Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Law Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Journal

2009

Discipline
Institution
Keyword
Publication
File Type

Articles 31 - 60 of 4934

Full-Text Articles in Law

Table Of Contents Dec 2009

Table Of Contents

Seton Hall Journal of Sports and Entertainment Law

No abstract provided.


Now More Than Ever: Expanding Access To Justice In Times Of Crisis, Editors Dec 2009

Now More Than Ever: Expanding Access To Justice In Times Of Crisis, Editors

University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change

No abstract provided.


The Future Of Civil Legal Aid: Initial Thoughts, Alan W. Houseman Dec 2009

The Future Of Civil Legal Aid: Initial Thoughts, Alan W. Houseman

University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change

No abstract provided.


Looking Behind The “Protection Gap”: The Moral Obligation Of The State To Necessitous Immigrants, Tally Kritzman-Amir Dec 2009

Looking Behind The “Protection Gap”: The Moral Obligation Of The State To Necessitous Immigrants, Tally Kritzman-Amir

University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change

No abstract provided.


Hope Over Experience?, Cath Collins Dec 2009

Hope Over Experience?, Cath Collins

Human Rights & Human Welfare

Writing about US human rights policy from the outside is always a disconcerting experience. All bets are off, and all assumptions are turned on their head. Assumptions from the South looking North are that, rhetoric aside, US interests rarely if ever feature human rights protection and promotion in first place. What’s more, they have very frequently featured the opposite: dirty tricks, torture and rendition were sadly familiar to students of Latin American history long before Guantanamo. The Clinton years went some way towards reining in the more blatant contradictions of the 1980s, but they also set in train the easy …


The Limits Of Executive Power, Robert J. Reinstein Dec 2009

The Limits Of Executive Power, Robert J. Reinstein

American University Law Review

Justice Jackson’s concurring opinion in The Steel Seizure Case has taken on iconic status among legal scholars and had been adopted by the Supreme Court as the governing framework for evaluating presidential power. But Jackson’s principles are conclusory, do not rest on any historical foundation, and raise as many questions as they answer. He fails to examine, much less justify, the existence or scope of implied presidential powers, nor does he meaningfully explain the extent to which those powers are subject to congressional regulation and override. I apply novel originalist methodologies to answer those unexamined questions, with important consequences to …


Turning The Faucet Back On: The Future Of Mccain-Feingold's Soft-Money Ban After Davis V. Federal Election Commission, Kevin J. Madden Dec 2009

Turning The Faucet Back On: The Future Of Mccain-Feingold's Soft-Money Ban After Davis V. Federal Election Commission, Kevin J. Madden

American University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Product Placement Or Pure Entertainment? Critiquing A Copyright-Preemption Proposal, Kristen E. Riccard Dec 2009

Product Placement Or Pure Entertainment? Critiquing A Copyright-Preemption Proposal, Kristen E. Riccard

American University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Public Use, Public Choice, And The Urban Growth Machine: Competing Political Economies Of Takings Law, Daniel A. Lyons Dec 2009

Public Use, Public Choice, And The Urban Growth Machine: Competing Political Economies Of Takings Law, Daniel A. Lyons

University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform

The Kelo decision has unleashed a tidal wave of legislative reforms ostensibly seeking to control eminent domain abuse. But as a policy matter, it is impossible to determine what limits should be placed upon local government without understanding how cities grow and develop, and how local governments make decisions to shape the communities over which they preside. This Article examines takings through two very different models of urban political economy: public choice theory and the quasi-Marxist Urban Growth Machine model. These models approach takings from diametrically opposite perspectives, and offer differing perspectives at the margin regarding proper and improper condemnations. …


A New Era Of Tax Enforcement: From 'Big Stick' To Responsive Regulation, Sagit Leviner Dec 2009

A New Era Of Tax Enforcement: From 'Big Stick' To Responsive Regulation, Sagit Leviner

University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform

This Article explores the economics of crime and compliance as the dominant approach to U.S. tax enforcement of the past three and a half decades. It evaluates the key advantages and disadvantages of the economic model as well as its application to tax. The Article then addresses the multiplicity of taxpayer behavior and the need and prospect of balancing the economically conceived methods of detection and punishment against other, more cooperative, means and developing a broader approach to tax enforcement more generally. The Article explores responsive regulation as a case study for an alternative method to tax enforcement that heavily …


Taking Reasonable Doubt Seriously, Arnold H. Lowey Dec 2009

Taking Reasonable Doubt Seriously, Arnold H. Lowey

Chicago-Kent Law Review

In recent years, we have discovered a spate of factually innocent people who have been convicted. In this article, Professor Loewy contends that the failure of juries to take reasonable doubt seriously contributes to this phenomenon. Professor Loewy via an illustrative fictitious case explains that juries might be reluctant to give the defendant the benefit of a reasonable doubt because of their concern about putting dangerous criminals back on the street. He then asks whether we really want juries to take reasonable doubt seriously. Concluding that we do, he examines how we can do that. Loewy concludes that the best …


Anatomy Of A Wrongful Conviction: State V. Dedge And What It Tells Us About Our Flawed Criminal Justice System, Armen H. Merjian Dec 2009

Anatomy Of A Wrongful Conviction: State V. Dedge And What It Tells Us About Our Flawed Criminal Justice System, Armen H. Merjian

University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change

No abstract provided.


Change We Can Believe In?, Katherine Hite Dec 2009

Change We Can Believe In?, Katherine Hite

Human Rights & Human Welfare

We were warned to temper our high hopes for a bold new Obama era of human rights. After all, President Obama would have “a lot on his plate”: a serious economic crisis, high unemployment, over forty million people without health insurance, “two wars,” global volatility. But it’s very hard not to be dismayed by some of the continuities from the Bush to the Obama administration, as well as by some Janus-faced policy decisions with damning human rights implications. When it comes to US-Latin America relations, such decisions include: professing support for progressive immigration reform while expanding regressive anti-immigration measures; claiming …


From Inspiring Hope To Taking Action: Obama And Human Rights, Stephen James Dec 2009

From Inspiring Hope To Taking Action: Obama And Human Rights, Stephen James

Human Rights & Human Welfare

While President George H. Bush spoke of a new world order, and his “misunderestimated” son mangled the English language at countless press conferences, with Barack Obama the USA now has a talented orator as a president. There is a new word order. But does the new and skillful rhetoric match the reality when it comes to human rights?


Note From The Editor, Angelo Suozzi Dec 2009

Note From The Editor, Angelo Suozzi

Alaska Law Review

No abstract provided.


Table Of Contents Dec 2009

Table Of Contents

Seton Hall Journal of Sports and Entertainment Law

No abstract provided.


Risky Ventures: The Impact Of Irs Health Care Joint Venture Policy, Roger P. Meyers Dec 2009

Risky Ventures: The Impact Of Irs Health Care Joint Venture Policy, Roger P. Meyers

University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform

IRS oversight of joint ventures between exempt and for-profit organizations has undergone substantial change over the past thirty years. This change has important consequences for the health care industry, where joint ventures have grown increasingly common. In the face of unclear guidance and aggressive enforcement of exemption-policing tools such as the private benefit doctrine and the control test, a hospital risks revocation of its tax-exempt status, or liability for unrelated business income tax, when it engages in a joint venture directly. It may be able to eliminate this risk by operating the same joint venture through a for-profit subsidiary; however, …


The Fourth Amendment, The Exclusionary Rule, And The Roberts Court: Normative And Empirical Dimensions Of The Over-Deterrence Hypothesis, Donald Dripps Dec 2009

The Fourth Amendment, The Exclusionary Rule, And The Roberts Court: Normative And Empirical Dimensions Of The Over-Deterrence Hypothesis, Donald Dripps

Chicago-Kent Law Review

This essay engages in the risky business of predicting future Supreme Court developments. In the first part, I analyze the evidence suggesting that the Roberts Court might abolish the exclusionary rule. The critique of exclusion in Hudson v. Michigan is both less and more probative than appears at first blush. Part II turns to some less obvious evidence pointing in the direction of retaining the exclusionary rule. First, abolition of the exclusionary rule is inconsistent with the Hudson majority's apparent content with prevailing police behavior. Second, abolition of the exclusionary rule would curtail the power of the Supreme Court. Part …


Replacing The Exclusionary Rule: Fourth Amendment Violations As Direct Criminal Contempt, Ronald J. Rychlak Dec 2009

Replacing The Exclusionary Rule: Fourth Amendment Violations As Direct Criminal Contempt, Ronald J. Rychlak

Chicago-Kent Law Review

The exclusionary rule, which bars from admission evidence obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment's prohibition of unreasonable searches and seizures, is a bedrock of American law. It is highly controversial, but there seems to be no equally effective way to protect citizens' rights. This paper proposes that an admissibility standard be adopted that is in keeping with virtually every jurisdiction around the world other than the United States. Thus, before ruling evidence inadmissible, the court would consider the level of the constitutional violation, the seriousness of the crime, whether the violation casts substantial doubt on the reliability of the …


The Ncaa’S Lost Cause And The Legal Ease Of Redefining Amateurism, Virginia A. Fitt Dec 2009

The Ncaa’S Lost Cause And The Legal Ease Of Redefining Amateurism, Virginia A. Fitt

Duke Law Journal

The recent resolution of the Andrew Oliver case may mark the death throes of the NCAA's no-agent rule, prohibiting college athletes from retaining agents in professional contract negotiations, and perhaps the traditional paradigm of amateurism in sport. In light of the trial court's ruling, as well as continuing calls for the revocation of the NCAA's tax-exempt status, the time is ripe for a reexamination of amateurism and the law. This Note argues that the NCAA has developed a complicated web of largely unenforceable rules and regulations that are unnecessary to maintain tax-exempt status in light of the regulatory environment. This …


Constitutional Limits On Private Policing And The State’S Allocation Of Force, M. Rhead Enion Dec 2009

Constitutional Limits On Private Policing And The State’S Allocation Of Force, M. Rhead Enion

Duke Law Journal

This Note argues that a variety of "private police" forces, such as university patrols and residential security guards, should. be held to the constitutional limitations found in the Bill of Rights. These private police act as arms of the state by supplying force in response to a public demand for order and security. The state, as sovereign, retains responsibility to allocate force, in the form of either public or private police, in response to public demand. This state responsibility-a facet of its police power-is evidenced throughout English and American history. When this force responds to a public demand for order …


Don't Bet On It: Casino's Contractual Duty To Stop Compulsive Gamblers From Gambling, Irina Slavina Dec 2009

Don't Bet On It: Casino's Contractual Duty To Stop Compulsive Gamblers From Gambling, Irina Slavina

Chicago-Kent Law Review

To address the problem of compulsive gambling, most states with commercial casinos have enacted statewide self-exclusion programs—a mechanism by which patrons petition to be physically removed from a casino if they are discovered on the premises. The casinos in the remaining states voluntarily instituted facility-based programs to assist problem gamblers in fighting their addiction.

But besides having any intended effect, these programs provided gamblers with a new ground for lawsuits—breach of contract. This note argues that neither states nor individual casinos should be liable to self-excluded patrons for breach of contract, even if they enter a casino and lose money …


2008 Seton Hall University School Of Law Sports & Entertainment Law Symposium: From The Arena To The Streets - The Pressures Placed On Athletes, Entertainers, And Management, Courtney Ray Dec 2009

2008 Seton Hall University School Of Law Sports & Entertainment Law Symposium: From The Arena To The Streets - The Pressures Placed On Athletes, Entertainers, And Management, Courtney Ray

Seton Hall Journal of Sports and Entertainment Law

No abstract provided.


The Phases And Faces Of The Duke Lacrosse Controversy: A Conversation, James E. Coleman Jr., Angela Davis, Michael Gerhardt, K.C. Johnson, Lyrissa Lidsky, Howard M. Wasserman Dec 2009

The Phases And Faces Of The Duke Lacrosse Controversy: A Conversation, James E. Coleman Jr., Angela Davis, Michael Gerhardt, K.C. Johnson, Lyrissa Lidsky, Howard M. Wasserman

Seton Hall Journal of Sports and Entertainment Law

No abstract provided.


Tortured Souls: Unhappy Lawyers Viewed Through The Medium Of Film, Lance Mcmillian Dec 2009

Tortured Souls: Unhappy Lawyers Viewed Through The Medium Of Film, Lance Mcmillian

Seton Hall Journal of Sports and Entertainment Law

No abstract provided.


Title Ix: An Opportunity To Level The Olympic Playing Field, Susannah Carr Dec 2009

Title Ix: An Opportunity To Level The Olympic Playing Field, Susannah Carr

Seton Hall Journal of Sports and Entertainment Law

No abstract provided.


Modern Difficulties In Resolving Old Problems: Does The Actual Malice Standard Apply To Celebrity Gossip Blogs?, Victoria Cioppettini Dec 2009

Modern Difficulties In Resolving Old Problems: Does The Actual Malice Standard Apply To Celebrity Gossip Blogs?, Victoria Cioppettini

Seton Hall Journal of Sports and Entertainment Law

No abstract provided.


Buccaneers And Bucks From The Internet: Pirate Bay And The Entertainment Industry, Tara Touloumis Dec 2009

Buccaneers And Bucks From The Internet: Pirate Bay And The Entertainment Industry, Tara Touloumis

Seton Hall Journal of Sports and Entertainment Law

No abstract provided.


Editorial Board - Vol. 19, No. 1 2009 Dec 2009

Editorial Board - Vol. 19, No. 1 2009

Seton Hall Journal of Sports and Entertainment Law

No abstract provided.


"To Catch A Predator" Gets Caught: Are Nbc's Television Journalists Sacrificing Media Ethics And Legal Procedures For A Chance In The Spotlight?, Amy Rokuson Dec 2009

"To Catch A Predator" Gets Caught: Are Nbc's Television Journalists Sacrificing Media Ethics And Legal Procedures For A Chance In The Spotlight?, Amy Rokuson

Seton Hall Journal of Sports and Entertainment Law

No abstract provided.