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Articles 1 - 30 of 35
Full-Text Articles in Law
Ndls Update 12/1992, Notre Dame Law School
Ndls Update 11/1992, Notre Dame Law School
Ndls Update 10/1992, Notre Dame Law School
The Dean's Report: The Law School: 1991–92 Academic Year (Acting Dean Fernand N. Dutile), Fernand N. Dutile
The Dean's Report: The Law School: 1991–92 Academic Year (Acting Dean Fernand N. Dutile), Fernand N. Dutile
1975–1999: David T. Link
Acting Dean, Fernand N. Dutile, provides a description of the state of Notre Dame Law School as it closes the 1991–1992 academic year. The elements covered in his report include: administration, faculty, students, general comments, and priorities. Two addendums, both dated August 31, 1992 are the text of presentations on the "State of the Law School," delivered by Tex Dutile, and "The State of the Law Library," delivered by Janis Johnston. Supplementary reports are included from the Kresge Law Library, the National Institute for Trial Advocacy, the Thomas J. White Center on Law & Government, the Journal of College and …
Ndls Update 09/1992, Notre Dame Law School
Ndls Update 08/1992, Notre Dame Law School
Bulletin Of Information, University Of Notre Dame Law School 1993–94,Volume 88, Number 5, Notre Dame Law School
Bulletin Of Information, University Of Notre Dame Law School 1993–94,Volume 88, Number 5, Notre Dame Law School
Bulletins of Information
Notre Dame Law School
Notre Dame Law School
Honor Code
Foreign Law Study
Graduate Law Programs
Joint Degree Programs
Requirements for Admission and Graduation
Fees and Expenses
Financial Aid Programs
The Law Program
Student Activities
Curriculum
Course Descriptions Appendix
Officers of Administration
The Law School Faculty
London Faculty
Practice Court Judges
Professional Staff
Faculty Profiles
Endowed Chairs
The Joseph A. Matson Chair in Law
The John N. Matthews Chair in Law
The William and Dorothy O'Neill Chair in Law
Robert E. and Marion D. Short Chair in Law
The Paul J. Schied Chair in Legal Ethics
The Concannon Program of …
147th University Of Notre Dame Commencement And Mass Program, University Of Notre Dame
147th University Of Notre Dame Commencement And Mass Program, University Of Notre Dame
Commencement Programs
147th University of Notre Dame Commencement and Mass Program including Law School awards
Ndls Update 05/1992, Notre Dame Law School
Ndls Update 04/1992, Notre Dame Law School
Ndls Update 03/1992, Notre Dame Law School
Ndls Update 02/1992, Notre Dame Law School
Ndls Update 01/1992, Notre Dame Law School
Law Library Guide 1992–1993, Kresge Law Library, Research Services Department
Law Library Guide 1992–1993, Kresge Law Library, Research Services Department
Law Library Guide
The Kresge Law Library Guide's informative content includes: library services, policies, and physical layout.
Your Right To Privacy: A Selective Bibliography, Sandra S. Klein
Your Right To Privacy: A Selective Bibliography, Sandra S. Klein
Journal Articles
An awareness of relevant contemporary legal thought in the area of privacy is especially important today in light of what appears to be an increasing hostility to .the notion of individual privacy. The following bibliography considers privacy in terms of concept and application, and should prove useful to scholars, practitioners, and those seeking to gain more knowledge about this very important and complicated area of law.
Indian Claims In The Courts Of The Conqueror, Nell Jessup Newton
Indian Claims In The Courts Of The Conqueror, Nell Jessup Newton
Journal Articles
The Federal Circuit reviews Indian claims because Congress combined the former Court of Claims, which had jurisdiction over Indian claims, with the Court of Patent and Customs Appeals to create the new Claims Court. The jurisdiction of the Court of Claims also included some patent cases as well as tax, contract, pay suits, takings cases, and congressional reference cases. Congress added the Court of Claims to this mix in part to counter the argument that the two new courts, the Claims Court and the Federal Circuit, would become overly specialized.
Indian claims comprise only a tiny portion of the jurisdiction …
National Socialism And The Rule Of Law, Donald P. Kommers
National Socialism And The Rule Of Law, Donald P. Kommers
Journal Articles
Ingo Muller's book, originally published in 1987 as Furchtbare Juristen: Die unbewaltigte Vergangenheit unserer Justiz (literally "Dreadful Jurists: The Remorseless Past of Our Judiciary"), describes the moral collapse of the German legal profession and its role in facilitating the construction and maintenance of the Nazi regime. Gracefully translated by Deborah Lucas Schneider, Hitler's Justice seeks, first, to show how legal professionals betrayed their trust as lawyers, prosecutors, and judges and, second, to assess the degree to which Germany in the postwar period reformed its legal system, purged the judiciary of former Nazis, and rededicated itself to the rule of law. …
Asian Traditions And English Law, Geoffrey J. Bennett
Asian Traditions And English Law, Geoffrey J. Bennett
Journal Articles
Sebastian Poulter's book deals with a whole range of issues raised by the interplay of English law and Asian traditions. The areas covered include marriage, employment, children, and inheritance. In other words, all those topics are likely to affect most people in their everyday legal dealings.
Banning Broadcasting – A Transatlantic Perspective, Geoffrey Bennett, Russel L. Weaver
Banning Broadcasting – A Transatlantic Perspective, Geoffrey Bennett, Russel L. Weaver
Journal Articles
The British Government's decision to prohibit radio and television networks from airing interviews or statements by members of certain Northern Ireland organizations, or by allies and sympathizers of such organizations (the Broadcasting Ban or Ban) is analyzed in context. From an analysis of the Ban, some conclusions are drawn about the nature of judicial review.
With Liberty And Justice For Whom? The Recent Evangelical Debate Over Capitalism (Book Review), Thomas L. Shaffer
With Liberty And Justice For Whom? The Recent Evangelical Debate Over Capitalism (Book Review), Thomas L. Shaffer
Journal Articles
Those who for scholarly or journalistic convenience aggregate hundreds of Christian denominations into four or five "movements" put the radical Christian pacifist Jim Wallis (of Sojourners magazine) and Dr. Jerry Falwell, founder of the Moral Majority, in one theological category. They are both evangelicals, heirs of Calvinism and the Radical Reformation, both practitioners of "conservative Protestant orthodoxy," both believers in the fundamental authority of the Bible.
And, because both of them, and thousands of Christians who follow one or both of them, are trying to respond to the criticism that evangelicalism (or "fundamentalism") neglects social and economic issues, they are …
Remarks On The Dedication Of The Robing Room In Honor Of Judge Robert Allen Grant, Kenneth F. Ripple
Remarks On The Dedication Of The Robing Room In Honor Of Judge Robert Allen Grant, Kenneth F. Ripple
Journal Articles
Today, Notre Dame Law School honors one of its most beloved and successful sons by naming in his honor the robing room of the courtroom. "Robing Room" is really a misnomer for this chamber. It serves a variety of functions for the court, and it is no exaggeration to term it the epicenter of the court's activity. If we take a few moments to review what judges do in this room and reflect on the significance of those activities in the American judicial tradition, it becomes readily apparent why it is particularly appropriate that this room be named in honor …
The Bill Of Rights And Originalism, Gerard V. Bradley
The Bill Of Rights And Originalism, Gerard V. Bradley
Journal Articles
Professor Bradley begins the final installment of the University of Illinois Law Review's year-long tribute to the Bill of Rights by proposing that the first ten Amendments, like the Constitution itself, be interpreted according to the original understanding of their ratifiers. Professor Bradley, though, narrows the scope of the exegetical inquiry to what he proposes is the only sound originalism - plain meaning, historically recovered. Professor Bradley argues that interpreting the Bill of Rights according to the text's plain meaning among persons politically active at the time of drafting avoids both the inflexibility and philosophical deficiencies of "snapshot" conservative originalism …
Permanent Legislation To Correct Duro V. Reina, Nell Jessup Newton
Permanent Legislation To Correct Duro V. Reina, Nell Jessup Newton
Journal Articles
In Duro v. Reinal the Supreme Court held that Indian tribal courts do not have criminal jurisdiction over nonmember Indians. In so doing the Court extended its earlier holding in Oliphant v. Suquamish Indian Tribe, which had prevented tribes from exercising criminal jurisdiction over non-Indians and struck a serious blow to tribal sovereignty. The Oliphant decision has been soundly criticized as ahistorical and even dishonest, as well as essentially ethnocentric. The case also posed grave dangers to tribal people, because of the great number of nonmember Indians who live and work on Indian reservations, and the fact that nonmembers fall …
Doctrinal Synergies And Liberal Dilemmas: The Case Of The Yellow-Dog Contract, Barry Cushman
Doctrinal Synergies And Liberal Dilemmas: The Case Of The Yellow-Dog Contract, Barry Cushman
Journal Articles
The three decades spanning the years 1908 to 1937 saw a remarkable transformation of the Supreme Court's jurisprudence concerning the rights of workers to organize. In 1908, the Court held that a federal law prohibiting employers from discharging an employee because of his membership in a labor union violated the liberty of contract secured to the employer by the Fifth Amendment. In 1915, the Court similarly declared a state statute prohibiting the use of "yellow-dog" contracts unconstitutional. In 1937, by contrast, the Court upheld provisions of the Wagner Act prohibiting both discharges for union membership and the use of yellow-dog …
Continuing Limits On Un Intervention In Civil War, Mary Ellen O'Connell
Continuing Limits On Un Intervention In Civil War, Mary Ellen O'Connell
Journal Articles
Can the United Nations (UN or Organization) send military forces into civil war without the consent of the parties to the conflict? To date, it never has, but with the end of the Cold War, the Organization is in a position to think again about its proper role in civil war. During the past year, the Security Council has had requests to intervene in the civil wars in Iraq, Yugoslavia, and Somalia. So far, the UN has sent troops to Iraq and Yugoslavia but only after getting the consent of all parties.
The Security Council's recent decisions conform with the …
Survey Of Recent Developments In Indiana Law: Labor And Employment Law, Barbara J. Fick
Survey Of Recent Developments In Indiana Law: Labor And Employment Law, Barbara J. Fick
Journal Articles
This article examines developments in labor and employment law occuring shortly before its publicaiton in 1992. The article discusses cases revisiting the Frampton rule, addressing employee defamation suits against employers, employment discrimination, issues arising in public sector employment, wage statutes, unemployment compensation, and workers' compensation. It also discusses a state statute prohibiting employment discrimination based on employees' off-duty use of tobacco.
Tort Law: The Languages Of Duty, Jay Tidmarsh
Tort Law: The Languages Of Duty, Jay Tidmarsh
Journal Articles
Summarizing the developments in Indiana tort law is a daunting, perhaps impossible task. In more than 115 reported opinions, state and federal courts wrestled with issues, many of them issues of first impression, which ranged across the spectrum of tort law. A constant thread runs through many of these cases. The thread is duty. Time and again during the past year, Indiana courts were required to decide whether a particular set of facts gave rise to a duty of care by the defendant or an obligation of avoidance by the plaintiff.
Some of the cases involved novel legal duties, while …
The Extraterritorial Application Of Antitrust Laws: The United States And European Community Approaches, Roger P. Alford
The Extraterritorial Application Of Antitrust Laws: The United States And European Community Approaches, Roger P. Alford
Journal Articles
This Article compares the differing approaches of the United States and the European Community as they wrestle with the question of how to regulate foreign anticompetitive activity. More specifically, this Article highlights the distinctive features of the U.S. "effects doctrine" and the European Community's "implementation approach" and analyzes the differences that exist between the two systems. Only the U.S. doctrine openly provides for the consideration of international comity concerns, but both approaches have been used liberally to assert jurisdiction over foreign defendants. Part II of this Article provides a background to the subject by briefly outlining the traditional bases of …
The French Legal Profession: A Prisoner Of Its Glorious Past?, Tang Thi Thanh Trai Le
The French Legal Profession: A Prisoner Of Its Glorious Past?, Tang Thi Thanh Trai Le
Journal Articles
In 1978 a French television poll queried 982 viewers as to their images of the French lawyer (avocat). Of those polled, less than five percent held a positive view of the avocat. Eighteen percent of the 940 persons who expressed a negative view of the avocat simply conveyed this impression in general terms, but the remainder were more precise. Forty-eight percent of the respondents felt that the avocat was a "money sucker"; fourteen percent saw him as a man without conscience; and another fourteen percent believed that he acted with impunity within his bar. Four percent considered the bar to …
Common Sense In Formation For The Common Good - Justice White's Dissents In The Parochial School Aid Cases: Patron Of Lost Causes Or Precursor Of Good News, John J. Coughlin
Common Sense In Formation For The Common Good - Justice White's Dissents In The Parochial School Aid Cases: Patron Of Lost Causes Or Precursor Of Good News, John J. Coughlin
Journal Articles
This Article envisions a new order for public education in this country. Pursuant to the new order, a free market under appropriate government regulation rather than unchecked political authority would determine the flow of public aid to various schools. Such an order would enable parents to choose what kind of school, secular or sectarian, presents the most desirable educational environment. The new arrangement would also provide incentives for quality education, as schools now run by the state government would have to compete on an even field with schools that currently receive no public funds.
It has been almost twenty years …