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

June 22, 2002

  • In memoriam.

  • Tribute to justice Stanley Mosk.

  • Honoring the record service of justice Stanley Mosk, California Supreme Court (1964-present).

  • In defense of specific proportionality review.

  • The quest for privacy: state courts and an elusive right.

  • Political cycles of life and death: capital punishment as public policy in California.

  • The mandatory constitutional convention question referendum: the New York experience in national context.

  • The economics of shootouts: does the passage of capital punishment laws protect or endanger police officers?

  • Court of Appeals update, 2000 & 2001: conservative voting, narrow rulings.

  • Hugh Jones and modern courts: the pursuit of justice then and now.

  • Children's justice: the legislative and judicial career of Minnesota chief justice.

  • Choosing a "primacy" approach: Chief Justice Christine M. Durham advocating states rights in our federalist system.

  • Joyce L. Kennard: an independent streak on California's highest court.

  • March 22, 2003

  • A remarkable jurist.

  • A supreme justice.

  • Stanley G. Feldman: what one lawyer can do.

  • Stanley G. Feldman: federalism and the state courts.

  • Justice Stanley Feldman: an extraordinary judicial career.

  • State equal protection: its diverse guises and effects.

  • Disregarding intent: using statistical evidence to provide greater protection of the laws.

  • Federalism and the Florida Constitution: the self-inflicted wounds of thrown-away independence from the control of the U.S. Supreme Court.

  • Progressive federalism? A gay liberationist perspective.

  • "Joltin' Joe has left and gone away": the vanishing presumption against preemption.

  • De Tocqueville or Disney? The Rehnquist Court's idea of federalism. .

  • Horizontal federalism in the new judicial federalism: a preliminary look at citations.

  • The silver anniversary of new judicial federalism.

  • Federalism and the death penalty.

  • Perspective on American Library Association v. United States.

  • Leveraging federalism: the real meaning of the Rehnquist Court's federalism jurisprudence for states.

  • Michigan v. Long: a twenty year retrospective.

  • State supreme courts and judicial review of regulation.

  • New death penalty statue in Idaho.

  • Stare decisis v. the "new authority": the Michigan Supreme Court's practice of overruling precedent, 1998-2002.

  • The new southpaws: the turning of the Nevada Supreme Court's criminal decisions.

  • Liberal behind the label?: a comparative high court case study of the New Mexico Supreme Court from 1997-2002.

  • Revisiting Michigan v. Long after twenty years.

  • June 22, 2003

  • Teaching government law & policy in law school: reflections on twenty-five years of experience.

  • State laws and the independent judiciary: an analysis of the effects of the Seventeenth Amendment on the number of Supreme Court cases holding state laws unconstitutional.

  • Richard C. Wesley: voting and opinion patterns on the New York Court.

  • Public access to court records in New York: the experience under Uniform Rule 216.1 and the rule's future in a world of electronic filing.

  • Pioneer's big lie.

  • A closer look at the Pioneer Fund: response to Rushton.

  • How well do you know your computer? The level of scienter in 18 U.S.C. s. 1462.

  • Affecting commerce: post Lopez review of the Hobbs Act.

  • Indefinite detention: tipping the scale toward the liberty interest of freedom.

  • June 22, 1996

  • Libel in cyberspace: a framework for addressing liability and jurisdictional issues in this new frontier.

  • Buckley, Imbler and stare decisis: the present predicament of prosecutorial immunity and an end to its absolute means.

  • Very serious business: sense and nonsense under section 403(b) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986.

  • 'Fair rents' or 'forced subsidies' under rent regulation: finding a regulatory taking where legal fictions collide.

  • Article 18 of New York's General Municipal Law: the state conflicts of interest law for municipal officials.