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Articles 91 - 118 of 118
Full-Text Articles in Law
Feminism In The Global Political Economy: Contradiction And Consensus In Cuba, Deborah M. Weissman
Feminism In The Global Political Economy: Contradiction And Consensus In Cuba, Deborah M. Weissman
University of Baltimore Law Review
No abstract provided.
Foreword: 2012 Clinical Legal Education Symposium, Leigh Goodmark
Foreword: 2012 Clinical Legal Education Symposium, Leigh Goodmark
University of Baltimore Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Modern Hiv/Aids Epidemic And Human Rights In The United States: A Lens Into Lingering Gender, Race, And Health Disparities And Cutting Edge Approaches To Justice, Brook Kelly
University of Baltimore Law Review
No abstract provided.
Meeting The Professional Identity Challenge In Legal Education Through A Relationship-Centered Experiential Curriculum, Susan L. Brooks
Meeting The Professional Identity Challenge In Legal Education Through A Relationship-Centered Experiential Curriculum, Susan L. Brooks
University of Baltimore Law Review
Legal education is facing a series of crises, the worst of which may well be its graduates' perceived lack of professionalism qualities such as civility, judgment, and commitment to service. This urgent message has been amplified by recent high-profile critiques emphasizing the need to teach professionalism, as well as to make law schools more nurturing and humanistic environments. The purpose of this article is to show that the challenge of preparing law students to become caring and competent professionals can be met by using a sequence of experiential learning opportunities to teach relational competencies.
Even the harshest critics of legal …
Herding Cats: Role Ambiguity, Governance, And Law School Clinical Programs, Binny Miller
Herding Cats: Role Ambiguity, Governance, And Law School Clinical Programs, Binny Miller
University of Baltimore Law Review
No abstract provided.
Comments: Modest Proposals For A Complex Problem: Patent Misuse And Incremental Changes To The Hatch-Waxman Act As Solutions To The Problem Of Reverse Payment Settlements, Alyssa L. Brown
University of Baltimore Law Review
No abstract provided.
When Things Go Wrong In The Clinic: How To Prevent And Respond To Serious Student Misconduct, Robert L. Jones Jr., Gerard F. Glynn, John J. Francis
When Things Go Wrong In The Clinic: How To Prevent And Respond To Serious Student Misconduct, Robert L. Jones Jr., Gerard F. Glynn, John J. Francis
University of Baltimore Law Review
No abstract provided.
University Of Baltimore Law Review Volume 41 Number 2 (Winter 2012) Front Matter
University Of Baltimore Law Review Volume 41 Number 2 (Winter 2012) Front Matter
University of Baltimore Law Review
No abstract provided.
Bringing Balance To Mid-North America: Restructuring The Sovereign Relationships Between Tribal Nations And The United States, Angelique Townsend Eaglewoman (Wambdi A. Wastewin)
Bringing Balance To Mid-North America: Restructuring The Sovereign Relationships Between Tribal Nations And The United States, Angelique Townsend Eaglewoman (Wambdi A. Wastewin)
University of Baltimore Law Review
No abstract provided.
Comments: The Credit Card Act Of 2009 Was Not Enough: A National Usury Rate Would Provide Consumers With The Protection They Need, Eliot C. Schaefer
Comments: The Credit Card Act Of 2009 Was Not Enough: A National Usury Rate Would Provide Consumers With The Protection They Need, Eliot C. Schaefer
University of Baltimore Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Romantic Corporation: Trademark, Trust, And Tyranny, Malla Pollack
The Romantic Corporation: Trademark, Trust, And Tyranny, Malla Pollack
University of Baltimore Law Review
Humans in the United States, and many other market-centric nations, live in a world extensively populated by friendly, helpful, honest, charitable, patriotic beings worthy of our respect and support — none of whom exist. Yet these fellow-beings speak to us humans so often that they must be part of our ingrained perception of the world. Who are they? They are the marketing personas created by totally self-interested businesses. They harm humans not only by misdirection in specific instances, but by providing cover for our government's improper prioritization of corporate interests over human interests. This systemic distortion of public perception is …
Comments: The Scarlett Letter "T": The Tier Iii Terrorist Classification's Inconsistent And Ineffectual Effects On Asylum Relief For Members And Supporters Of Pro-Democratic Groups, Daniella Pozzo Darnell
Comments: The Scarlett Letter "T": The Tier Iii Terrorist Classification's Inconsistent And Ineffectual Effects On Asylum Relief For Members And Supporters Of Pro-Democratic Groups, Daniella Pozzo Darnell
University of Baltimore Law Review
No abstract provided.
Unraveling The Chicago/Harvard Antitrust Double Helix: Applying Evolutionary Theory To Guard Competitors And Revive Antitrust Jury Trials, Thomas J. Horton
Unraveling The Chicago/Harvard Antitrust Double Helix: Applying Evolutionary Theory To Guard Competitors And Revive Antitrust Jury Trials, Thomas J. Horton
University of Baltimore Law Review
No abstract provided.
Comments: Equitable Subrogation In Maryland Mortgages And The Restatement Of Property: A Historical Analysis For Contemporary Solutions, Gregg H. Mosson
Comments: Equitable Subrogation In Maryland Mortgages And The Restatement Of Property: A Historical Analysis For Contemporary Solutions, Gregg H. Mosson
University of Baltimore Law Review
No abstract provided.
Comments: Estate Planning For The Posthumously Conceived Child: A Blueprint For The Sperm Donor, Brooke Shemer
Comments: Estate Planning For The Posthumously Conceived Child: A Blueprint For The Sperm Donor, Brooke Shemer
University of Baltimore Law Review
No abstract provided.
University Of Baltimore Law Forum Volume 43 Number 1 (Fall 2012) Front Matter
University Of Baltimore Law Forum Volume 43 Number 1 (Fall 2012) Front Matter
University of Baltimore Law Forum
No abstract provided.
University Of Baltimore Law Review Volume 41 Number 4 (Summer 2012) Front Matter
University Of Baltimore Law Review Volume 41 Number 4 (Summer 2012) Front Matter
University of Baltimore Law Review
No abstract provided.
Comments: The "Walkaway Shop": Long-Term Union Avoidance And Management Decisions To Open New Facilities As Lawful Conduct Under The National Labor Relations Act, Garrett Wozniak
University of Baltimore Law Review
No abstract provided.
Thinking Like A Lawyer Abroad: Putting Justice Into Legal Reasoning, James Maxeiner
Thinking Like A Lawyer Abroad: Putting Justice Into Legal Reasoning, James Maxeiner
All Faculty Scholarship
Americans are taking new interest in legal reasoning. Thinking Like a Lawyer: A New Introduction to Legal Reasoning by Professor Frederick Schauer suggests why. According to Schauer, American legal methods often require decision-makers “to do something other than the right thing.” There has got to be a better way.
Now comes a book that offers Americans opportunities to look into a world where legal methods help decision-makers do the right thing. According to Reinhard Zippelius in his newly published Introduction to German Legal Methods, German legal methods help decision makers resolve legal problems “in a just and equitable manner.”
This …
Confine Is Fine: Have The Non-Dangerous Mentally Ill Lost Their Right To Liberty? An Empirical Study To Unravel The Psychiatrist’S Crystal Ball, Donald H. Stone
Confine Is Fine: Have The Non-Dangerous Mentally Ill Lost Their Right To Liberty? An Empirical Study To Unravel The Psychiatrist’S Crystal Ball, Donald H. Stone
All Faculty Scholarship
This Article will examine the reverse trend in civil commitment laws in the wake of recent tragedies and discuss the effect of broader civil commitment standards on the care and treatment of the mentally ill. The 2007 Virginia Tech shooting, the 2011 shooting of Congresswoman Giffords, and the 2012 Aurora movie theatre shooting have spurred fierce debates about the dangerousness of mentally ill and serve as cautionary tale about what happens when warning signs go unnoticed and opportunities for early intervention missed. This piece will explore the misconception about the role medication and inpatient civil commitments should play in prevention …
Could This Train Make It Through: The Law And Strategy Of The Gold Train Case, Charles Tiefer, Jonathan W. Cuneo, Annie Reiner
Could This Train Make It Through: The Law And Strategy Of The Gold Train Case, Charles Tiefer, Jonathan W. Cuneo, Annie Reiner
All Faculty Scholarship
In 1944-45, the Nazis seized personal belongings of the Hungarian Jewish population and dispatched some of the most valuable of them on a train. The United States Army took control of this "Gold Train" and gave reassurances that it would keep the valuables safe. However, the items were plundered by individual soldiers, including officers, and diverted to various uses. After decades of dormancy, a Presidential Commission exposed the facts, but the government still did not right the wrong — until there was litigation.
The "Gold Train" case (Rosner v. United States) represents a measure of justice for the victimized community …
The Justice Of International Law, Mortimer N.S. Sellers
The Justice Of International Law, Mortimer N.S. Sellers
All Faculty Scholarship
A critical essay on The Philosophy of International Law, edited by Samantha Besson and John Tasioulas (Cambridge University Press, 2010), 632 pp, ISBN 978-0199208579.
Recent Developments: Port V. Cowan: When Applying Maryland's Domestic Divorce Law, A Valid Same-Sex Marriage Performed Out-Of-State Is Recognized As Legitimate In Maryland Under The Doctrine Of Comity, Errin K. Roby
University of Baltimore Law Forum
No abstract provided.
Hearsay And The Confrontation Clause, Lynn Mclain
Hearsay And The Confrontation Clause, Lynn Mclain
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
What Useful Role (If Any) Could Legal Positivism Play In The Study Or Advancement Of International Law?, Mortimer N.S. Sellers
What Useful Role (If Any) Could Legal Positivism Play In The Study Or Advancement Of International Law?, Mortimer N.S. Sellers
All Faculty Scholarship
What useful role (if any) could legal positivism play in the study or advancement of international law? For most of those who remember this once fashionable term at all, "international legal positivism" is redolent of the early years of the twentieth century-of Lassa Oppenheim' at best, and at worst of his model, John Austin, who famously denied that international law is or ever could be genuine law at all, "properly so called." 2 "Positive" law in its central and most usual sense is law "set by a sovereign individual or a sovereign body ... to a person or persons in …
Sex On The Bench: Do Women Judges Matter To The Legitimacy Of International Courts?, Nienke Grossman
Sex On The Bench: Do Women Judges Matter To The Legitimacy Of International Courts?, Nienke Grossman
All Faculty Scholarship
This article seeks to advance our understanding of international courts' legitimacy and its relationship to who sits on the bench. It asks whether we should care that few women sit on international court benches. After providing statistics on women's participation on eleven of the world's most important courts and tribunals, the article argues that under-representation of one sex affects normative legitimacy because it endangers impartiality and introduces bias when men and women approach judging differently. Even if men and women do not think differently, a sex un-representative bench harms sociological legitimacy for constituencies who believe they do nonetheless. For groups …
Beyond Saints And Sinners: Discretion And The Need For New Narratives In The U.S. Immigration System, Elizabeth Keyes
Beyond Saints And Sinners: Discretion And The Need For New Narratives In The U.S. Immigration System, Elizabeth Keyes
All Faculty Scholarship
Beyond Saints and Sinners examines the forces affecting the exercise of discretion in American immigration courts, and argues that in this present age of immigration anxiety, the same facts that place an individual in deportation proceedings may constitute the reasons a judge will, relying on discretion, deny them relief for which they are otherwise eligible. The article explores the polarized narratives told about "good" and "bad" immigrants, the exceptionally difficult task of adjudicating in overburdened immigration courts, and the ways in which these polarized narratives interact with psychological short-cuts, or heuristics, that affect judicial exercises of discretion. After engaging in …
Can The President And Congress Establish A Legislative Veto Mechanism For Jointly Drawing Down A Long And Controversial War?, Charles Tiefer
Can The President And Congress Establish A Legislative Veto Mechanism For Jointly Drawing Down A Long And Controversial War?, Charles Tiefer
All Faculty Scholarship
In the simplest case: Congress declares war, and does not intrude on the President's solo decision about when the troops come home. However, in our time, long wars, such as in Afghanistan and Iraq, occur with great tension between the two elected branches of government over the pace of a drawdown. Sometimes it may be a hawkish Congress that disagrees with a President reluctant to continue the war at full troop levels. To find a joint way to draw down the American troops in the war zone, they may seek congressional mechanisms to resolve their differences with interactive processes. Then, …