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Full-Text Articles in Law

An Attorney-Client Privilege For Embattled Tax Practitioners: A Legislative Response To Uncertain Legal Counsel, William H. Volz, Theresa Ellis Jan 2009

An Attorney-Client Privilege For Embattled Tax Practitioners: A Legislative Response To Uncertain Legal Counsel, William H. Volz, Theresa Ellis

Hofstra Law Review

No abstract provided.


Uniform Collaborative Law Act, National Conference Of Commissioners On Uniform State Laws Jan 2009

Uniform Collaborative Law Act, National Conference Of Commissioners On Uniform State Laws

Hofstra Law Review

This prefatory note is designed to facilitate understanding of the Uniform Collaborative Law Act by:

* providing an overview of what collaborative law is, its growth and development, and its benefits to parties, the public, and the legal profession;

* summarizing main provisions of the Uniform Collaborative Law Act;

* discussing the major policy issues addressed during the act's development and drafting-for example, appropriate scope of regulation, informed consent, and domestic violence; and

* identifying the reasons why the Uniform Collaborative Law Act should be a uniform act.

The text of the act, with comments on specific sections, follows this …


Using Local Knowledge To Shrink The Individual Carbon Footprint, Katrina Fischer Kuh Jan 2009

Using Local Knowledge To Shrink The Individual Carbon Footprint, Katrina Fischer Kuh

Hofstra Law Review

The unexpected willingness of local governments to engage in climate change mitigation has occasioned a flurry of reflection and debate about whether local efforts are meaningful, what the implications of local climate change initiatives are for theories of environmental federalism, and how the motivations of local actors can be understood. Additionally, there has been much discussion about the efficacy of local actions and the appropriate role for local governments in addressing the climate change problem.

This Idea does not consider which level of government is best suited to address or attempt to define the optimal role of local governments with …


Redefining The Legal Family: Protecting The Rights Of Coparents And The Best Interests Of Their Children, Marissa Wiley Jan 2009

Redefining The Legal Family: Protecting The Rights Of Coparents And The Best Interests Of Their Children, Marissa Wiley

Hofstra Law Review

No abstract provided.


Responsible Environmental Behavior, Energy Conservation, And Compact Fluorescent Bulbs: You Can Lead A Horse To Water, But Can You Make It Drink?, Hope M. Babcock Jan 2009

Responsible Environmental Behavior, Energy Conservation, And Compact Fluorescent Bulbs: You Can Lead A Horse To Water, But Can You Make It Drink?, Hope M. Babcock

Hofstra Law Review

No abstract provided.


Facts Do Matter: A Reply To Bagenstos, Gregory Mitchell, Phillip E. Tetlock Jan 2009

Facts Do Matter: A Reply To Bagenstos, Gregory Mitchell, Phillip E. Tetlock

Hofstra Law Review

This essay replies to critics of our earlier article reviewing efforts to apply psychological research on implicit bias to antidiscrimination law. We document that we do not hold the normative position ascribed to us by our leading critic, Professor Bagenstos, and that he misconstrued our scientific arguments and has accepted at face value empirically unsubstantiated claims about the power of millisecond-reaction-time measures to predict behavior in workplaces. Scholars, judges, regulators, and legislators who seek to combat the root causes of inequality effectively should attend carefully to the disputes surrounding the empirical assessment and theoretical modeling of implicit bias and consider …


The End Of An Era: Closing The Exclusionary Debate Under Herring V. United States, Sean D. Doherty Jan 2009

The End Of An Era: Closing The Exclusionary Debate Under Herring V. United States, Sean D. Doherty

Hofstra Law Review

No abstract provided.


Climate Change, Causation, And Delayed Harm, Eric Biber Jan 2009

Climate Change, Causation, And Delayed Harm, Eric Biber

Hofstra Law Review

No abstract provided.


Cooperative Federalism And Wind: A New Framework For Achieving Sustainability, Patricia E. Salkin, Ashira Pelman Ostrow Jan 2009

Cooperative Federalism And Wind: A New Framework For Achieving Sustainability, Patricia E. Salkin, Ashira Pelman Ostrow

Hofstra Law Review

This Article proposes a federal wind siting policy modeled on the cooperative federalism framework of the Telecommunication Siting Policy. Part II describes some advantages of wind energy, focusing specifically on the environmental, economic, and social benefits. This Part also discusses several technical obstacles to wind energy development, including the need to supplement wind energy with conventional energy sources and the lack of adequate transmission infrastructure.

Part III assesses the current regulatory regime for the siting of wind turbines, reviewing general practices across the United States at both the state and local levels. Although a number of states have been active …


What's So Civil About Civil Commitment?: Balancing The State's Interest In Treating Substance Dependence With The Protection Of Individual Liberty Interests, Rebecca L. Abensur Jan 2009

What's So Civil About Civil Commitment?: Balancing The State's Interest In Treating Substance Dependence With The Protection Of Individual Liberty Interests, Rebecca L. Abensur

Hofstra Law Review

No abstract provided.


Cracking Open The Golden Door: Revisiting U.S. Asylum Law's Response To China's One-Child Policy, Sean T. Masson Jan 2009

Cracking Open The Golden Door: Revisiting U.S. Asylum Law's Response To China's One-Child Policy, Sean T. Masson

Hofstra Law Review

No abstract provided.


Small Is The New Biglaw: Some Thoughts On Technology, Economics, And The Practice Of Law, Glenn Harlan Reynolds Jan 2009

Small Is The New Biglaw: Some Thoughts On Technology, Economics, And The Practice Of Law, Glenn Harlan Reynolds

Hofstra Law Review

This paper looks at technological and economic changes affecting lawyers, and their effect on the competitiveness of large law firms. It explores methods of unbundling big law firm features, and providing similar services on a more ad hoc basis. In addition, it considers whether current legal education is properly preparing students for a world in which large law firms will be much less dominant. Based on a talk given at Hofstra Law School in March of 2009.


Legal Ethics And Collaborative Practice Ethics, Robert F. Cochran Jr. Jan 2009

Legal Ethics And Collaborative Practice Ethics, Robert F. Cochran Jr.

Hofstra Law Review

In Collaborative Practice (CP), the clients and their attorneys (and other professionals in the case, if there are any) contract to resolve the issues presented in a structured process without litigation. Lawyers who engage in CP are governed by the legal professional rules in their state. However, Collaborative Practice differs greatly from adversarial dispute resolution practice. It challenges practitioners in ways not necessarily addressed by the ethics of individual disciplines. Therefore, collaborative professionals have developed their own standards to provide guidance for their members. Cochran describes the legal and ethical context within which professionals engage in CP in the United …


Categorizing Zipporah's Petition, William E. Nelson Jan 2009

Categorizing Zipporah's Petition, William E. Nelson

Hofstra Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Social Bases Of Climate Change Knowledge, Concern, And Policy Support In The U.S. General Public, Aaron M. Mccright Jan 2009

The Social Bases Of Climate Change Knowledge, Concern, And Policy Support In The U.S. General Public, Aaron M. Mccright

Hofstra Law Review

No abstract provided.


What The Law Should (And Should Not) Learn From Child Development Research, Emily Buss Jan 2009

What The Law Should (And Should Not) Learn From Child Development Research, Emily Buss

Hofstra Law Review

No abstract provided.


Discovering Secrets: Act Of State Defenses To Bribery Cases, Elizabeth Spahn Jan 2009

Discovering Secrets: Act Of State Defenses To Bribery Cases, Elizabeth Spahn

Hofstra Law Review

Prosecution of white collar crime, particularly grand corruption bribery, is increasing. High-level bribery is structurally similar to illegal drug cartels and terrorist organizations. Bribe-givers are serviced by multinational networks of attorneys and bankers – the “gatekeepers”.

The prosecution of New York attorney and banker, James H. Giffen, in the Southern District of New York generated a pair of landmark opinions on significant issues of first impression rejecting act of state doctrine defenses to bribery cases. Act of state doctrine defenses involve complex legal issues at obscure intersections of U.S. criminal law, constitutional law, conflicts of law, and international comity.

The …


Habeas By Any Other Name, Eric M. Freedman Jan 2009

Habeas By Any Other Name, Eric M. Freedman

Hofstra Law Review

No abstract provided.


Foreword, Hon. Martha L. Walters Jan 2009

Foreword, Hon. Martha L. Walters

Hofstra Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Uniform Collaborative Law Act As A Teaching Tool, Harry L. Tindall, Jennie R. Smith Jan 2009

The Uniform Collaborative Law Act As A Teaching Tool, Harry L. Tindall, Jennie R. Smith

Hofstra Law Review

No abstract provided.


Federal Rule Of Civil Procedure 37(E): Spoiling The Spoliation Doctrine, Nicole D. Wright Jan 2009

Federal Rule Of Civil Procedure 37(E): Spoiling The Spoliation Doctrine, Nicole D. Wright

Hofstra Law Review

No abstract provided.


Energy And The Environment: Empowering Consumers, Katrina Fischer Kuh Jan 2009

Energy And The Environment: Empowering Consumers, Katrina Fischer Kuh

Hofstra Law Review

Individual consumers and the local governments that serve them are at the center of the energy-environment equation. Consumers experience the fruits of energy and environmental policies--whether those policies damage the environment and imperil environmental goods or protect the environment but perhaps impose higher costs on consumers--and are in a unique position to influence energy policy and environmental outcomes through their political, behavioral, and consumption choices. In the United States, the individual and household sector generates, by some estimates, thirty to forty percent of GHG emissions. And the harms from individual behaviors and consumption with respect to a wide range of …


The Ethical Responsibility To Reduce Energy Consumption, John C. Dernbach, Donald A. Brown Jan 2009

The Ethical Responsibility To Reduce Energy Consumption, John C. Dernbach, Donald A. Brown

Hofstra Law Review

This Article argues that developed countries have an ethical responsibility to reduce energy consumption - through energy efficiency and conservation - as part of the global effort to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. While this responsibility is borne by nations themselves, it has consequences for the individuals living in those nations. This Article also argues that developing countries have different duties concerning energy consumption. Their responsibility to improve human quality of life will mean greater use of modern energy, especially when it is not now available. At the same time, developing countries should use energy efficiency and conservation when it is …


Reciprocity And Environmental Obligations, Leslie P. Francis Jan 2009

Reciprocity And Environmental Obligations, Leslie P. Francis

Hofstra Law Review

No abstract provided.


Resolving The Conflict Between Jewish And Secular Estate Law, Benjamin C. Wolf Jan 2009

Resolving The Conflict Between Jewish And Secular Estate Law, Benjamin C. Wolf

Hofstra Law Review

No abstract provided.


Legal Turmoil In A Factious Colony: New York, 1664-1776, William E. Nelson Jan 2009

Legal Turmoil In A Factious Colony: New York, 1664-1776, William E. Nelson

Hofstra Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Case Of The Headless Baby: Did Interracial Sex In The Massachusetts Bay Colony Lead To Infanticide And The Earliest Habeas Corpus Petition In America?, Melinde Lutz Sanborn Jan 2009

The Case Of The Headless Baby: Did Interracial Sex In The Massachusetts Bay Colony Lead To Infanticide And The Earliest Habeas Corpus Petition In America?, Melinde Lutz Sanborn

Hofstra Law Review

No abstract provided.


Why There Should Be A Duty To Mitigate Liquidated Damages Clauses, Lisa A. Fortin Jan 2009

Why There Should Be A Duty To Mitigate Liquidated Damages Clauses, Lisa A. Fortin

Hofstra Law Review

No abstract provided.


Giving Public Opinion The Process That Is Due: What The Supreme Court Can Learn From Its Eighth Amendment Jurisprudence, Rebecca Wilhelm Jan 2009

Giving Public Opinion The Process That Is Due: What The Supreme Court Can Learn From Its Eighth Amendment Jurisprudence, Rebecca Wilhelm

Hofstra Law Review

No abstract provided.


A Vision For Collaborative Practice: The Final Report Of The Hofstra Collaborative Law Conference, J. Herbie Difonzo Jan 2009

A Vision For Collaborative Practice: The Final Report Of The Hofstra Collaborative Law Conference, J. Herbie Difonzo

Hofstra Law Review

In November 2009, Hofstra University School of Law’s Center for Children, Families and the Law hosted a Conference on the Uniform Collaborative Law Act, in conjunction with the Uniform Law Commission, the Association of Family and Conciliation Courts, the International Academy of Collaborative Professionals ("IACP"), and the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolution. This event marked the first time a law school has sponsored a conference exclusively focusing on the innovative practice of collaborative law.

The goal of the Conference was to assess collaborative practice in light of the adoption of the Uniform Collaborative Law Act (“UCLA”). This Report …