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Articles 1 - 30 of 40
Full-Text Articles in Law
Tribute In Honor Of Oliver W. Hill, Esq., Jonathan K. Stubbs
Tribute In Honor Of Oliver W. Hill, Esq., Jonathan K. Stubbs
Law Faculty Publications
Memorial tribute to Oliver W. Hill, pioneer Richmond civil rights attorney.
The Irs And Your Politically Controversial Speakers, Mary L. Heen
The Irs And Your Politically Controversial Speakers, Mary L. Heen
Law Faculty Publications
During the 2008 election cycle, we can expect an upsurge of incidents in which college and unive rsity administrators rescind legitimate invitations to politically controversial speakers. As Academic Freedom and Outside Speakers, a statement issued by the MU P's Committee A on Academic Freedom and Tenure, affirms, "Because academic freedom requires the liberty to learn as well as to teach, colleges and universities should respect the prerogati ves of campus organizations to select outside speakers they wish to hear." (The statement begins on page 62 .) In the past, administrators have sometimes cited the lack of balance represented by the …
Our Very Privileged Executive: Why The Judiciary Can (And Should) Fix The State Secrets Privilege, D. A. Jeremy Telman
Our Very Privileged Executive: Why The Judiciary Can (And Should) Fix The State Secrets Privilege, D. A. Jeremy Telman
Law Faculty Publications
This paper was first presented at the Temple Law Review Symposium on Executive Power.
In Reynolds v. United States, the Supreme Court shaped the state secrets privilege (the Privilege) as one akin to that against self-incrimination. In recent litigation, the government has asserted the Privilege in motions for pre-discovery dismissal, thus transforming the Privilege into a form of executive immunity. This Paper argues that courts must step in to return the Privilege to a scope more in keeping with its status as a form of evidentiary privilege.
After reviewing the doctrinal origins of the Privilege, the Paper explores three types …
School Is In Session For Summer Associates, Joyce Manna Janto
School Is In Session For Summer Associates, Joyce Manna Janto
Law Faculty Publications
Law students who are starting summer associate positions often need a “reality check.”
Whether these aspiring lawyers are moving from the casual summer employment of their college days, or switching professional fields, they will have to understand and adapt to the culture of a law firm.
New summer associates need to understand the mores of their own firm and the locale’s legal culture, and master practical matters such as the firm’s billing system. Legal research that is “more or less accurate” is not accurate enough, and may be too costly, for a law firm’s clients.
From The Treasurer: Aall Funds Initiatives, Joyce Manna Janto
From The Treasurer: Aall Funds Initiatives, Joyce Manna Janto
Law Faculty Publications
Report of AALL financial status at the end of FY 2005-2006.
Can Prosecutors Bluff? Brady V. Maryland And Plea Bargaining, John G. Douglass
Can Prosecutors Bluff? Brady V. Maryland And Plea Bargaining, John G. Douglass
Law Faculty Publications
The author discusses the symbolic value of the Brady rule in the pretrial context in the U.S. criminal justice system. Brady's symbolic power remains stronger than its corrective power in post-trial motions. It serves as a constitutional reminder to prosecutors because they cannot serve as architects of unfairness. Most prosecutors disclose more Brady material in pretrial discovery than the constitutional rule actually demands. This indicates that prosecutors can bluff.
Furman Fundamentals, Corinna Barrett Lain
Furman Fundamentals, Corinna Barrett Lain
Law Faculty Publications
For the first time in a long time, the Supreme Court's most important death penalty decisions all have gone the defendant's way. Is the Court's newfound willingness to protect capital defendants just a reflection of the times, or could it have come even without public support for those protections? At first glance, history allows for optimism. Furman v. Georgia, the 1972 landmark decision that invalidated the death penalty, provides a seemingly perfect example of the Court's ability and inclination to protect capital defendants when no one else will. Furman looks countermajoritarian, scholars have claimed it was countermajoritarian, and even …
An Expressive Jurisprudence Of The Establishment Clause, Ivan E. Bodensteiner, Alex Geisinger
An Expressive Jurisprudence Of The Establishment Clause, Ivan E. Bodensteiner, Alex Geisinger
Law Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Open Or Closed: Balancing Border Policy With Human Rights, Elizabeth M. Bruch
Open Or Closed: Balancing Border Policy With Human Rights, Elizabeth M. Bruch
Law Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
The Business Judgment Rule, Disclosure, And Executive Compensation, D. A. Jeremy Telman
The Business Judgment Rule, Disclosure, And Executive Compensation, D. A. Jeremy Telman
Law Faculty Publications
Despite its ubiquity in corporate law, the business judgment rule remains a doctrinal puzzle. Both courts and scholars offer different understandings of the Rule's role in litigation brought against corporate directors and different justifications for its deployment to insulate such directors from liability for breaches of fiduciary duties. This Article rejects all existing justifications for the Rule and argues that the Rule is no longer needed to protect directors from liability either because the justifications offered never made any sense or because directors are now protected by other, statutory means. Rather, the Rule is needed today not to protect directors, …
Discovering Discovery: Non-Party Access To Pretrial Information In The Federal Courts 1938-2006, Seymour Moskowitz
Discovering Discovery: Non-Party Access To Pretrial Information In The Federal Courts 1938-2006, Seymour Moskowitz
Law Faculty Publications
In the modern era, the pretrial process is critical to the disposition of almost all litigation. The vast majority of cases never go to trial. Those which are contested at trial and upon appeal are often decided upon the results of the information gather before trial. This is true in both private litigation and in public interest cases where "private attorneys general" may only function effectively with court-enforced discovery. Despite the significance of the Article III courts to our society, transparency in their processes for resolving civil disputes has been severely compromised. Threats to openness emanate from multiple sources. This …
Immigration Reform, National Security After September 11, And The Future Of North American Integration, Kevin R. Johnson, Bernard Trujillo
Immigration Reform, National Security After September 11, And The Future Of North American Integration, Kevin R. Johnson, Bernard Trujillo
Law Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Toward A Limited-Government Theory Of Extraterritorial Detention, Robert Knowles, Marc D. Falkoff
Toward A Limited-Government Theory Of Extraterritorial Detention, Robert Knowles, Marc D. Falkoff
Law Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Cold Case - One Ordinary Law Librarian Assists In Solving A 53-Year-Old Mystery And Learns A Lesson About How Law Students Treat Legal Research, Joyce Manna Janto
Cold Case - One Ordinary Law Librarian Assists In Solving A 53-Year-Old Mystery And Learns A Lesson About How Law Students Treat Legal Research, Joyce Manna Janto
Law Faculty Publications
One ordinary law librarian assists in solving a 53-year-old mystery and learns a lesson about how law students treat legal research.
Accidental Rights, James Gibson
Accidental Rights, James Gibson
Law Faculty Publications
Written for the Yale Law Journal's online Pocket Part, this is a much shorter and (I hope) more accessible iteration of my earlier paper, Risk Aversion and Rights Accretion in Intellectual Property Law, 116 Yale L.J. 882 (2007). It summarizes that paper's central point - i.e., that intellectual property entitlements are growing not just because of expansive court decisions and legislative enactments, but also because of seemingly sensible, risk-averse licensing decisions that inadvertently feed back into legal doctrine - and then explores how this phenomenon might apply to (and be manipulated by) enterprises such as Google Book Search.
The Houses That Eminent Domain And Housing Tax Credits Built: Imagining A Better New Orleans, Carol N. Brown
The Houses That Eminent Domain And Housing Tax Credits Built: Imagining A Better New Orleans, Carol N. Brown
Law Faculty Publications
Proposals for investing in and rebuilding urban enclaves such as New Orleans are layered with controversy and difficulty. One of the most significant impediments to rebuilding New Orleans will be addressing the need to replenish the depleted rental housing market. Racial and economic integration of housing markets and appropriate use of private sector money to replenish the rental housing stock within a “reasonable” time period are indispensable components of a responsible revitalization and renewal plan. This Article contends that a combination of the smart exercise of eminent domain and of ”housing production subsidies” – housing tax credits – is necessary …
Deciding Death, Corinna Barrett Lain
Deciding Death, Corinna Barrett Lain
Law Faculty Publications
When the Supreme Court is deciding death, how much does law matter? Scholars long have lamented the majoritarian nature of the Court's Eighth Amendment "evolving standards of decency" doctrine, but their criticism misses the mark. Majoritarian doctrine does not drive the Court's decisions in this area; majoritarian forces elsewhere do. To make my point, I first examine three sets of "evolving standards" death penalty decisions in which the Court implicitly or explicitly reversed itself, attacking the legal justification for the Court's change of position and offering an extralegal explanation for why those cases came out the way they did. I …
Ants, Elephant Guns, And Statutory Subject Matter, Kristen Jakobsen Osenga
Ants, Elephant Guns, And Statutory Subject Matter, Kristen Jakobsen Osenga
Law Faculty Publications
Questions about whether software qualifies for patent protection are becoming increasingly more prevalent, despite the fact the issue seemed settled. The Supreme Court has indicated its interest in the topic and the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office-which had previously been liberally issuing patents in the computer-related arts-now appears to be leading the groundswell against the subject-matter eligibility of these inventions, rejecting an increasing number of applications in this area for lack of statutory subject matter. Despite the broad definitions of patentable subject matter provided by the Constitution, Patent Act, and Supreme Court, the Patent Office has grafted various additional requirements …
Rembrandts In The Research Lab: Why Universities Should Take A Lesson From Big Business To Increase Innovation, Kristen Jakobsen Osenga
Rembrandts In The Research Lab: Why Universities Should Take A Lesson From Big Business To Increase Innovation, Kristen Jakobsen Osenga
Law Faculty Publications
In this Article, I argue that patents, if obtained and exploited strategically, can have a beneficial effect on university research. I will describe the barriers to university participation in the patent arena-that is, lack of money, lack of knowledge, lack of infrastructure, and cultural concerns-and explain, with reference to business, how and why universities need to overcome these barriers. By breaking down these barriers and ably exploiting their intellectual property, I argue that the obstacles to university research will be lessened, resulting in increased research and innovation. I further provide a primer to provide university administrators, technology transfer offices, and …
The Case For A Collaborative Enforcement Model For A Federal Right To Education, Kimberly J. Robinson
The Case For A Collaborative Enforcement Model For A Federal Right To Education, Kimberly J. Robinson
Law Faculty Publications
This Article proposes an innovative approach for directing the expanding federal role in education that will encourage states to address disparities in educational opportunities that prevent disadvantaged students from achieving their full potential. The proposed approach builds on the understanding reflected in NCLB that the federal government will remain critical in public education reform. This Article reexamines one avenue for federal involvement that the U.S. Supreme Court considered in several cases and that scholars have debated for more than thirty years: a federal right to education.
San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez explicitly offered the Supreme Court the opportunity …
Dred Scott: Tiered Citizenship And Tiered Personhood, Henry L. Chambers, Jr.
Dred Scott: Tiered Citizenship And Tiered Personhood, Henry L. Chambers, Jr.
Law Faculty Publications
Part I of this brief essay discusses Dred Scott and the Court's acceptance of tiered citizenship and tiered personhood. Part II discusses the Reconstruction Amendments as a response to tiered citizenship and tiered personhood. Part III notes two issues-felon disfranchisement and the treatment of detainees in the War on Terror-that help illuminate tiered citizenship and tiered personhood and help us evaluate the conditions under which citizenship and personhood rights may be restricted without creating tiers of citizenship and tiers of personhood.
The Process Due Indefinitely Detained Citizens, Carl W. Tobias
The Process Due Indefinitely Detained Citizens, Carl W. Tobias
Law Faculty Publications
A very controversial feature of the "war on terror" is the scope of the power which Congress has granted President George W. Bush to designate suspected terrorists enemy combatants and indefinitely detain them. The United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit has most fully, if not clearly, resolved this question.
The United States incarcerated two citizens with little process for more than a year in the Charleston and Norfolk naval brigs. The first litigated three habeas corpus petitions before the Fourth Circuit and a fourth to the Supreme Court before the government released him. The second convinced a …
Assessing The Revised Arizona Local Rules Of Federal Procedure, Carl W. Tobias
Assessing The Revised Arizona Local Rules Of Federal Procedure, Carl W. Tobias
Law Faculty Publications
The United States District Court for the District of Arizona has generally not contributed to a significant difficulty with modem federal court practice: local procedural proliferation. Each of the remaining ninety-three federal district courts has prescribed and applied numerous local strictures that govern admiralty, bankruptcy, civil, criminal and evidentiary practice, while mounting numbers of these local provisos conflict with or repeat analogous federal rules or statutes. In contrast, the United States District Court for the District of Arizona has promulgated and enforced relatively few local measures, and only a tiny percentage of them are redundant or inconsistent with corresponding federal …
Rational Retroactivity In A Commercial Context, David Frisch
Rational Retroactivity In A Commercial Context, David Frisch
Law Faculty Publications
This Article focuses on the commercial law context. While transition issues have previously received scant attention, this area of the law is proceeding at an accelerating rate, making transition policy crucially important at this time. In particular, this Article will consider the plausibility and implications of a retroactivity norm in the commercial law context by examining the recent revisions and amendments to Articles 1 and 2 of the Code. Two claims will be advanced: The incentive-based analysis of retroactivity issues in other contexts does not necessarily comport with the realities of commercial law, and consideration of both expectations and incentives …
What You Should Know Before You Leave The System, Dale Margolin Cecka
What You Should Know Before You Leave The System, Dale Margolin Cecka
Law Faculty Publications
Discharging young people from foster care with no place to go, no source of income, and no health insurance is not just wrong-it's illegal. Although every state's laws are different, all states have an obligation to make sure you are able to live on your own before forcing you to leave the foster care system. In New York, you can remain in foster care until you are 21. However, once you turn 18, you must agree to remain in care by either signing an agreement or telling the judge in court that you want to stay in care. You cannot …
Reassessing The Purposes Of Federal Question Jurisdiction, John F. Preis
Reassessing The Purposes Of Federal Question Jurisdiction, John F. Preis
Law Faculty Publications
For ages, judges and legal academics have claimed that federal question jurisdiction has three purposes: to provide litigants with a judge experienced in federal law, to protect litigants from state court hostility toward federal claims, and to preserve uniformity in federal law. Because federal claims, for the most part, have always been cognizable in state courts, these purposes imply that state courts are less experienced, more hostile, and more likely to adjudicate federal law in ways that decrease the uniformity of federal law. Despite the ongoing allegiance to this conception of federal question jurisdictionand by implication, state court adjudication of …
Donotcall.Gov: Do Not Call It Up With Firefox, Roger V. Skalbeck
Donotcall.Gov: Do Not Call It Up With Firefox, Roger V. Skalbeck
Law Faculty Publications
This article examines a critical design error with the website DoNotCall.gov.
Law And Technology Podcasts, Roger V. Skalbeck
Law And Technology Podcasts, Roger V. Skalbeck
Law Faculty Publications
This article lists a select handful of useful podcasts covering topics such as technology policy, law, and web development.
Have You Reddit? Exploring Ways To Digg Some Del.Icio.Us Stories, Roger V. Skalbeck
Have You Reddit? Exploring Ways To Digg Some Del.Icio.Us Stories, Roger V. Skalbeck
Law Faculty Publications
Almost anybody who has read an online newspaper or blog recently has probably seen the names del.icio.us, Digg, or reddit. These are three of the most popular social networking sites included in the concept that makes up part of the buzzword Web 2 .0.
Beyond Jetting you collect and share information, these services also have great research and marketing potential. In this article, we explore some of these concepts and how to use them.
The Freedom Of Information Act And Trade Secrets, Roger V. Skalbeck
The Freedom Of Information Act And Trade Secrets, Roger V. Skalbeck
Law Faculty Publications
This article details a case illustration where federal law intersects with trade secret questions, a subject normally governed by state laws.