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, 2013

  • Avoiding contractual liability to baseball players who have used performance enhancing drugs: can we knock it out of the park?

  • Fractured communities: hydraulic fracturing and the law in New York state.

  • Hydrofracking and home rule: defending and defining an anti-preemption canon of statutory construction in New York.

  • At the intersection of Wall Street and Main: impacts of hydraulic fracturing on residential property interests, risk allocation, and implications for the secondary mortgage market.

  • Gas transmission facilities: the limits on home rule.

  • The thirst of fracking: regulating to protect the linchpin of the natural gas boom.

  • June 22, 2014

  • Editor's foreword.

  • Dedication.

  • Exceeding federal standards.

  • Exceeding federal standards.

  • Judicial independence: is it preserved or impaired by the election of judges?

  • New York State constitutional law - today unquestionably accepted and applied as a vital and essential part of New York jurisprudence.

  • Do precedents take precedence? Stare decisis and Oregon constitutionalism.

  • Realigning the constitutional pendulum.

  • Constitutional "stuff": house cleaning the New York Constitution.

  • Constitutional "stuff": house cleaning the New York Constitution.

  • Avoiding the appearance of impropriety: Missouri and Kansas Supreme Court decisions on the constitutionality of caps on noneconomic damages demonstrate the need for objective procedures in the selection of special judges.

  • Balancing the Sixth Amendment on the scales of justice: is the lawyer or the client in control of the proceedings?

  • Stops, frisks, and police encounters: the New York Court of Appeals's strict application of the De Bour standard.

  • Restraining notices.

  • Restraining notices.

  • Restraining notices.

  • Restraining notices.

  • "Our constitution, our precedents, and (our) own best human judgments": a survey of free exercise state constitutional interpretation in the wake of Oregon v. Smith.

  • September 22, 2014

  • Dedication.

  • Parting shots.

  • In support of an implied state constitutional free speech tort in public employment retaliation cases.

  • In support of an implied state constitutional free speech tort in public employment retaliation cases.

  • The Court of Appeals cracks open the small door to more whistleblower claims under the New York Labor Law.

  • Can New York City govern itself? The incongruity of the Court of Appeals' recent cases regarding regulation of New York City by New York City.

  • The preservation rule in the New York Court of Appeals: how recent decisions and characterizations of the rule inform advocacy.

  • Norex v. Blavatnik - how the Court of Appeals "borrowed" first and "saved" later.

  • Reforming New York Labor Law section 240(1).

  • What 'tough on crime' looks like: how George Pataki transformed the New York State Court of Appeals.

  • What "tough on crime" looks like: how George Pataki transformed the New York State Court of Appeals.

  • That's (not) what she said: the case for expanding admission of prior inconsistent statements in New York criminal trials.

  • December 22, 2014

  • Tribute to David D. Siegel.

  • Mentor to the profession: David D. Siegel.

  • Professor David D. Siegel: amicus curiae-a special relationship with the Court of Appeals.

  • The king of New York practice.

  • Drug diversion administrative revocation and application hearings for medical and pharmacy practitioners: a primer for navigating murky, drug-infested waters.

  • Drug diversion administrative revocation and application hearings for medical and pharmacy practitioners: a primer for navigating murky, drug-infested waters.

  • First-time offender, productive offender, offender with dependents: why the profile of offenders (sometimes) matters in sentencing.

  • Support the troops: renewing angst over Massachusetts v. Laird and endowing service members with effectual First and Fifth Amendment rights.

  • Support the troops: renewing angst over Massachusetts v. Laird and endowing service members with effectual First and Fifth Amendment rights.

  • Grim fairy tales: studies of wicked stepmothers, poisoned apples, and the elective share.

  • Embracing disruption: how technological change in the delivery of legal services can improve access to justice.

  • Embracing disruption: how technological change in the delivery of legal services can improve access to justice.

  • When every drop counts: addressing hydrologic connectivity as a climate change issue.

  • It's time to confess that Brown v. Illinois isn't working: purging the taint from the Supreme Court's attenuation jurisprudence.