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Full-Text Articles in Law

Imposing Tort Liability On Websites For Cyber Harassment, Nancy Kim Jan 2008

Imposing Tort Liability On Websites For Cyber Harassment, Nancy Kim

Faculty Scholarship

Several female law students were the subject of derogatory comments on AutoAdmit.com, a message board about law school admissions. When one of the women asked the website administrator to remove certain comments, the administrator discussed her request in an online post, prompting further attacks. An undergraduate student’s rape was revealed on a gossip site, JuicyCampus.com, where posters engaged in a cruel session of “blame the victim.” Another student on that site was falsely identified, by name, as being a stalker, bi-polar, and suicidal. When officials at her university asked JuicyCampus.com to remove the most egregious posts, the company refused.

These …


Encouraging Physician-Attorney Collaboration Through More Explicit Professional Standards, Linda Morton, Howard Taras, Vivian Reznik Jan 2008

Encouraging Physician-Attorney Collaboration Through More Explicit Professional Standards, Linda Morton, Howard Taras, Vivian Reznik

Faculty Scholarship

In this age of multi-layered global problem solving, the skill of working with other disciplines is a necessary tool for any professional. Societal ills can no longer be solved by narrow approaches learned in graduate training but call for interdisciplinary collaboration. Effective collaboration of this nature requires the professions to understand the differences in professional cultures and to bridge the communication gap caused by these differences.

Legal and medical training offer useful, but often conflicting, approaches to problem solving, thus, potentially impeding our abilities to understand and communicate with others regarding a shared issue or problem.

Though each profession has …


Louis B. Sohn And The Law Of The Sea, John E. Noyes Jan 2008

Louis B. Sohn And The Law Of The Sea, John E. Noyes

Faculty Scholarship

Louis B. Sohn significantly influenced the modern law of the sea, as he did other areas of international law. Though a positivist immersed in the human history and process of developing the law, Louis was also a visionary who saw international law as a noble endeavor that could improve or even transform the world. Part I of this essay describes Louis's various roles and character. Part II briefly sets out his vision and his sense of the interconnectedness between the law of the sea and other areas of international law. Part III analyzes how Louis saw the international lawmaking process, …


The Software Licensing Dilemma, Nancy Kim Jan 2008

The Software Licensing Dilemma, Nancy Kim

Faculty Scholarship

This Article makes two arguments. First, the dilemma posed by software transactions-sales or licenses?-should be answered by dynamic contract law. Dynamic contract law has as its objective effectuating the intent of the parties but weighs that objective against policy considerations. Second, the validity of a license grant should not be inextricably tied to the validity of the contract as a whole. The problem with relying on contract doctrine in the context of software licensing is that, too often, the application of that doctrine is static and formalistic. A new doctrine is not necessary to address software licensing issues; rather, the …


Mistakes, Changed Circumstances And Intent, Nancy Kim Jan 2008

Mistakes, Changed Circumstances And Intent, Nancy Kim

Faculty Scholarship

The most common contract defenses are duress, unconscionability, incapacity, fraud, and the basic assumption. defenses4 of mutual mistake, unilateral mistake, impossibility, frustration of purpose and commercial impracticability. In this Article, I limit my discussion to basic assumption defenses. Several prevailing rationales explain why a party should be allowed to escape contractual liability despite the sufficiency of consideration where there has been a failure of a basic assumption material to the transaction. No single rationale or principle, however, unifies all basic assumption defenses. Several commentators have noted that similar fact patterns applying a given doctrine often yield inconsistent results. Parties’ employment …


Rabenmutter And The Glass Ceiling: An Analysis Of Role Conflict Experienced By Women Lawyers In Germany As Compared With Women Lawyers In The United States, Jacquelyn H. Slotkin Jan 2008

Rabenmutter And The Glass Ceiling: An Analysis Of Role Conflict Experienced By Women Lawyers In Germany As Compared With Women Lawyers In The United States, Jacquelyn H. Slotkin

Faculty Scholarship

The purpose of this article is to analyze and compare women lawyers in Germany with women lawyers in the United States: their legal education, gender proportion in the legal profession, work opportunities, satisfaction with professional choices, and role conflicts. 22 Part I of this article will describe Germany's legal education and compare it with U.S. legal education. Part II will review the literature and issues relevant to German women lawyers as compared with U.S. women lawyers and will summarize and analyze how societal attitudes have affected women's choices in Germany and in the United States. Part III will compare demographic …


“A Painful Process Of Waiting”: The New York, Washington, New Jersey, And Maryland Dissenting Justices Understand That “Same-Sex Marriage” Is Not What Same-Sex Couples Are Seeking, Barbara Cox Jan 2008

“A Painful Process Of Waiting”: The New York, Washington, New Jersey, And Maryland Dissenting Justices Understand That “Same-Sex Marriage” Is Not What Same-Sex Couples Are Seeking, Barbara Cox

Faculty Scholarship

This essay focuses on the recent decisions by the highest courts of four states rejecting the claims of individuals in same-sex relationships that they must be permitted to marry the partner of their choice. In the cases of Hernandez v. Robles, Andersen v. King County, Lewis v. Harris, and Conaway v. Deane, a majority or plurality of each court determined that the bans preventing individuals in same-sex couples from marrying were constitutional. Understanding these cases is particularly important as additional state supreme courts address the cases of similar plaintiffs pending before them.


Places Of Refuge For Ships, John E. Noyes Jan 2008

Places Of Refuge For Ships, John E. Noyes

Faculty Scholarship

This essay first provides an overview of Places of Refuge for Ships, a book that contains essential information and perspectives for lawyers and policy makers. Part III then briefly explores why the issue of places of refuge is daunting. The reasons for the complexity of this issue set the scene for Part IV, which proposes a process-oriented approach to assess and manage risks where vessels in distress seek access to places of refuge.


Unintended Consequences: How Antidiscrimination Litigation Increases Group Bias In Employer-Defendants, Jessica Fink Jan 2008

Unintended Consequences: How Antidiscrimination Litigation Increases Group Bias In Employer-Defendants, Jessica Fink

Faculty Scholarship

This Article examines the extent to which employment discrimination litigation conducted under the current legal framework increases the biases of those involved in this process, particularly defendant-employers. It examines whether discrimination litigation enhances and exacerbates the negative views that these defendants may have toward not just the plaintiff who initiated the litigation, but also toward the broader protected class to which the plaintiff belongs.

Part I of this Article briefly expands upon the different types of bias that can infect employers' decisions, from the blatant discrimination that largely has disappeared from American society, to intentional discrimination that employers strategically hide …


Gresham’S Law In Legal Education, Steven R. Smith Jan 2008

Gresham’S Law In Legal Education, Steven R. Smith

Faculty Scholarship

This article will first examine the traditional Gresham's Law regarding currency and then its broader application to instances in which the nominal and intrinsic values of something are separated. It will then look at the licensing of attorneys and how Gresham's Law may justify both the general accreditation of legal education and specific accreditation Standards. Viewed from this perspective it is the interests of the public, and not the more parochial interests of law schools, that deserve primary consideration in accreditation related to licensure. The article will conclude with a consideration of a coming debate about the appropriate place of …


Proyecto Acceso: The Use Of Popular Culture To Build The Rule Of Law In Latin America, James Cooper Jan 2008

Proyecto Acceso: The Use Of Popular Culture To Build The Rule Of Law In Latin America, James Cooper

Faculty Scholarship

This article is about developing the rule of law in Latin America using popular popular culture and modeling the United States' experience.


Competing Legal Cultures And Legal Reform: The Battle Of Chile, James Cooper Jan 2008

Competing Legal Cultures And Legal Reform: The Battle Of Chile, James Cooper

Faculty Scholarship

This Article explores the competition that exists between U.S. and German legal cultures and examines Chilean legal reform efforts since the late 1990s as a case study of this competition. A country's legal culture is comprised of the self-governing rules and operations of national and regional bar associations, the format of legal education, the structure of the legal and judicial profession, the role of the judiciary, jurisprudential style, and the reputation of the legal sector according to the general public. The influence of predominant legal cultures on developing nations has been explored in a number of contexts, while the importance …


Deductions In A Proposed Calculation And Allocation Of Distributable Net Income To The Separate Shares Of A Trust Or Estate, Michael T. Yu Jan 2008

Deductions In A Proposed Calculation And Allocation Of Distributable Net Income To The Separate Shares Of A Trust Or Estate, Michael T. Yu

Faculty Scholarship

This article examines the treatment of certain deductions1" in the separate share regulations and discusses how the separate share regulations arguably provide two methods for calculating distributable net income (DNI) to be used in coordinating the income taxation of a trust or estate with separate shares and of the beneficiaries of such trust or estate. Specifically, this article analyzes how the two methods address the income taxation of a trust or estate with two separate shares in which one separate share has a net loss as to at least one type of income. Such loss, pursuant to the separate share …


Internet Challenges To Business Innovation, Nancy Kim Jan 2008

Internet Challenges To Business Innovation, Nancy Kim

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.