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Comments On Rooker-Feldman Or Let State Law Be Our Guide, Jack M. Beermann May 1999

Comments On Rooker-Feldman Or Let State Law Be Our Guide, Jack M. Beermann

Faculty Scholarship

I feel privileged to have been asked to be a commentator on the three principal papers in this symposium. These are three excellent papers, and although there has been some valuable commentary on the Rooker-Feldman doctrine, there will be no need to go beyond these papers to gain a full appreciation of the doctrine, its applications, and its problems, which run as deep as the problems of any doctrine.


Introduction: Latcrit Theory: Mapping It's Intellectual And Political Foundations And Future Self-Critical Directions, Margaret E. Montoya Jan 1999

Introduction: Latcrit Theory: Mapping It's Intellectual And Political Foundations And Future Self-Critical Directions, Margaret E. Montoya

Faculty Scholarship

The third annual gathering of LatCrit scholars has resulted in this cluster of essays and articles that continue the work of defining the foundations and the future directions of this legal scholarship movement. As described in some of the articles within this cluster, LatCrit has had the benefit of learning valuable lessons from other slightly older schools of critical legal theory, most particularly from the Critical Race Theory ("CRT") Workshop. The LatCrit movement has been strengthened because scholars identified primarily with CRT working with and alongside scholars identified primarily with LatCrit have struggled to recognize, name and address the hetero-normativity …


Preface: Electronic Medical Information: Privacy, Liability And Quality Issues, Frances H. Miller Jan 1999

Preface: Electronic Medical Information: Privacy, Liability And Quality Issues, Frances H. Miller

Faculty Scholarship

This symposium issue explores the timely topic of health care information and information technology, and their impact on health care delivery. The potential for mischief in this area has been the subject of many a dire prediction, but documented instances of negligence or abuse are thus far relatively rare. As information technology becomes more and more sophisticated and pervasive, however, legal problems are increasingly possible-if not probable-and these articles examine a wide range of issues related to the phenomenon.