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Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Legal History
The Creation Of A Usable Judicial Past: Max Lerner, Class Conflict, And The Propagation Of Judicial Titans, Sarah Barringer Gordon
The Creation Of A Usable Judicial Past: Max Lerner, Class Conflict, And The Propagation Of Judicial Titans, Sarah Barringer Gordon
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Poverty Lawyering In The Golden Age, Matthew Diller
Poverty Lawyering In The Golden Age, Matthew Diller
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Brutal Need: Lawyers and the Welfare Rights Movement, 1960-1973 by Martha F. Davis
Patents And The Jeffersonian Mythology, 29 J. Marshall L. Rev. 269 (1995), Edward C. Walterscheid
Patents And The Jeffersonian Mythology, 29 J. Marshall L. Rev. 269 (1995), Edward C. Walterscheid
UIC Law Review
No abstract provided.
Attorney-Client And Work Product Protection In A Utilitarian World: An Argument For Recomparison, Catherine T. Struve
Attorney-Client And Work Product Protection In A Utilitarian World: An Argument For Recomparison, Catherine T. Struve
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Closing Argument, James H. Seckinger
Closing Argument, James H. Seckinger
Journal Articles
To put closing argument in perspective, lawsuits are won or lost on the evidence and the law, not on the advocate's analytical and oratory skill. As pointed out by Broun and Seckinger: “This is not intended to minimize the importance of the closing argument. It is merely to relegate it to its proper position, which is a summation of the evidence that has preceded it and a relation of that evidence to the issues in the case.”
An effective closing is an argument, not a summation. An effective closing argument should attack the serious problems in a case and put …
Review Of The History Of The Law In Massachusetts: The Supreme Judicial Court 1692-1992, Russell Osgood, Ed., Alexis Anderson
Review Of The History Of The Law In Massachusetts: The Supreme Judicial Court 1692-1992, Russell Osgood, Ed., Alexis Anderson
Alexis Anderson
No abstract provided.