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Articles 1 - 13 of 13
Full-Text Articles in Law
What If There Is No Client?: Prosecutors As "Counselors" Of Crime Victims, Stacy Caplow
What If There Is No Client?: Prosecutors As "Counselors" Of Crime Victims, Stacy Caplow
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Lawyering Up, Jack M. Beermann, Susan Bandes
Lawyering Up, Jack M. Beermann, Susan Bandes
Faculty Scholarship
The widespread dissemination of knowledge about the Miranda protections is often referred to as one of the most successful efforts ever made to educate the American public about its constitutional rights. Studies confirm that a high percentage of the public is aware of Miranda, largely due to television and other mass media. This article asks the question: if television is educating the public about its Miranda rights, what exactly is it teaching us? As fans of the cop show NYPD Blue (a show in which the interrogation and confession are often the dramatic focus) we use that show to explore …
The Mccleskey Puzzle: Remedying Prosecutorial Discrimination Against Black Victims In Capital Sentencing, Evan Tsen Lee, Ashutosh Bhagwat
The Mccleskey Puzzle: Remedying Prosecutorial Discrimination Against Black Victims In Capital Sentencing, Evan Tsen Lee, Ashutosh Bhagwat
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
The Crisis In The Ideology Of Crime, John L. Diamond
The Crisis In The Ideology Of Crime, John L. Diamond
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Sentencing In England: The Rise Of Populist Punishment, Aaron J. Rappaport
Sentencing In England: The Rise Of Populist Punishment, Aaron J. Rappaport
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
The Fall And Rise Of Criminal Theory, George P. Fletcher
The Fall And Rise Of Criminal Theory, George P. Fletcher
Faculty Scholarship
These are good times – at least for the theory of criminal law. This special issue of Buffalo Criminal Law Review testifies to a remarkable surge of interest among younger scholars in perennial questions: Why should we punish offenders? Do we require a human act as a precondition for liability and what is its structure? What does it mean for someone to be guilty or culpable for committing an offense? How do we avoid contradictions in structuring the criteria of liability? The time has come for renewed intensity in pondering and discussing these basic issues.
The contributions of this symposium …
Archibald Cox: Teacher, David J. Seipp
Archibald Cox: Teacher, David J. Seipp
Faculty Scholarship
Archie Cox is a teacher. He taught generations of law students at Harvard Law School and, more recently, at Boston University School of Law. He left the classroom on three occasions, reluctantly, when first President Truman, then President Kennedy, then President Nixon's Attorney General called Professor Cox to Washington to play a part on the national stage. In his first weeks as Watergate Special Prosecutor, Cox carried with him a stack of blue books, Labor Law examinations he still had to grade (p. 263). In the public eye, his straight-backed demeanor, his familiar crew cut, half-glasses, bow tie, and tweeds …
Section 2254(D) Of The New Habeas Statute: An (Opinionated) User's Manual, Evan Tsen Lee
Section 2254(D) Of The New Habeas Statute: An (Opinionated) User's Manual, Evan Tsen Lee
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Dogmas Of The Model Penal Code, George P. Fletcher
Dogmas Of The Model Penal Code, George P. Fletcher
Faculty Scholarship
The Model Penal Code has become the central document of American criminal justice. It has had some effect on law reform in over 35 states. More significantly, it provides the lingua franca of most people who teach criminal law in the United States. Most academics think that the precise definitions of culpability states in section 2.02(2) are really neat, and they applaud the liberal rules that restrict the use of strict liability to administrative fines. Indeed, all things considered, for a code drafted with almost total indifference to what might be learned from European models, the Model Penal Code is …
Slashing And Burning Prisoners' Rights: Congress And The Supreme Court In Dialogue, Susan Herman
Slashing And Burning Prisoners' Rights: Congress And The Supreme Court In Dialogue, Susan Herman
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Reflecting On The Subject: A Critique Of The Social Influence Conception Of Deterrence, The Broken Windows Theory, And Order-Maintenance Policing New York Style, Bernard Harcourt
Reflecting On The Subject: A Critique Of The Social Influence Conception Of Deterrence, The Broken Windows Theory, And Order-Maintenance Policing New York Style, Bernard Harcourt
Faculty Scholarship
In 1993, New York City began implementing the quality-of-life initiative, an order-maintenance policing strategy targeting minor misdemeanor offenses like turnstile jumping, aggressive panhandling, and public drinking. The policing initiative is premised on the broken windows theory of deterrence, namely the hypothesis that minor physical and social disorder, if left unattended in a neighborhood, causes serious crime. New York City's new policing strategy has met with overwhelming support in the press and among public officials, policymakers, sociologists, criminologists and political scientists. The media describe the "famous" Broken Windows essay as "the bible of policing" and "the blueprint for community policing." Order-maintenance …
Our Administrative System Of Criminal Justice, Gerard E. Lynch
Our Administrative System Of Criminal Justice, Gerard E. Lynch
Faculty Scholarship
Bill Tendy was already a legend among federal prosecutors when I first served as an Assistant United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York in the early 1980s. To us youngsters, Bill even then seemed a survivor from another era, when prosecutors really did resemble the tough-talking Hollywood DAs played by actors like Brian Donleavy – while we felt more like insecure young lawyers who should be played by Michael J. Fox or Calista Flockhart.
Partly, of course, this was just a function of age and experience; hard as it was to imagine, there must have been a …
Truth In Codification, George P. Fletcher
Truth In Codification, George P. Fletcher
Faculty Scholarship
Some men think that the earth is round, others think it flat; it is a matter capable of question. But if it is flat, will the King's command make it round? And if it is round, will the King's command flatten it?
These are the words of Thomas More as interpreted by Robert Bolt in his play A Man for All Seasons. More invokes the issue of scientific truth to question Parliament's authority to determine whether King Henry VIII should be recognized as the head of the Church of England. The point is well taken. When the issue is scientific …