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- Natural Resource Development in Indian Country (Summer Conference, June 8-10) (5)
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Articles 1 - 30 of 37
Full-Text Articles in Judges
The Wind River Litigation: Effects Of The Wyoming Supreme Court’S Decision On The Wind River Reservation’S Water Use And Implications For Other Reservations’ Water Rights, David M. Dornbusch
The Wind River Litigation: Effects Of The Wyoming Supreme Court’S Decision On The Wind River Reservation’S Water Use And Implications For Other Reservations’ Water Rights, David M. Dornbusch
Natural Resource Development in Indian Country (Summer Conference, June 8-10)
11 pages.
The Wind River Litigation: Quantification And Implementation, Gordon W. Fassett
The Wind River Litigation: Quantification And Implementation, Gordon W. Fassett
Natural Resource Development in Indian Country (Summer Conference, June 8-10)
19 pages.
Taxation In Indian Country, Richard B. Collins
Taxation In Indian Country, Richard B. Collins
Natural Resource Development in Indian Country (Summer Conference, June 8-10)
11 pages.
The Process Of Decision-Making In Tribal Courts, Tom Tso
The Process Of Decision-Making In Tribal Courts, Tom Tso
Natural Resource Development in Indian Country (Summer Conference, June 8-10)
11 pages.
Agenda: Natural Resource Development In Indian Country, University Of Colorado Boulder. Natural Resources Law Center
Agenda: Natural Resource Development In Indian Country, University Of Colorado Boulder. Natural Resources Law Center
Natural Resource Development in Indian Country (Summer Conference, June 8-10)
Conference organizers and/or faculty included University of Colorado School of Law professors David H. Getches, Charles F. Wilkinson, Lawrence J. MacDonnell and Richard B. Collins.
Indian reservations constitute about 2.5% of all land in the country and 5% of all land in the American West. During the last two decades, Indian natural resources issues have moved to the forefront as tribal governments have dramatically expanded their regulatory programs, judicial systems. and resource development activities. This major symposium will address current developments and assess likely future directions in the areas of tribal, federal, and state regulation; tribal-state intergovernmental agreements; financing; mineral …
Naturalization Ceremony: Dutchess County Bar Association, Roger J. Miner '56
Naturalization Ceremony: Dutchess County Bar Association, Roger J. Miner '56
Naturalization Ceremonies
No abstract provided.
Appellate Practice In The Second Circuit Court Of Appeals, Roger J. Miner '56
Appellate Practice In The Second Circuit Court Of Appeals, Roger J. Miner '56
Federal Courts and Federal Practice
No abstract provided.
Developing A Consensus Of Constraint: A Judge's Perspective On Judicial Retention Elections, Joseph R. Grodin
Developing A Consensus Of Constraint: A Judge's Perspective On Judicial Retention Elections, Joseph R. Grodin
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Panel On Aids In The Workplace, Insurance And Education —Introduction And Discussion Of Education Issues, Roger J. Miner '56
Panel On Aids In The Workplace, Insurance And Education —Introduction And Discussion Of Education Issues, Roger J. Miner '56
Court Conferences and Events
No abstract provided.
Workable Antitrust Law: The Statutory Approach To Antitrust, Thomas Arthur
Workable Antitrust Law: The Statutory Approach To Antitrust, Thomas Arthur
Faculty Articles
This Article will demonstrate the superiority of the statutory approach for producing more stable and consistent antitrust law. Part I details the development of the constitutional approach to antitrust, demonstrating how the rise of the pragmatic and instrumentalist view of law led to the displacement of the original statutory approach to antitrust. Part II illustrates that the constitutional approach fundamentally cannot produce workable antitrust law. It summarizes both the doctrinal disarray that continues to plague each major area of antitrust law and the irreconcilable policy prescriptions of the contending antitrust "schools." Part III presents an alternative, statutory approach to antitrust …
Has The Time Come For Judicial Sabbaticals, Ira P. Robbins
Has The Time Come For Judicial Sabbaticals, Ira P. Robbins
Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals
No abstract provided.
Benjamin N. Cardozo: Sixty Years After His Appointment As New York's Chief Judge, Jay C. Carlisle
Benjamin N. Cardozo: Sixty Years After His Appointment As New York's Chief Judge, Jay C. Carlisle
Elisabeth Haub School of Law Faculty Publications
Sixty years after his appointment as Chief Judge of the New York State Court of Appeals, Benjamin N. Cardozo’s place in history as one of the country's most outstanding jurists and preeminent legal philosophers is secure. He is· widely acclaimed for being a successful practitioner, a brilliant legal scholar and a man who is ranked among the preeminent American judges, along with Marshall, Kent, Story and Holmes. He was a giant of his era who, while spending all but six years of his professional life in New York, exerted a powerful national influence upon his own times.
Review Of Judging Credentials: Nonlawyer Judges And The Politics Of Professionalism By Doris Marie Provine, William T. Gallagher
Review Of Judging Credentials: Nonlawyer Judges And The Politics Of Professionalism By Doris Marie Provine, William T. Gallagher
Publications
Doris Marie Provine's Judging Credentials is a provocative work that draws on and furthers the critical approach to the study of professions. The book is a study of judges in lower courts of limited jurisdiction who are not lawyers, a group of considerable size. There are over 13,000 of them in the United States. In this work Provine examines the legal profession's assertion that these judges are inferior to judges who are lawyers. Contrary to both professional claims and popular belief, Provine argues that lay judges in America's lower courts perform as well as their lawyer counterparts. Her conclusions derive …
Appellate Justice Bureaucracy And Scholarship, William M. Richman, William L. Reynolds
Appellate Justice Bureaucracy And Scholarship, William M. Richman, William L. Reynolds
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
An Empirical Case Study Of Informal Alternative Dispute Resolution, Ronald J. Bacigal
An Empirical Case Study Of Informal Alternative Dispute Resolution, Ronald J. Bacigal
Law Faculty Publications
The following Article is taken from that portion of Merhige's biography that addresses the Westinghouse uranium case of the 1970s, perhaps the first of the major "complex cases" to attract national attention. This case study provides an opportunity to examine a judicial decision making process involving four years of litigation, international discovery proceedings, judicial administrative guidelines, diverse national precepts of economics and politics, the interplay between the free market and multinational cartels and embargoes, and lastly, the personality of the trial judge. Shunning any pretense of passivity, Merhige initiated proceedings in the Westinghouse case by ignoring administrative protocol in order …
Justice Kelleher And The Constitutions, Robert B. Kent
Justice Kelleher And The Constitutions, Robert B. Kent
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Cannibal Moves: An Essay On The Metamorphoses Of The Legal Distinction, Pierre Schlag
Cannibal Moves: An Essay On The Metamorphoses Of The Legal Distinction, Pierre Schlag
Publications
No abstract provided.
Judicial Discipline And Impeachment, John H. Garvey
Judicial Discipline And Impeachment, John H. Garvey
Scholarly Articles
This symposium deals with the discipline and removal of Article III judges. In employing these measures we must heed two principles that are in tension with one another. The first is that judges must be honest. The second is that they must be independent. This second principle actually presupposes a third, about which I will say something before returning to the first two. The independence of federal judges is particularly important because they engage in the practice of judicial review
Look Before You Leap: Some Cautionary Notes On Civic Republicanism, Michael A. Fitts
Look Before You Leap: Some Cautionary Notes On Civic Republicanism, Michael A. Fitts
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
A Distorted Mirror: The Supreme Court's Shimmering View Of Summary Judgment, Directed Verdict, And The Value Of Adjudication, Jeffrey W. Stempel
A Distorted Mirror: The Supreme Court's Shimmering View Of Summary Judgment, Directed Verdict, And The Value Of Adjudication, Jeffrey W. Stempel
Scholarly Works
As almost anyone alive during the past decade knows, this is the era of the ‘litigation explosion,’ or there is at least the perception that a litigation explosion exists. Although all agree that the absolute number of lawsuits has increased in virtually every corner of the state and federal court systems, there exists vigorous debate about whether the increase is unusual in relative or historical terms and even more vigorous debate about whether the absolute increase in cases symbolizes the American concern for fairness and justice or represents a surge in frivolous or trivial disputes needlessly clogging the courts. As …
The Dialogue Of Heart And Head, Lynne N. Henderson
The Dialogue Of Heart And Head, Lynne N. Henderson
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.
The Dialogue Of The Heart And Head, Lynne Henderson
The Dialogue Of The Heart And Head, Lynne Henderson
Scholarly Works
No abstract provided.
Judging Judges: How We Choose Our Federal And State Judges, Joseph R. Grodin, Frank K. Richardson
Judging Judges: How We Choose Our Federal And State Judges, Joseph R. Grodin, Frank K. Richardson
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
The Chancellor's Boot, Stephen B. Burbank
The Chancellor's Boot, Stephen B. Burbank
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
The Article Iii Judiciary In Its Third Century, Kenneth F. Ripple
The Article Iii Judiciary In Its Third Century, Kenneth F. Ripple
Journal Articles
Tonight we celebrate the memory of one of the great American jurists of this century, Robert A. Ainsworth, Jr. In this bicentennial year of our Constitution, it seems most appropriate that we honor the memory of Judge Ainsworth by reflecting on that part of the Constitution to which he exhibited so much devotion—article III, the judicial article.
Original Understanding And The Constitution, Michael E. Tigar
Original Understanding And The Constitution, Michael E. Tigar
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Sanctioning Frivolous Litigation In State And Federal Courts: Introduction And Overview, Roger J. Miner '56
Sanctioning Frivolous Litigation In State And Federal Courts: Introduction And Overview, Roger J. Miner '56
Court Conferences and Events
No abstract provided.
One From Many, Roger J. Miner '56
The Work Of The Federal Courts, Roger J. Miner '56
The Work Of The Federal Courts, Roger J. Miner '56
Federal Court System and Administration
No abstract provided.