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Articles 1 - 30 of 59
Full-Text Articles in Law
Hoynes Code, The, Patricia A. O'Hara
Hoynes Code, The, Patricia A. O'Hara
Hoynes Code
This code governs legal education at the University of Notre Dame in all programs and in all locations.
Notre Dame Lawyer - Fall 2007, Notre Dame Law School
Notre Dame Lawyer - Fall 2007, Notre Dame Law School
Notre Dame Lawyer
No abstract provided.
Irish Law 2007, Notre Dame Law School
Irish Law 2007, Notre Dame Law School
About the Law School
Dear Notre Dame Law School Class of 2010, Welcome as a potential student to Notre Dame Law School! We are thrilled to be among the first to receive you into our family. We know that this is an exciting time for you and that, if you are anything like we were just a couple of years ago, you probably have plenty of questions about law school and Notre Dame. That's why we've prepared the Guide. We hope it will answer many of your questions and that it will provide a window into Notrt;: Dame Law School. We also hope that …
University Of Notre Dame, The Law School: Educating A Different Kind Of Lawyer, Notre Dame Law School
University Of Notre Dame, The Law School: Educating A Different Kind Of Lawyer, Notre Dame Law School
About the Law School
Notre Dame Law School is like no other:
I say this from experience as an alumna, professor, and Dean. I believe that the Law School's unique character comes not only from famous campus buildings or the immediate public recognition of our name, but also from faculty and students who collectively dedicate themselves to the highest ethical and moral standards in the pursuit of justice. Thus is born "a different kind of lawyer." At Notre Dame, we strive to be a place where students and faculty who are interested in the integration of faith and reason, whether they are Catholics or …
Red Mass Invitation 2007, Notre Dame Law School
Red Mass Invitation 2007, Notre Dame Law School
The Red Mass
Most Rev. John M. D'Arcy, Bishop of Fort Wayne-South Bend, the Notre Dame Law School and the members of the Red Mass Committee request the honor of your presence and that of your guests at the celebration of a Red Mass for lawyers, judges, law students and civil government officials at the Basilica of the Sacred Heart on Sunday, September 9, 2007 at 10 AM.
The celebration of this ancient rite in which God's blessing is asked on all those who serve the law will be followed by a reception at the LaFortune Student Center Ballroom.
Bulletin Of The University Of Notre Dame The Law School 2007–08, Volume 103, Number 4, University Of Notre Dame
Bulletin Of The University Of Notre Dame The Law School 2007–08, Volume 103, Number 4, University Of Notre Dame
Bulletins of Information
CONTENTS
Graduate Law Programs
Dual-Degree Programs
Requirements for Graduation and Good Academic Standing
Tuition and Fees
Withdrawal Regulations
Curriculum
Law School Courses
Course Descriptions
Officers of Administration
Law School Faculty
Law School Calendar
Important Addresses
Coloring Outside The Lines: Examining Treasury's (Lack Of) Compliance With Administrative Procedure Act Rulemaking Requirements, Kristin E. Hickman
Coloring Outside The Lines: Examining Treasury's (Lack Of) Compliance With Administrative Procedure Act Rulemaking Requirements, Kristin E. Hickman
Notre Dame Law Review
No abstract provided.
University Of Notre Dame Law School Diploma Ceremony, University Of Notre Dame, Notre Dame Law School
University Of Notre Dame Law School Diploma Ceremony, University Of Notre Dame, Notre Dame Law School
Commencement Programs
Notre Dame Law School Diploma and Hooding Ceremony
162nd University Of Notre Dame Commencement And Mass Program, University Of Notre Dame
162nd University Of Notre Dame Commencement And Mass Program, University Of Notre Dame
Commencement Programs
162nd Commencement and Mass Program
Saturday, May 19, 2007
Associate Professor Jennifer Mason Mcaward Commencement Address, Jennifer Mason Mcaward
Associate Professor Jennifer Mason Mcaward Commencement Address, Jennifer Mason Mcaward
Commencement Programs
Notre Dame Law School Commencement Speech
JENNIFER M. MASON
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF LAW
Free To Believe, Richard Garnett
Free To Believe, Richard Garnett
Journal Articles
Richard Garnett reviews Religious Freedom and the Constitution by Christopher L. Eisgruber & Lawrence G. Sager, Harvard University Press, 352 pages, $28.95
Social Security For Migrant Workers: The Eu, Ilo & Treaty Based Regimes, Barbara Fick, Alma Clara Garcia Flechas
Social Security For Migrant Workers: The Eu, Ilo & Treaty Based Regimes, Barbara Fick, Alma Clara Garcia Flechas
Books
Book Chapter
Social Security for Migrant Workers: The EU, ILO & Treaty Based Regimes, in 9 International Law: Revista Colombiana de Derecho Internacional 45 (Diana Carolina Olarte Bacarés, ed., 2007)
ISSN: 1692-8156
Migrant workers face special problems in terms of qualifying for, and receiving payment under, national social security systems. In an effort to mitigate these problems, many states coordinate their social security systems. This paper explores how coordination schemes work in regional mechanisms such as the European Union, in international conventions adopted by the International Labour Organisation, and in multi-lateral treaties such as the Andean Social Security Instrument.
Individuals First, Richard Garnett
Individuals First, Richard Garnett
Journal Articles
Richard Garnett reviews Modern Liberty and the Limits of Government by Charles Fried, W.W. Norton, 224 pp. (2006)
Notre Dame Lawyer - Spring 2007, Notre Dame Law School
Notre Dame Lawyer - Spring 2007, Notre Dame Law School
Notre Dame Lawyer
No abstract provided.
Drop Coffers, Richard W. Garnett, Benjamin P. Carr
Drop Coffers, Richard W. Garnett, Benjamin P. Carr
Journal Articles
”Coffers.” When we hear or read the word, what do we picture? Buried treasure on the Isle of Monte Cristo? The dragon Smaug’s stolen riches, piled deep under the Lonely Mountain? Maybe we dimly remember a line of Shakespeare or Chaucer. If one is male and of a certain age, the word might bring to the surface suppressed memories of the all-nighters and arcana associated with Dungeons & Dragons. And, if one is a justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, one’s thoughts might turn to the checking account of St. Jerome Catholic School in Cleveland.
Arbitrating Human Rights, Roger P. Alford
Arbitrating Human Rights, Roger P. Alford
Roger P. Alford
Currently domestic human rights litigation against corporations appears to be a proxy fight in which the accomplice is pursued while the principal evades punishment. Typically the principal malfeasor—the sovereign—is immune from suit because of foreign sovereign immunity. But corporations can be found liable for aiding and abetting those violations. This article suggests a solution to this problem, drawing on principles from contract law and arbitration. If a corporation is found liable for aiding and abetting sovereign abuse, it may invoke contractual provisions in the agreement with the sovereign to arbitrate the question of shared responsibility. While the victims may not …
Neuroimaging And The "Complexity" Of Capital Punishment, Orlando Carter Snead
Neuroimaging And The "Complexity" Of Capital Punishment, Orlando Carter Snead
O. Carter Snead
The growing use of brain imaging technology to explore the causes of morally, socially, and legally relevant behavior is the subject of much discussion and controversy in both scholarly and popular circles. From the efforts of cognitive neuroscientists in the courtroom and in the public square, the contours of a project to transform capital sentencing both in principle and practice have emerged. In the short term, such scientists seek to intervene in the process of capital sentencing by serving as mitigation experts for defendants, where they invoke neuroimaging research on the roots of criminal violence to support their arguments. Over …
Law Library Guide 2007–2008, Kresge Law Library, Research Services Department
Law Library Guide 2007–2008, Kresge Law Library, Research Services Department
Law Library Guide
No abstract provided.
University Of Notre Dame - The Law School: Educating A Different Kind Of Lawyer, Notre Dame Law School
University Of Notre Dame - The Law School: Educating A Different Kind Of Lawyer, Notre Dame Law School
About the Law School
COMMITTED TO THE CONNECTION BETWEEN THE WORLD AND THE LAW. . . 4
COMMITTED TO THE CONNECTION BETWEEN FAITH AND PRACTICE. . . . . . . 6
COMMITTED TO EXCELLENCE IN ACADEMICS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Academic Programs
Juris Doctor (J.D.) Curriculum
Academic Life
An Ethics-Rich Curriculum
Dual-Degree Programs
Law Journals
The Kresge Law Library
COMMITTED TO A GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE OF THE LAW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . …
National Association Of Women Lawyers Award 1997–2007, Notre Dame Law School
National Association Of Women Lawyers Award 1997–2007, Notre Dame Law School
Student, Faculty, and Staff Awards
For scholarship, motivation, and contribution to the advancement of women in society.
"Technical" Defenses: Ethics, Morals, And The Lawyer As Friend, Thomas L. Shaffer, Robert F. Cochran Jr.
"Technical" Defenses: Ethics, Morals, And The Lawyer As Friend, Thomas L. Shaffer, Robert F. Cochran Jr.
Journal Articles
This essay examines the question of lawyer-client counseling on the issue of raising "technical" defenses, such as statutes of limitations. The authors challenge the prevailing notion of American lawyers that technical defenses raise no moral issue worthy of dialogue between lawyers and clients. Looking at the history of legal ethics and modern treatment in European law, they suggest that questions of limitations do raise moral issues. They go on to explore how those moral issues ought to be discussed and decided between lawyers and clients, using the framework of lawyers as godfathers, hired guns, gurus, and friends that they laid …
A Search For Balance In The Whirlwind Of Law School: Spirituality From Law Teachers, Thomas L. Shaffer
A Search For Balance In The Whirlwind Of Law School: Spirituality From Law Teachers, Thomas L. Shaffer
Journal Articles
The first-year introductory course in property law is about all that is left of the traditional black-box curriculum. It is where beginning law students cope with and despair of the arcana of English common law; where, with more detachment than, say, in the torts course, analysis of appellate opinions is what "thinking like a lawyer" means, with no more than peripheral and begrudging attention to modem legislation and administrative law; where legal reasoning is a stretching exercise and initiatory discipline. And, incidentally, surviving bravely the rude invasion of teachers of public law, it is where a teaching lawyer can point …
Addressing The Incoherency Of The Preemption Provision Of The Copyright Act Of 1976, Joseph P. Bauer
Addressing The Incoherency Of The Preemption Provision Of The Copyright Act Of 1976, Joseph P. Bauer
Journal Articles
Section 301 of the Copyright Act of 1976 expressly preempts state law actions that are within the "general scope of copyright" and that assert claims that are "equivalent to" the rights conferred by the Act. The Act eliminated the previous system of common law copyright for unpublished works, which had prevailed under the prior 1909 Copyright Act. By federalizing copyright law, the drafters of the statute sought to achieve uniformity and to avoid the potential for state protection of infinite duration.
The legislative history of § 301 stated that this preemption provision was set forth "in the clearest and most …
Grasping Smoke: Enforcing The Ban On Political Activity By Charities, Lloyd Histoshi Mayer
Grasping Smoke: Enforcing The Ban On Political Activity By Charities, Lloyd Histoshi Mayer
Journal Articles
The rule that charities are not allowed to intervene in political campaigns has now been in place for over fifty years. Despite uncertainty about the exact reasons for Congress' enactment of it, skepticism by some about its validity for both constitutional and public policy reasons, and continued confusion about its exact parameters, this rule has survived virtually unchanged for all of those years. Yet while overall noncompliance with the income tax laws has drawn significant scholarly attention, few scholars have focused on violations of this prohibition and the IRS' attempts to enforce it.
This Article focuses on the elusive issue …
On Hart's Ways: Law As Reason And As Fact, John M. Finnis
On Hart's Ways: Law As Reason And As Fact, John M. Finnis
Journal Articles
This address at the Hart Centenary Conference in Cambridge in July 2007 reflects on foundational elements in Hart's method in legal philosophy. It argues that his understanding of what it is to adopt an internal point of view was flawed by (a) inattention to the difference between descriptive history (or biography or detection) and descriptive general theory of human affairs, (b) inattention to practical reason as argument from premises, some factual but others normative (evaluative) in their content, and (c) relative inattention to the deliberations of law-makers as distinct from subjects of the law. These flaws contributed to a concept …
The Canon Of American Legal Thought, Robert E. Rodes
The Canon Of American Legal Thought, Robert E. Rodes
Journal Articles
Professors Kennedy and Fisher have put together a book containing twenty essays, most of them first published in law reviews. They are elegantly presented, and each is preceded by an introductory essay by one of the editors, which provides background information on the author, analyzes the piece lucidly and succinctly, and situates it in the development of American legal thought. Each piece is also preceded by a bibliography, which further situates it by describing the rest of the author's work and summarizing the commentary it has evoked. All the works are given in full, adding considerably to what can be …
Taxing Citizens In A Global Economy, Michael S. Kirsch
Taxing Citizens In A Global Economy, Michael S. Kirsch
Journal Articles
This Article addresses a fundamental issue underlying the U.S. tax system in the international context: the use of citizenship as a jurisdictional basis for imposing income tax. As a general matter, the United States is the only economically developed country that taxes its citizens abroad on their foreign income.
Despite this broad general assertion of taxing jurisdiction, Congress allows citizens abroad to exclude a limited amount of their income earned from working outside the United States. Influential lobbying groups, including businesses that employ significant numbers of U.S. citizens abroad, argue that this exclusion is necessary in order to keep American …
The Much Maligned 527 And Institutional Choice, Lloyd Hitoshi Mayer
The Much Maligned 527 And Institutional Choice, Lloyd Hitoshi Mayer
Journal Articles
The continuing controversy over 527 organizations has led Congress to impose extensive disclosure requirements on these political organizations and to consider imposing extensive restrictions on their funding as well. The debate about what laws should govern these entities has, however, so far almost completely ignored the fact that such laws raise a complicated institutional choice question.
This Article seeks to resolve that question by developing a new institutional choice framework to guide this and similar choices. The Article first explores the context for making this determination by describing the current laws governing 527s, including both federal election laws administered by …
Rankings, Standards, And Competition: Task Vs. Scale Comparisions, Avishalom Tor, Stephen M. Garcia
Rankings, Standards, And Competition: Task Vs. Scale Comparisions, Avishalom Tor, Stephen M. Garcia
Journal Articles
Research showing how upward social comparison breeds competitive behavior has so far conflated local comparisons in task performance (e.g. a test score) with comparisons on a more general scale (i.e. an underlying skill). Using a ranking methodology (Garcia, Tor, & Gonzalez, 2006) to separate task and scale comparisons, Studies 1–2 reveal that an upward comparison on the scale (e.g. being surpassed in rank), rather than in the mere task (e.g., being outperformed), is necessary to generate competition among rivals proximate to a standard (e.g. ranked #3 vs. 4, near “the top”); rivals far from a standard (e.g. ranked …
Erastian And High Church Approaches To The Law: The Jurisprudential Categories Of Robert E. Rodes, Jr., M. Cathleen Kaveny
Erastian And High Church Approaches To The Law: The Jurisprudential Categories Of Robert E. Rodes, Jr., M. Cathleen Kaveny
Journal Articles
It is a great honor for me to have been asked to contribute to this issue of the Journal of Law and Religion focusing on the work of my colleague and friend, Robert E. Rodes, Jr. In June 2006, Professor Rodes celebrated his fiftieth anniversary as a member of the faculty of Notre Dame Law School. His long career has marked him as a founding father of interdisciplinary scholarship at the intersection of faith, law, and morality—the very sort of scholarship which this journal is dedicated to fostering and preserving.
The topics that Professor Rodes has considered over the years …