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, 2009

  • Cultural inversion and the one-drop rule: an essay on biology, racial classification, and the rhetoric of racial transcendence.

  • Computer games, racial pleasure, and discursive racial spaces.

  • Cultivating race: how the science and technology of agriculture preserves race in the global economy.

  • On race theory and norms.

  • Critical race feminist bioethics: telling stories in law school and medical school in pursuit of "cultural competency".

  • Transnational dimensions of race in America.

  • On account of race or color: race as corporation and the original understanding of race.

  • Defining race through law: enforcing the social norms of power and privilege.

  • Laying down the law: post-racialism and the deracination project.

  • Shattered: afterword for defining race, a joint symposium of the Albany Law Review and the Albany Journal of Science and Technology.

  • Four problems facing meaningful state health care reform and coverage in the United States.

  • Understanding race: the evolution of the meaning of race in American Law and the impact of DNA technology on its meaning in the future.

  • Endangering the Endangered Species Act: National Association of Home Builders v. Defenders of Wildlife and its threat to the survival of endangered species protection.

  • January 01, 2010

  • Main Street, Wall Street, and K Street: regulating financial markets in New York and beyond.

  • "Eating your seed corn": a note on New York State's fiscal policy from Lieutenant Governor Ravitch.

  • What the financial services industry puts together let no person put asunder: how the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act contributed to the 2008-2009 American capital markets crisis.

  • Transparency and bank supervision.

  • So you think you want to buy a bank?

  • Banks and brokers and bricks and clicks: an evaluation of FINRA's proposal to modify the "bank broker-dealer rule".

  • Review of the policy debate over short sale regulation during the market crisis.

  • RAND Institute for Civil Justice report on the abuse of medical diagnostic practices in mass tort litigation: lessons learned from the "phantom" silica epidemic that may deter litigation screening abuse.

  • Calling their shots: miffed minor leaguers, the steroid scandal, and examining the use of section 1 of the Sherman Act to hold MLB accountable.

  • After the storm: unmasking publicly-traded private equity firms to create value through shareholder democracy.

  • Aiding and abetting, a Madoff family affair: why secondary actors should be held accountable for securities fraud through the restoration of the private right of action for aiding and abetting liability under the federal securities laws.

  • March 22, 2010

  • New York appeals: a new tradition.

  • A tribute to presiding Justice Anthony V. Cardona: a great jurist and dynamic leader of the Appellate Division, Third Department.

  • A tribute to presiding Justice Anthony V. Cardona: the core values of courtesy and respect displayed in jurisprudence and court administration.

  • A tribute to presiding Justice Anthony V. Cardona: vision and resolve.

  • A tribute to presiding justice Anthony V. Cardona: a jurist who has always sought to "do the right thing" in the law and in life.

  • Skelos v. Paterson: the surprisingly strong case for the governor's surprising power to appoint a lieutenant governor.

  • The Court of Appeals's decision in Godfrey v. Spano: a troubling exercise of indecision.

  • Line in the sand: progressive lawyering, "master communities," and a battle for affordable housing in New York City.

  • If the system is not working let's fix it: why seven judges are better than one for deciding criminal leave applications at the Court of Appeals.

  • A nullity or not? The status of a default judgment entered absent compliance with CPLR 3215(f).

  • Dependent upon the kindness of strangers: the circumstances in which a non-appellant may be awarded affirmative relief in the New York Courts.

  • CPLR 3126 conditional orders requiring disclosure "can't get no respect".

  • Toward the Lippman Court: flux and transition at New York's Court of Appeals.

  • Chief Judge Jonathan Lippman: a new era.

  • Judge Carmen Beauchamp Ciparick: a glimpse into the senior associate judge's judicial philosophy through her dissents.

  • Judge Victoria A. Graffeo: committed, conservative, collegial.

  • How to win the Read vote: a profile of the statutory interpretation method of associate judge Susan P. Read from a practical viewpoint.

  • The independent jurist: an analysis of judge Robert S. Smith's dissenting opinions.

  • The pert perpender: associate Judge Eugene F. Pigott, Jr.'s journey from Buffalo to Rochester and Albany.

  • Theodore T. Jones, the defendant's champion: reviewing a sample of Judge Jones's criminal jurisprudence.

  • The Albany nine: recognizing Albany Law School's Alumni Justices of the Third Department.

  • June 22, 2010

  • Wrongful convictions then and now: lessons to be learned.

  • A conviction integrity initiative.

  • Extraordinary wrongful convictions, ordinary errors - why measurement matters.

  • False confessions.

  • Adversaries as allies: joining together to prevent criminal injustice.