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Full-Text Articles in Law

Teaching Ethics In Criminal Justice To First Year Law Students: Or Efforts To Dislodge The Csi Effect, Susan Rutberg Jul 2012

Teaching Ethics In Criminal Justice To First Year Law Students: Or Efforts To Dislodge The Csi Effect, Susan Rutberg

Susan Rutberg

Teaching Ethics in Criminal Justice to First Year Law Students:

Or Efforts to Dislodge the CSI Effect[1]

Susan Rutberg[2]

ABSTRACT

This article discusses the implementation of an innovative first year course at Golden Gate University School of Law entitled “Lawyering Skills: Ethics in Criminal Justice.” The course, offered for the first time in the spring of 2011, was the product of curricular reform set in motion by the 2007 Carnegie Foundation Report, Educating Lawyers: Preparation for the Profession of Law. Golden Gate University has had a longtime focus both on practical legal education and ethical training. We devote a substantial …


Towards Determining Legal Parentage By Agreement In Israel, Yehezkel Margalit Jul 2012

Towards Determining Legal Parentage By Agreement In Israel, Yehezkel Margalit

Hezi Margalit

In Israel as in other parts of the world, families, parenthood, and relations between parents and children have changed dramatically over the past few decades. So, too, developments in modern medicine have enhanced the ability to separate sexuality from fertility and parenthood. Many researchers feel that the legal system has not kept pace with these changes, and that traditional models of familial relationships no longer provide adequate tools for dealing with them. In order to bridge the gap between a desired social status and current law, a growing number of parents seek to regulate the status, rights, and obligations of …


Determining Legal Parenthood By Agreement As A Possible Solution To The Challenges Of The New Era, Yehezkel Margalit Jul 2012

Determining Legal Parenthood By Agreement As A Possible Solution To The Challenges Of The New Era, Yehezkel Margalit

Hezi Margalit

Over the past decades, we witnessed changes in the matrimonial and parenting institutions. Medical innovations have further created ethical-legal dilemmas. It is, therefore, essential to create a theory and framework that will determine ways to deal with the resulting dilemma in a fully developed manner. This paper surveys the current, conflicting shifts in family structure and the definition of legal parenthood. In it, I deal with the importance and various aspects of defining legal parenthood. I will also focus on the singularity of this dilemma as it is increasingly apparent in the various fertility treatments. I present the sociological-legal roots …


The Plenary Power Immigration Doctrine: The Post 9/11 Hijacking Of State Legislatures, Geordan S. Kushner Jun 2012

The Plenary Power Immigration Doctrine: The Post 9/11 Hijacking Of State Legislatures, Geordan S. Kushner

Geordan S Kushner

The Supreme Court has determined Congress’ authority over immigration policy to be one of its plenary powers. Classifying immigration as a plenary power effectively precludes any external involvement and/or interference from any other entity. From the early 1900s and into the 21st Century, Congressional plenary authority over immigration had come to be expected and desired in the United States. However, one event changed this, essentially rendering that power over immigration unconstitutional when taken in light of other doctrines the Court has iterated.

The event that brought about this transformation was the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. The attacks transformed …


Can Super-Committees Cure Congressional Gridlock?, Sean J. Wright May 2012

Can Super-Committees Cure Congressional Gridlock?, Sean J. Wright

Sean J Wright

No abstract provided.


Is The Middle East Moving Toward Islamism After The Arab Spring? The Case Study Of The Egyptian Commercial And Financial Laws, Radwa S. Elsaman Ms., Ahmed Eldakak Mr. Apr 2012

Is The Middle East Moving Toward Islamism After The Arab Spring? The Case Study Of The Egyptian Commercial And Financial Laws, Radwa S. Elsaman Ms., Ahmed Eldakak Mr.

Radwa S Elsaman

The parliamentary elections that followed the Egyptian Revolution witnessed an unprecedented success for Islamists as they secured an overwhelming majority of seats, suggesting that they may intend to amend many laws to bring it in compliance with the Islamic Shari’a. This article addresses legal challenges that will face the new majority if they decide to Islamize laws and regulations related to business and finance. Particularly, the article discusses Islamic money theory, trade, banking systems, consumer protection, insurance, competition, and tax systems. The article analyzes the Egyptian business and finance laws to examine whether they comply with Islamic law. It then …


Debtor’S Prison In The Neoliberal State: “Debtfare” And The Cultural Logics Of The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention And Consumer Protection Act Of 2005, Linda E. Coco Apr 2012

Debtor’S Prison In The Neoliberal State: “Debtfare” And The Cultural Logics Of The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention And Consumer Protection Act Of 2005, Linda E. Coco

Linda E. Coco

The enactment of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act (“BAPCPA”) of 2005, amending the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978, marks a transformation in bankruptcy law and policy that is representative of larger shifts in dominant economic and political models from “embedded liberalism” to free market “neoliberalism.” BAPCPA’s provisions are part of the new practices of the emergent neoliberal state as they relate to the American middle class segment of the population. In disciplining the middle class, BAPCPA shifts the risk and the responsibility of the lending relationship onto consumer debtors. BAPCPA does this by keeping financially distressed individuals …


Debtor’S Prison In The Neoliberal State: “Debtfare” And The Cultural Logics Of The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention And Consumer Protection Act Of 2005, Linda E. Coco Apr 2012

Debtor’S Prison In The Neoliberal State: “Debtfare” And The Cultural Logics Of The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention And Consumer Protection Act Of 2005, Linda E. Coco

Linda E. Coco

The enactment of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act (“BAPCPA”) of 2005, amending the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978, marks a transformation in bankruptcy law and policy that is representative of larger shifts in dominant economic and political models from “embedded liberalism” to free market “neoliberalism.” BAPCPA’s provisions are part of the new practices of the emergent neoliberal state as they relate to the American middle class segment of the population. In disciplining the middle class, BAPCPA shifts the risk and the responsibility of the lending relationship onto consumer debtors. BAPCPA does this by keeping financially distressed individuals …


Legal Services Programs Can Avoid Service Reductions By Improving Efficiency And Effectiveness, Wayne Moore Apr 2012

Legal Services Programs Can Avoid Service Reductions By Improving Efficiency And Effectiveness, Wayne Moore

wayne moore

This article describes how legal services for low-income people can be maintained or even increased despite recent decreases in funding, if some legal services programs increased their efficiency and effectiveness. Data is presented that indicates that some programs are much less efficient than others. Accepted methods are described for boosting staff output and efficiency without working faster or shortchanging time spent with clients. This can be accomplished using better technology (document generators), methods (telephone conversations can take much less time than face-to-face conversations), and systems (assigning common, routine cases to specially trained staff who use streamlined processes). Effectiveness is defined …


A Costly Illusion? An Empirical Study Of Taiwan’S Use Of Isolation To Control Tuberculosis Transmission And Its Implications For Public Health Law And Policymaking, Shinrou Lin Apr 2012

A Costly Illusion? An Empirical Study Of Taiwan’S Use Of Isolation To Control Tuberculosis Transmission And Its Implications For Public Health Law And Policymaking, Shinrou Lin

Shinrou Lin

The resurgence of tuberculosis (TB) and the emergence of multidrug-resistant TB have resulted in the detention of patients in a number of international jurisdictions since the 1990s, including in Taiwan. The Taiwanese government adopted isolation as an official policy to control TB’s spread in its 2006 Ten-Year Mobilization Plan, whose goal is to halve TB incidence from 66.7 per 100,000 persons to 34 per 100,000 persons. The isolation program allows treating physicians to nominate patients for isolation while public health officials may also isolate patients if necessary. Hospitals providing care to isolated patients would be reimbursed from the budget of …


The Role Of The Law In The Availability Of Public Transit And Affordable Housing In Atlanta’S West End, Elliott Lipinsky Apr 2012

The Role Of The Law In The Availability Of Public Transit And Affordable Housing In Atlanta’S West End, Elliott Lipinsky

ELLIOTT LIPINSKY

Single family home prices in West End will remain below $250,000 on average due to the generous grants and investment incentives provided by the City of Atlanta and the State of Georgia. Atlanta wants to create affordable, well-designed urban housing. This housing will provide anyone in Atlanta an affordable place to live. The West End is the perfect example of the City’s attempts to create such an environment. Furthermore, the Sky Lofts of West End offer brand new affordable housing in the West End through developer grants, tax abatements, and down payment loans. These government-created incentives have provided affordable housing …


The Role Of The Hunter/Seattle Doctrine In Adjudicating Measures Against Affirmative Action, Gautam Y. Reddy Apr 2012

The Role Of The Hunter/Seattle Doctrine In Adjudicating Measures Against Affirmative Action, Gautam Y. Reddy

Gautam Y Reddy

In 1997, the Ninth Circuit upheld the constitutionality of Proposition 209, a ballot initiative that the citizens of California passed to ban affirmative action programs in the state. However, over a decade later in 2011, the Sixth Circuit reached the opposite conclusion regarding Proposal 2, a nearly identical ballot initiative passed by the voters of Michigan. At the core of this circuit split is the applicability of a rarely invoked Equal Protection test: the Hunter/Seattle Doctrine.

Controversy stems from the incongruity of this doctrine with the Rehnquist Court’s move towards a less deferential stance regarding affirmative action in key Equal …


No Justice, Just Peas: Why Wal-Mart Will Not End D.C.’S Food Deserts, Emily R. Citkowski Apr 2012

No Justice, Just Peas: Why Wal-Mart Will Not End D.C.’S Food Deserts, Emily R. Citkowski

Emily R. Citkowski

Without a significant policy shift away from corporate subsidies and towards local capital development, local entrepreneurs may need to abandon traditional for-profit business models in favor of alternative non-profit models that build upon existing community assets. Legislation meant to solve the problem of food deserts should prioritize community-based enterprise because of the capacity to localize capital, create living-wage jobs, and build accountability to community.


Moral Disengagement Of Medical Providers: Another Clue To The Continued Neglect Of Treatable Pain, Kelly Dineen Apr 2012

Moral Disengagement Of Medical Providers: Another Clue To The Continued Neglect Of Treatable Pain, Kelly Dineen

Kelly Dineen

The neglect of treatable pain is an ongoing reality for patients in all health care settings despite decades of research, education, institutional and organizational initiatives and regulatory reform. Most recently the Accountable Care Act and the Institute of Medicine have called for further work to understand and correct the continued inadequate treatment of pain. To date, research has identified a variety of barriers to treatment from educational deficits to biases to regulatory scrutiny with little change in practice. Yet, very little research has addressed the social cognitive mechanisms used by providers who continue to undertreat pain. This article explores the …


The Great Onyx Cave Cases -- A Micro-History, Bruce Ziff Mar 2012

The Great Onyx Cave Cases -- A Micro-History, Bruce Ziff

Bruce Ziff

Controversies surrounding property rights to the Great Onyx Cave in Kentucky have given rise to two legendary decisions with enduring legal importance. The first of these, Edwards v. Sims (1929), is a leading authority on the extent of ownership below the surface of land. The second, Edwards v. Lee's Administrator (1936), concerns the appropriate measure of damages for trespass. Stripped to essentials, the facts that led to these rulings are quite straightforward: E discovered a cave beneath his surface, which he developed into a thriving tourist attraction. However, it turns out that approximately one-third of the cave passes below, well …


Municipal Securities: The Crises Of State And Local Government Indebtedness, Systemic Costs Of Low Default Rates, And Opportunities For Reform, Christine Sgarlata Chung Mar 2012

Municipal Securities: The Crises Of State And Local Government Indebtedness, Systemic Costs Of Low Default Rates, And Opportunities For Reform, Christine Sgarlata Chung

Christine Sgarlata Chung

Municipal securities are securities that state and local governments issue to pay for large infrastructure projects like roads and power plants, to fund economic development and public welfare initiatives like sports stadiums and hospitals, and to meet day-to-day funding needs. According to conventional wisdom, municipal securities are safe because state and local government issuers rarely default. State and local governments rarely default because they may be legally obligated to collect taxes, fees and assessments in amounts necessary to pay bondholders. In addition, legal and non-legal constraints may make it difficult or impossible for state and local governments to obtain discharge. …


The Next Battleground? Personhood, Privacy, And Assisted Reproductive Technologies, Mark Strasser Mar 2012

The Next Battleground? Personhood, Privacy, And Assisted Reproductive Technologies, Mark Strasser

Mark Strasser

Personhood statutes and amendments have been proposed in several states. As a general matter, they establish as a matter of state law that legal personhood begins at conception. Such laws may have implications for state policies concerning abortion and contraception, and will have implications for other areas of law including state policies related to assisted reproductive technologies. Yet, some of the ways in which these different areas of law might be affected are not well understood and thus are explored here.


Reconstruction And Empire: Legacies Of The U.S. Civil War And Puerto Rican Struggles For Home Rule, 1898-1917, Sam Erman Mar 2012

Reconstruction And Empire: Legacies Of The U.S. Civil War And Puerto Rican Struggles For Home Rule, 1898-1917, Sam Erman

Sam Erman

The Civil War and U.S. Empire transformed U.S. relationships among race, law, and constitutionalism in the late-19th and early-20th centuries. Traditional accounts portray these events as iterative, with Republicans and the Supreme Court abandoning ideals of Reconstruction just in time for the United States – through annexation from Spain of Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines – to take a deliberate imperial turn in 1898-1899. That account is wrong. As recent scholarship has anticipated, debates over meanings of the Civil War, the early postbellum period, and the Reconstruction Amendments to the Constitution raged on into the 20th century. Puerto Rican …


I Didn’T Go To Law School To Become A Salesperson – The Development Of Marketing In Law Firms, Silvia Hodges Mar 2012

I Didn’T Go To Law School To Become A Salesperson – The Development Of Marketing In Law Firms, Silvia Hodges

Silvia Hodges

The legal profession has undergone greater transformations during the past few decades than in the last few centuries. Deregulation and liberalization, increasing consumer expectations, new information technology, as well as a growing global marketplace have resulted in a significantly changed, increasingly competitive marketplace. Services that were once considered highly specialized are being treated today more and more like commodities. Most lawyers no longer have the luxury of waiting for business to come to them. ‘Technical’ competence alone is insufficient or not a guarantee of success in winning new business or keeping existing clients.

There is general recognition in business and …


The Court Misses The Point Again In United States V. Jones: An Opt-In Model For Privacy Protection In A Post Google-Earth World, Mary G. Leary Mar 2012

The Court Misses The Point Again In United States V. Jones: An Opt-In Model For Privacy Protection In A Post Google-Earth World, Mary G. Leary

Mary G Leary

“Nothing is private anymore.” This is an oft repeated sentiment by many Americans, not to mention the focus of judicial confusion and legislative blustering. In the wake of publicly available technologies such as Google Earth, internet tracking, cell phone triangulation, to name just a few, many people feel unable to prevent the government or anyone from obtaining private information. While this may seem simply a function of a modern world, this reality creates a fundamental problem for Fourth Amendment jurisprudence which has heretofore gone unrecognized. The Fourth Amendment protects citizens from unreasonable searches and seizures. Therefore, in order for the …


Why Harlan Fiske Stone (Also) Matters, Eric H. Schepard Mar 2012

Why Harlan Fiske Stone (Also) Matters, Eric H. Schepard

Eric H Schepard

This article argues that Harlan Fiske Stone has been largely overlooked in the recent legal literature even though his legacy should influence how we resolve contemporary legal problems. It examines Stone’s archived correspondence, his speeches and opinions, and numerous secondary sources to demonstrate why he is more important now than at any time since his death in 1946. As Attorney General from 1924-25, Stone’s decision to prohibit the Bureau of Investigation (BI, today’s FBI) from spying on domestic radicals established a framework that should guide the troublesome relationship between domestic intelligence and law enforcement that reemerged after September 11, 2001. …


Breakthrough Science And The New Rehabilitation, Meghan J. Ryan Mar 2012

Breakthrough Science And The New Rehabilitation, Meghan J. Ryan

Meghan J. Ryan

Breakthroughs in pharmacology, genetics, and neuroscience are transforming how society views criminals and thus how society should respond to criminal behavior. Although the criminal law has long been based on notions of culpability, science is undercutting the assumption that offenders are actually responsible for their criminal actions. Further, scientific advances have suggested that criminals can be changed at the biochemical level. The public has become well aware of these advances largely due to pervasive media reporting on these issues and also as a result of the pharmaceutical industry’s incessant advertising of products designed to transform individuals by treating everything from …


A Way Forward: Transparency At American Law Schools, Kyle P. Mcentee, Patrick J. Lynch Mar 2012

A Way Forward: Transparency At American Law Schools, Kyle P. Mcentee, Patrick J. Lynch

Kyle P McEntee

Law school has long been thought of as an investment in human capital inherently worth consuming. This is a dated view. Today, entering the legal profession through law school requires an increasingly significant financial investment. Yet very little information about the value of a legal education is available for prospective law students. In fact, much of the information tends to mislead rather than inform aspiring lawyers.

This Article surveys the available information with respect to one important segment of the value analysis: post-graduation employment outcomes. It then proposes a new standard for the presentation of post-graduation outcomes, "The LST Proposal." …


Illegal Emigration: The Continuing Life Of Invalid Deportation Orders, Richard Frankel Feb 2012

Illegal Emigration: The Continuing Life Of Invalid Deportation Orders, Richard Frankel

Richard Frankel

Federal appeals courts overturn more than one thousand deportation orders every year. A significant number of those reversals involve non-citizens who are abroad because they have been deported as a result of losing their cases at the administrative level. Although an order overturning a deportation order ordinarily restores non-citizens to their prior status of being lawfully present in the United States, federal immigration authorities have used the fact of the non-citizen’s now-invalidated deportation to subject such non-citizens to a new and previously inapplicable set of standards that has the effect of preventing them from returning. Under this practice, non-citizens who …


Why Harlan Fiske Stone (Also) Matters, Eric H. Schepard Feb 2012

Why Harlan Fiske Stone (Also) Matters, Eric H. Schepard

Eric H Schepard

This article argues that Harlan Fiske Stone has been largely overlooked in the recent legal literature even though his legacy should influence how we resolve contemporary legal problems. It examines Stone’s archived correspondence, his speeches and opinions, and numerous secondary sources to demonstrate why he is more important now than at any time since his death in 1946. As Attorney General from 1924-25, Stone’s decision to prohibit the Bureau of Investigation (BI, today’s FBI) from spying on domestic radicals established a framework that should guide the troublesome relationship between domestic intelligence and law enforcement that reemerged after September 11, 2001. …


Why Harlan Fiske Stone (Also) Matters, Eric H. Schepard Feb 2012

Why Harlan Fiske Stone (Also) Matters, Eric H. Schepard

Eric H Schepard

This article argues that Harlan Fiske Stone has been largely overlooked in the recent legal literature even though his legacy should influence how we resolve contemporary legal problems. It examines Stone’s archived correspondence, his speeches and opinions, and numerous secondary sources to demonstrate why he is more important now than at any time since his death in 1946. As Attorney General from 1924-25, Stone’s decision to prohibit the Bureau of Investigation (BI, today’s FBI) from spying on domestic radicals established a framework that should guide the troublesome relationship between domestic intelligence and law enforcement that reemerged after September 11, 2001. …


Why Harlan Fiske Stone (Also) Matters, Eric H. Schepard Feb 2012

Why Harlan Fiske Stone (Also) Matters, Eric H. Schepard

Eric H Schepard

This article argues that Harlan Fiske Stone has been largely overlooked in the recent legal literature even though his legacy should influence how we resolve contemporary legal problems. It examines Stone’s archived correspondence, his speeches and opinions, and numerous secondary sources to demonstrate why he is more important now than at any time since his death in 1946. As Attorney General from 1924-25, Stone’s decision to prohibit the Bureau of Investigation (BI, today’s FBI) from spying on domestic radicals established a framework that should guide the troublesome relationship between domestic intelligence and law enforcement that reemerged after September 11, 2001. …


Why Harlan Fiske Stone (Also) Matters, Eric H. Schepard Feb 2012

Why Harlan Fiske Stone (Also) Matters, Eric H. Schepard

Eric H Schepard

This article argues that Harlan Fiske Stone has been largely overlooked in the recent legal literature even though his legacy should influence how we resolve contemporary legal problems. It examines Stone’s archived correspondence, his speeches and opinions, and numerous secondary sources to demonstrate why he is more important now than at any time since his death in 1946. As Attorney General from 1924-25, Stone’s decision to prohibit the Bureau of Investigation (BI, today’s FBI) from spying on domestic radicals established a framework that should guide the troublesome relationship between domestic intelligence and law enforcement that reemerged after September 11, 2001. …


Non-Recourse Mortages – A Fresh Start, Ron Harris, Asher Meir Feb 2012

Non-Recourse Mortages – A Fresh Start, Ron Harris, Asher Meir

Ron Harris

In about a quarter of US states, all residential mortgages are essentially non-recourse, meaning that in case of default, the lender can only repossess the house but cannot collect on the private assets and future income of the borrower. This American innovation is now beginning to attract extensive interest abroad, but ironically in the US itself is getting a bad name. The law has been blamed for exacerbating the financial crisis, while stricken homeowners who take advantage of it have been scolded by lenders and even by the Secretary of the Treasury. We propose a fresh and more balanced look …


Consenting Under Stress, Hila Keren Feb 2012

Consenting Under Stress, Hila Keren

Hila Keren

This Article highlights a disturbing gap between what is currently known about stress across a range of disciplines and the way stress is treated at law. It does so by focusing on parties who seek relief from harmful contracts, on the grounds that they consented under stress. The Article first exposes the leading legal view that stress is merely a subjective feeling and therefore merits no legal recognition. It then provides a pragmatic synthesis of the rich study of stress, in order to counter that misguided legal presumption and to offer a better understanding of the physical, social and psychological …