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Full-Text Articles in Law

The Last Lecture: State Anti-Slapp Statutes And The Federal Courts, Charles W. Adams, Mbilike M. Mwafulirwa Nov 2022

The Last Lecture: State Anti-Slapp Statutes And The Federal Courts, Charles W. Adams, Mbilike M. Mwafulirwa

St. John's Law Review

(Excerpt)

An old proverb says that “when the student is ready[,] the teacher appears.” In this collaborative effort, a civil procedure law professor has partnered with his former student to address one of the most challenging topics to confront the federal courts in recent times: whether state anti-SLAPP statutes conflict with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The acronym “SLAPP” stands for “Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation.” Anti-SLAPP statutes are a spate of state legislation of recent vintage, designed “to give more breathing space for free speech about contentious public issues” and to “try to decrease the ‘chilling effect’ of …


United States V. Osage Wind, Llc, Summer Carmack Dec 2017

United States V. Osage Wind, Llc, Summer Carmack

Public Land & Resources Law Review

The Osage Nation, as owner of the beneficial interest in its mineral estate, issues federally-approved leases to persons and entities who wish to conduct mineral development on its lands. After an energy-development company, Osage Wind, leased privately-owned surface lands within Tribal reservation boundaries and began to excavate minerals for purposes of constructing a wind farm, the United States brought suit on the Tribe’s behalf. In the ensuing litigation, the Osage Nation insisted that Osage Wind should have obtained a mineral lease from the Tribe before beginning its work. In its decision, the Tenth Circuit applied one of the Indian law …


Oklahoma And Beyond: Understanding The Wave Of State Anti-Transnational Law Initiatives, Martha F. Davis, Johanna Kalb Jan 2012

Oklahoma And Beyond: Understanding The Wave Of State Anti-Transnational Law Initiatives, Martha F. Davis, Johanna Kalb

Indiana Law Journal

In the past year, initiatives to block judicial consideration of foreign or international law have been introduced in over half of the states. The proposals vary, ranging from the “softer” versions, which codify existing common law principles governing judicial decision making to the more extreme versions, which aggressively bar all consideration of foreign and international law, virtually eliminating judicial discretion regarding the relevance of such law in a particular case. This Essay contends that in all their variations, these anti-transnational law measures pose serious and fundamental challenges to the American judicial system. They undermine our federalist system by ignoring federal …


The Unconstitutionality Of Oklahoma's Sq 755 And Other Provisions Like It That Bar State Courts From Considering International Law, Penny M. Venetis Jan 2011

The Unconstitutionality Of Oklahoma's Sq 755 And Other Provisions Like It That Bar State Courts From Considering International Law, Penny M. Venetis

Cleveland State Law Review

This paper will discuss SQ 755's many legal deficiencies, focusing primarily on its constitutional infirmities. First, SQ 755 is a clear violation of the Supremacy Clause of Article VI of the U.S. Constitution. The prohibition on looking to international law requires that Oklahoma courts disregard U.S. treaty obligations, and the law of nations (also known as customary international law), which are all binding on American courts. Second, SQ 755 unconstitutionally limits a state's duty to give full faith and credit to the judicial decisions of other states. The law is clear that no state has the authority to condition its …


The State, Cherokee Nation, And Same-Sex Unions: In Re: Marriage License Of Mckinley & Reynolds, Christopher L. Kannady Jan 2005

The State, Cherokee Nation, And Same-Sex Unions: In Re: Marriage License Of Mckinley & Reynolds, Christopher L. Kannady

American Indian Law Review

No abstract provided.


Losing Ground: Seminole And The Annexation Power Of Municipalities In Oklahoma, Kristen M. O'Connor Jan 2005

Losing Ground: Seminole And The Annexation Power Of Municipalities In Oklahoma, Kristen M. O'Connor

Oklahoma Law Review

No abstract provided.


Property: Creating A Slayer Statute Oklahomans Can Live With, Gregory C. Blackwell Jan 2004

Property: Creating A Slayer Statute Oklahomans Can Live With, Gregory C. Blackwell

Oklahoma Law Review

No abstract provided.


Constitutional Law: The Garvee Bonds Case And Executive Power: Breakthrough Or Blip?, Andrew C. Spiropoulos Jan 2003

Constitutional Law: The Garvee Bonds Case And Executive Power: Breakthrough Or Blip?, Andrew C. Spiropoulos

Oklahoma Law Review

No abstract provided.


Oklahoma Constitutional Law: Highway Robbery: In Re Oklahoma Capitol Improvement Authority: The Eulogy For Oklahoma Constitutional Debt Limitations, Brian Edward Wheeler Jan 2000

Oklahoma Constitutional Law: Highway Robbery: In Re Oklahoma Capitol Improvement Authority: The Eulogy For Oklahoma Constitutional Debt Limitations, Brian Edward Wheeler

Oklahoma Law Review

No abstract provided.


Constitutional Law: Ethics Commission V. Keating: The Oklahoma Supreme Court Defies The Constitutional Mandate Of The People And Clips The Commission's Wings, Sean Paul Rieger Jan 2000

Constitutional Law: Ethics Commission V. Keating: The Oklahoma Supreme Court Defies The Constitutional Mandate Of The People And Clips The Commission's Wings, Sean Paul Rieger

Oklahoma Law Review

No abstract provided.


Constitutional Law: Vouchers, Sectarian Schools, And Constitutional Uncertainty: Choices For The Unites States Supreme Court And The States, Catharine V. Ewing Jan 2000

Constitutional Law: Vouchers, Sectarian Schools, And Constitutional Uncertainty: Choices For The Unites States Supreme Court And The States, Catharine V. Ewing

Oklahoma Law Review

No abstract provided.


Criminal Procedure: Allowing The Prosecution A "Second Bite At The Apple" In Non-Capital Sentencing: Monge V. California, Eva Maria Floyd Jan 2000

Criminal Procedure: Allowing The Prosecution A "Second Bite At The Apple" In Non-Capital Sentencing: Monge V. California, Eva Maria Floyd

Oklahoma Law Review

No abstract provided.


Preemption: The Federal Employees Health Benefit Act(Fehba): Why The Oklahoma Supreme Court Was Wrong In Allowing State Claims In Kincade V. Group Health Services, Matthew P. Sallusti Jan 1999

Preemption: The Federal Employees Health Benefit Act(Fehba): Why The Oklahoma Supreme Court Was Wrong In Allowing State Claims In Kincade V. Group Health Services, Matthew P. Sallusti

Oklahoma Law Review

No abstract provided.


Antitrust: Harold's V. Dillard: It Takes Two To Tango--Except In Oklahoma: The Tenth Circuit Interprets Oklahoma Antitrust Law To Reach Unilateral Activity, Eric Scott Smith Jan 1997

Antitrust: Harold's V. Dillard: It Takes Two To Tango--Except In Oklahoma: The Tenth Circuit Interprets Oklahoma Antitrust Law To Reach Unilateral Activity, Eric Scott Smith

Oklahoma Law Review

No abstract provided.


Arbitration: Shaffer V. Jeffery: The Oklahoma Supreme Court Rejects The Separability Doctrine And Takes A Step Back In The Enforcement Of Arbitration Clauses Under Oklahoma Law, John Douglas Stiner Jan 1997

Arbitration: Shaffer V. Jeffery: The Oklahoma Supreme Court Rejects The Separability Doctrine And Takes A Step Back In The Enforcement Of Arbitration Clauses Under Oklahoma Law, John Douglas Stiner

Oklahoma Law Review

No abstract provided.


Appeal And Error: Flores V. State--Navigating The Murky Waters Of Harmless Error Review, Jeannie Pinkston Jan 1996

Appeal And Error: Flores V. State--Navigating The Murky Waters Of Harmless Error Review, Jeannie Pinkston

Oklahoma Law Review

No abstract provided.


Oklahoma School Finance Litigation: Shifting From Equity To Adequacy, Mark S. Grossman May 1995

Oklahoma School Finance Litigation: Shifting From Equity To Adequacy, Mark S. Grossman

University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform

This Article traces the history of Oklahoma school finance litigation from the initial challenge based on funding inequity to a recent lawsuit founded on alleged constitutional inadequacies in the state system. Although the legal challenge based on funding inequity was unsuccessful in the courts, the pendency of the suit helped push the state legislature toward some reforms. The threat of a new lawsuit based on alleged inadequacies in the state school system, together with a serious funding shortfall, propelled a comprehensive education reform plan through the state legislature in 1990. The association of local school boards that led the equity …