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Full-Text Articles in Law
Fixing A Hole: How The Criminal Law Can Bolster Reparations Theory, Eric L. Muller
Fixing A Hole: How The Criminal Law Can Bolster Reparations Theory, Eric L. Muller
Faculty Publications
High-profile popular-press authors recently have challenged the mainstream consensus that certain historical events should be condemned as injustices. These authors argue that such condemnation unfairly imposes modern standards on historical actors. Until now, the redress movement has largely ignored these partisan revisionists who have sought to justify the harmful decisions made by past generations. Such revisionism, however, threatens the very foundation of reparations theory by persuading the public that redress is unnecessary because historical figures actually committed no injustice by merely acting appropriately, given the historical context in which they lived. This Article seeks to initiate a dialogue regarding how …
The Enumeration Of Rights: "Let Me Count The Ways", John V. Orth
The Enumeration Of Rights: "Let Me Count The Ways", John V. Orth
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Second Thoughts In The Law Of Property, John V. Orth
Second Thoughts In The Law Of Property, John V. Orth
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.