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Full-Text Articles in Law
Free Press-Fair Trial: Review Of Silence Orders, Doug Rendleman
Free Press-Fair Trial: Review Of Silence Orders, Doug Rendleman
Scholarly Articles
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Toward Due Process In Injunction Procedure, Doug Rendleman
Toward Due Process In Injunction Procedure, Doug Rendleman
Scholarly Articles
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Parens Patriae: From Chancery To The Juvenile Court, Doug Rendleman
Parens Patriae: From Chancery To The Juvenile Court, Doug Rendleman
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More On Void Orders, Doug Rendleman
Does The Environment Need A Court?, George P. Smith Ii
Does The Environment Need A Court?, George P. Smith Ii
Scholarly Articles
In one of his last opinions, Mr. Justice Harlan commented that interstate pollution cases were so complex that they might well be beyond the Supreme Court's power to adjudicate. Such intimations, coming at a time when many claim the American court system is taxed to its capacity and when environmental litigation is allegedly skyrocketing, prompt the question of whether we need a new environmental court to handle cases in this specialized field.
The Ferment In Divorce Legislation, Harvey L. Zuckman, William Fox
The Ferment In Divorce Legislation, Harvey L. Zuckman, William Fox
Scholarly Articles
Marriage as we know it in America is undergoing rigorous re-examination and even hostile attack in the last third of the twentieth century in part because of the doubt expressed in some quarters that this venerable institution meets the psychological and sociological needs of the mass of men and women. And since, as one wag has put it, marriage is the "cause" of divorce, one can expect great ferment in the area of divorce law as well. Such is in fact the case. The legislatures, the prime source of divorce law, after a period of neglect sometimes going back to …