Albany Law Review

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COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved

from June 1996
Last Number: December 2023

Albany Law School
ISSN 0002-4678




Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 1331

December 22, 1998

  • Coming out: decision-making in state and federal sodomy cases.

  • The government contractor defense: breaking the Boyle barrier.

  • The impact of "fair use" in the higher education community: a necessary exception.

  • Consumer abuse of bankruptcy: an evolving philosophy of debtor qualification for bankruptcy discharge.

  • Changes in the role and the form of the trust at the new millennium, or, we don't have to think of England anymore.

  • What's the score? Does the right of publicity protect professional sports leagues?

  • Untwisting the common law: public trust and the Massachusetts colonial ordinance.

  • Law & economics and tort law: a survey of scholarly opinion.

  • Just cheap butts, or an equal protection violation? New York's failure to tax reservation sales to non-Indians.

  • An examination of the New York State Board of Law Examiners' policy towards individuals with learning disabilities.

  • Regulating the Internet.

  • September 22, 1999

  • Air rage: choice of law for intentional torts occurring in flight over international waters.

  • LEGALIZING, DECOLONIZING, AND MODERNIZING NEW YORK STATE'S INDIAN LAW.

  • The new wild west: measuring and proving fame and dilution under the Federal Trademark Dilution Act.

  • Agreements to expand the scope of judicial review of arbitration awards.

  • Legal planning for gay, lesbian, and non-traditional elders.

  • Parents killing parents: creating a presumption of unfitness.

  • Finding the appropriate standard for employer liability in Title VII retaliation cases: an examination of the applicability of sexual harassment paradigms.

  • December 22, 1999

  • Justice for all? The Supreme Court's denial of pro se petitions for certiorari.

  • Justice David Josiah Brewer and the "Christian nation" maxim.

  • The misperception and ensuing error concerning the presumption of arbitrability in New York public employment.

  • Structuring corporate board action to meet the ever-decreasing scope of Revlon duties.

  • Are traditional agency principles effective for Internet transactions, given the lack of personal interaction?

  • The other family tree: leaving your legacy in a private foundation.

  • Redefining the right to reproduce: asserting infertility as a disability under the Americans with Disabilities Act.

  • Arbitration bodies should be considered tribunals under s. 1782.

  • The parameters of the substantial justification test as established by the Supreme Court in Lunding v. New York Tax Appeals Tribunal.

  • June 22, 2000

  • EDITOR'S FOREWORD.

  • PERSPECTIVES.

  • The Diallo case People v. Boss.

  • MEMORANDUM OF LAW OF REGIONAL NEWS NETWORK IN SUPPORT OF ITS MOTION FOR LIMITED INTERVENTION AND APPLICATION TO PROVIDE AUDIO-VISUAL COVERAGE OF TRIAL PROCEEDINGS.

  • The PEOPLE of the State of New York, Plaintiff, v. Kenneth BOSS, Sean Carroll, Edward McMellon and Richard Murphy, Defendants. In the Matter of Courtroom Television Network, Proposed Intervenor(*).

  • Free exercise in the states: belief, conduct, and judicial benchmarks.

  • State courts and school funding: a fifty-state analysis.

  • School finance reform litigation: Why are some state supreme courts activist and others restrained?

  • Expanding rights under state constitutions: a quantitative appraisal.

  • Gender, race, and partisanship on the Michigan Supreme Court.

  • Arrested development: an analysis of the Oregon Supreme Court's free speech jurisprudence in the post-Linde years.

  • A decade after Smith: an examination of the New York Court of Appeals' stance on the free exercise of religion in relation to Minnesota, Washington, and California.

  • June 22, 2001

  • Tribute to Justice Hans A. Linde.

  • A modest relativism.

  • A power of judicial ideas: a tribute to Justice Hans Linde.

  • Albany Law School on the High Court.

  • The failure of comparative proportionality review of capital cases (with lessons from New Jersey).

  • Traditional state interests and constitutional norms: impressive cases in conventional settings.

  • The Constitutional Commission in New York: a worthy tradition.

  • State constitutional reform: Is it necessary?

  • Public law at the New York Court of Appeals: an update on developments, 2000.

  • The calculus of dissent: a study of appellate division.

  • Death isn't welcome here: evaluating the federal death penalty in the context of a state constitutional objection to capital punishment.