Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
- Keyword
-
- Gender and law (6)
- Women (6)
- Pornography (4)
- Crimes (3)
- Democracy (3)
-
- Discrimination (3)
- St. Mary’s Law Journal (3)
- United States Supreme Court (3)
- Books (2)
- Colleges and universities (2)
- Divorce (2)
- Empirical studies (2)
- Families (2)
- History (2)
- Magazines (2)
- Marriage (2)
- Movies (2)
- Obscenity (2)
- Power (2)
- Public policy (2)
- Publishing (2)
- Rape (2)
- Regulation (2)
- St. Mary’s University School of Law (2)
- Violence (2)
- 42 U.S.C. (1)
- AIDS (1)
- Abortion (1)
- Adoption (1)
- Adversary ethic (1)
Articles 1 - 30 of 55
Full-Text Articles in Law
One Judge's Battle Against The New York City Judicial Establishment, Percy R. Luney Jr.
One Judge's Battle Against The New York City Judicial Establishment, Percy R. Luney Jr.
North Carolina Central Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Future Of Liberal Legal Scholarship, Ronald K.L. Collins, David M. Skover
The Future Of Liberal Legal Scholarship, Ronald K.L. Collins, David M. Skover
Michigan Law Review
Earl Warren is dead.
A generation of liberal legal scholars continues, nevertheless, to act as if the man and his Court preside over the present. While this romanticism is understandable, it exacts a high price in a world transformed.
The following commentary is a reconstructive criticism written from the perspective of two liberals concerned about the future of "legal liberalism." We present our views as a commentary to emphasize their preliminary character; they represent our current assessment of where liberals stand and where they might redirect their energies.
Funding Legal Services For The Poor: Floria's Iota Program -- Now Is The Time To Make It Mandatory, Gregory A. Hearing
Funding Legal Services For The Poor: Floria's Iota Program -- Now Is The Time To Make It Mandatory, Gregory A. Hearing
Florida State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Making Society's Legal System Accessible To Society: The Lawyer's Role And Its Implications, L. Harold Levinson
Making Society's Legal System Accessible To Society: The Lawyer's Role And Its Implications, L. Harold Levinson
Vanderbilt Law Review
During the past two decades the legal profession has been remarkably, even frantically active in examining and drafting standards of professional conduct. The American Bar Association (ABA) adopted the Code of Professional Responsibility in 1970. Most states adopted the Code with relatively minor variations during the 1970s. The ABA repealed the Code in 1983 and adopted, in its place, the Model Rules of Professional Conduct. By the beginning of 1988 one-half of the states had implemented the Model Rules, with significant variations from the ABA version in some of these states, while the remaining states either had rejected the Model …
The Unique, Novel, And Unsound Adversary Ethic, Thomas L. Shaffer
The Unique, Novel, And Unsound Adversary Ethic, Thomas L. Shaffer
Vanderbilt Law Review
The dominant ethic in the American legal profession in 1988 is the adversary ethic. The adversary ethic, in the words of the late Justice Abe Fortas, claims that "[l]awyers are agents, not principals; and they should neither criticize nor tolerate criticism based upon the character of the client whom they represent or the cause that they prosecute or defend. They cannot and should not accept responsibility for the client's practices." This ethic is the principal-and often the only-reference point in professional discussions. Although it is embedded in our professional codes, our cases, and our law offices, this Article argues that …
The Law: From A Profession To A Business, Norman Bowie
The Law: From A Profession To A Business, Norman Bowie
Vanderbilt Law Review
The public believes that the practice of law has become a business.They also believe that lawyers are in the profession for the money and that everything a law firm does is motivated by greed-well not every-hing, in L.A. Law lawyers are motivated by greed and lust. Allegedly,lawyers overcharge, create work, and delay in order to make more money. In return lawyers produce nothing useful; they do not make cars, steel, or heavy machinery. They are perceived by many as social parasites who make a handsome living off the productive labor of others. Economists note that the United States' workforce has …
Abortion And Divorce In Western Law, Sara J. Vance
Abortion And Divorce In Western Law, Sara J. Vance
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Abortion and Divorce in Western Law by Mary A. Glendon
Stories Of Rights: Developing Moral Theory And Teaching Law, Patricia A. Cain, Jean C. Love
Stories Of Rights: Developing Moral Theory And Teaching Law, Patricia A. Cain, Jean C. Love
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Rights, Restitution, & Risk: Essays in Moral Theory by Judith Jarvis Thomson, edited by William Parent
Rummaging Through The Emperor's Wardrobe, Don Herzog
Rummaging Through The Emperor's Wardrobe, Don Herzog
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Politics: A Work in Constructive Social Theory. 3 Volumes by Roberto Mangabeira Unger
Legislatures And Legal Change: The Reform Of Divorce Law, Carl E. Schneider
Legislatures And Legal Change: The Reform Of Divorce Law, Carl E. Schneider
Michigan Law Review
A Review of A Silent Revolution: Routine Policy Making and the Transformation of Divorce Law in the United States by Herbert Jacob
And We Are Not Saved: The Elusive Quest For Racial Justice, Kevin Edward Kennedy
And We Are Not Saved: The Elusive Quest For Racial Justice, Kevin Edward Kennedy
Michigan Law Review
A Review of And We Are Not Saved: The Elusive Quest for Racial Justice by Derrick A. Bell
The Closing Of The American Mind: How Higher Education Has Failed Democracy And Impoverished The Souls Of Today's Students, Maureen P. Taylor
The Closing Of The American Mind: How Higher Education Has Failed Democracy And Impoverished The Souls Of Today's Students, Maureen P. Taylor
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Closing of the American Mind: How Higher Education Has Failed Democracy and Impoverished the Souls of Today's Students/em by Allan Bloom
Democratic Education, Jonathan Marks
Democratic Education, Jonathan Marks
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Democratic Education by Amy Gutmann
Questioning Broadcast Regulation, Jonathan Weinberg
Questioning Broadcast Regulation, Jonathan Weinberg
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Seven Dirty Words and Six Other Stories: Controlling the Content of Print and Broadcast by Matthew L. Spitzer
A Need For Caring, Judith Areen
A Need For Caring, Judith Areen
Michigan Law Review
A Review of AIDS and the Law: A Guide for the Public edited by Harlon L. Dalton, Scott Burris and the Yale AIDS Law Project
Corporations And Society: Power And Responsibility, Sara Anne Engle
Corporations And Society: Power And Responsibility, Sara Anne Engle
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Corporations and Society: Power and Responsibility edited by Warren J. Samuels and Arthur S. Miller
The Public Defender, Robert R. Kimball
The Public Defender, Robert R. Kimball
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Public Defender by Lisa J. McIntyre
Crimewarps: The Future Of Crime In America, Brandon D. Lawniczak
Crimewarps: The Future Of Crime In America, Brandon D. Lawniczak
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Crimewarps: The Future of Crime in America by Georgette Bennett
Reexamining The Law Of Rape, Janet E. Findlater
Reexamining The Law Of Rape, Janet E. Findlater
Michigan Law Review
A Review Real Rape by Susan Estrich
The Twentieth-Century Revolution In Family Wealth Transmission, John H. Langbein
The Twentieth-Century Revolution In Family Wealth Transmission, John H. Langbein
Michigan Law Review
The main purpose of this article is to sound a pair of themes about the ways in which these great changes in the nature of wealth have become associated with changes of perhaps comparable magnitude in the timing and in the character of family wealth transmission. My first theme, developed in Part II, concerns human capital. Whereas of old, wealth transmission from parents to children tended to center upon major items of patrimony such as the family farm or the family firm, today for the broad middle classes, wealth transmission centers on a radically different kind of asset: the investment …
Pornography Is A Civil Rights Issue For Women, Andrea Dworkin
Pornography Is A Civil Rights Issue For Women, Andrea Dworkin
University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform
My name is Andrea Dworkin. I am a citizen of the United States, and in this country where I live, every year millions and millions of pictures are being made of women with our legs spread. We are called beaver, we are called pussy, our genitals are tied up, they are pasted, makeup is put on them to make them pop out of a page at a male viewer. Millions and millions of pictures are made of us in postures of submission and sexual access so that our vaginas are exposed for penetration, our anuses are exposed for penetration, our …
Methodological Issues In The Content Analysis Of Pornography, Daniel Linz, Edward Donnerstein
Methodological Issues In The Content Analysis Of Pornography, Daniel Linz, Edward Donnerstein
University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform
No scientifically sound analysis of the content of pornography in the United States as a whole currently exists. Dietz and Sears's article takes us a small step closer to quantifying the contents of pornography. Some of the methods employed in the present study, however, prohibit us from making solid generalizations from the findings reported here to the nationwide pornographic marketplace. Our critique of the article will concentrate first on the methods employed in the study and then on the findings obtained through these methods and the authors' interpretation of these findings.
The Right To Speak, The Right To Hear, And The Right Not To Hear: The Technological Resolution To The Cable/Pornography Debate, Michael I. Meyerson
The Right To Speak, The Right To Hear, And The Right Not To Hear: The Technological Resolution To The Cable/Pornography Debate, Michael I. Meyerson
University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform
This Article concludes that the power of government to regulate cable pornography is limited to that which is legally obscene. Part I reviews Supreme Court cases delineating the relationship between the rights of privacy in the home and of freedom of speech. Part II demonstrates that the technology of cable television provides the solution to the pornography dilemma. Cable television preserves both privacy and speech interests because individual subscribers can be given the physical means to block out programming they find personally offensive without affecting the ability of others to receive that programming. Where such accommodation of interests is permissible, …
Pornography And Obscenity Sold In "Adult Bookstores": A Survey Of 5132 Books, Magazines, And Films In Four American Cities, Park Elliott Dietz, Alan E. Sears
Pornography And Obscenity Sold In "Adult Bookstores": A Survey Of 5132 Books, Magazines, And Films In Four American Cities, Park Elliott Dietz, Alan E. Sears
University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform
During the eighteen months that the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography (the Commission) conducted public hearings, public discussion, and staff research, one of the most common types of inquiry directed to the staff consisted of questions as to the content of pornography currently available in the United States. Critics of the Commission's work asserted that the pornography used as exhibits by witnesses at the public hearings was extreme, not commonly available, or unrepresentative of that sold in pornography retail outlets; The only pertinent, quantitative data available to the Commission appeared in a single report in the American Journal of Psychiatry …
Civil Rights In Transition: Sections 1981 And 1982 Cover Discrimination On The Basis Of Ancestry And Ethnicity, Eileen Kaufman, Martin A. Schwartz
Civil Rights In Transition: Sections 1981 And 1982 Cover Discrimination On The Basis Of Ancestry And Ethnicity, Eileen Kaufman, Martin A. Schwartz
Touro Law Review
No abstract provided.
Common Callings And The Enforcement Of Postemployment Covenants In Texas Symposium - Business Tort Litigation., William H. White
Common Callings And The Enforcement Of Postemployment Covenants In Texas Symposium - Business Tort Litigation., William H. White
St. Mary's Law Journal
Abstract Forthcoming.
Surrogate Parenting After Baby M: The Ball Moves To The Legislature’S Court, John R. Dunne, Gregory V. Serio
Surrogate Parenting After Baby M: The Ball Moves To The Legislature’S Court, John R. Dunne, Gregory V. Serio
Touro Law Review
No abstract provided.
Arbitration And Litigation Of Public Customers' Claims Against Broker-Dealers After Mcmahon Symposium - Business Tort Litigation., Joseph L. Hoon Jr.
Arbitration And Litigation Of Public Customers' Claims Against Broker-Dealers After Mcmahon Symposium - Business Tort Litigation., Joseph L. Hoon Jr.
St. Mary's Law Journal
Abstract Forthcoming.
Franchise Litigation In Texas: Analyzing Claims And Defenses Symposium - Business Tort Litigation., John G. Lewis
Franchise Litigation In Texas: Analyzing Claims And Defenses Symposium - Business Tort Litigation., John G. Lewis
St. Mary's Law Journal
Abstract Forthcoming.
The Road Less Traveled: State Court Resolution Of Patent, Trademark, Or Copyright Disputes Symposium - Business Tort Litigation., Ted D. Lee, Ann Livingston
The Road Less Traveled: State Court Resolution Of Patent, Trademark, Or Copyright Disputes Symposium - Business Tort Litigation., Ted D. Lee, Ann Livingston
St. Mary's Law Journal
Abstract Forthcoming.