symposium, Marshall J. Breger

Scholarly Articles

No abstract provided.


‘Mixed’ Constitutions: Product Of An East-Central European Constitutional Melting Pot, Rett R. Ludwikowski Jan 1998

‘Mixed’ Constitutions: Product Of An East-Central European Constitutional Melting Pot, Rett R. Ludwikowski

Scholarly Articles

Part I of this Article discusses the difficulties involved in attempting to classify the new constitutions using traditional criteria. Part II examines the processes involved in the adoption of the various components of existing constitutional models into the constitutions of the East-Central European states, including separate analysis of the distributions of power, the structures of the legislatures, the electoral systems, the systems of governance and mechanisms of judicial enforcement provided by these instruments. Finally, Part III makes observations and draws conclusions regarding the processes examined in Part II.


Teaching Moral Perception And Moral Judgment In Legal Ethics Courses: A Dialogue About Goals, Lisa G. Lerman Jan 1998

Teaching Moral Perception And Moral Judgment In Legal Ethics Courses: A Dialogue About Goals, Lisa G. Lerman

Scholarly Articles

The first topic discussed at the 1997 W.M. Keck Foundation Forum on the Teaching of Legal Ethics was setting goals for the teaching of professional responsibility.

In this Essay, I report some of the ideas that were exchanged during the discussion 17 and comment on a few of them. I also will discuss experimental teaching initiatives that some panelists have undertaken to implement their articulated goals. Then I will comment on some of the problems we encounter in setting goals for the teaching of professional responsibility and on the implications of these observations for our law schools' curricula.


Scenes From A Law Firm, Lisa G. Lerman Jan 1998

Scenes From A Law Firm, Lisa G. Lerman

Scholarly Articles

No abstract provided.


Mandatory Hiv Testing Of Professional Boxers: An Unconstitutional Effort To Regulate A Sport That Needs To Be Regulated, Raymond C. O'Brien, Michael T. Flannery Jan 1998

Mandatory Hiv Testing Of Professional Boxers: An Unconstitutional Effort To Regulate A Sport That Needs To Be Regulated, Raymond C. O'Brien, Michael T. Flannery

Scholarly Articles

No abstract provided.