Albany Law Review

COPYRIGHT TV Trade Media, Inc.
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

September 22, 2005

  • United States policy and practice for the detention of enemy combatants in the war on terror.

  • March 22, 2006

  • Matthew J. Jasen, 1915-2006: in this issue.

  • Eulogy for Matthew J. Jasen.

  • A tribute to Judge Matthew Jasen.

  • The Honorable Matthew J. Jasen.

  • "Honor the craft": personal reflections on the judicial legacy of the Honorable Matthew J. Jasen.

  • A tribute to Honorable Matthew Joseph Jasen, (1915-2006) court of appeals (1968-1985).

  • Ordinary and enhanced rational basis review in the Massachusetts supreme judicial court: a preliminary investigation.

  • Free exercise of speech in shopping malls: bases that support an independent interpretation of article 40 of the Maryland declaration of rights.

  • Advances and departures in the criminal law of the states: a selective critique.

  • Indiana's constitution as a document of special aspirations.

  • Jurisdiction creep and the Florida Supreme Court.

  • The New Jersey constitution: positive rights, common law entitlements, and state action.

  • No guessing allowed: Washington rejects proportionate deduction in election contests.

  • Wringing rights out of the mountains: Colorado's centennial constitution and the ambivalent promise of human rights and social equality.

  • Vermont's tradition of education and the Vermont constitution.

  • New Hampshire: "live free or die," but in the meantime ...

  • June 22, 2006

  • Aristotle, Cicero and Cardozo: a perspective on external law.

  • Four mistakes in the debate on "outsourcing authority".

  • Citing foreign and international law to interpret the constitution: what's the point?

  • Foreign law and opinion in state courts.

  • To understand foreign court citation: dissecting originalism, dynamism, romanticism, and consequentialism.

  • Briefly resuscitating the great writ: the International Court of Justice and the U.S. death penalty.

  • The Supreme Court and international relations theory.

  • Contemporary foreign and international law in constitutional construction.

  • "A decent respect to the opinions of mankind": referring to foreign law to express American nationhood.

  • Citation by U.S. courts to decisions of international tribunals in international trade cases.

  • New York at a crossroads: sustaining a government reform agenda on the frontlines with executive, legislative and judicial reform initiatives.

  • Albany Law Review symposium: refinement or reinvention, the state of reform in New York: the courts.

  • Government reform from an executive perspective.

  • Why should I have to tell them? The necessary role of the judiciary in achieving reform.

  • The necessity for constitutional change.

  • New York's immediate need for a psychotherapist-patient privilege encompassing psychiatrists, psychologists, and social workers.

  • Unwise and unnecessary: statutory caps on non-economic damages in medical malpractice cases and the appellate review alternative.

  • September 22, 2006

  • Posthumous paternity testing: a proposal to amend EPTL 4-1.2(a) (2) (D).

  • The interaction of law and psychiatry: a voyage over the ages.

  • Minnesota Republican Party v. White and the future of state judicial selection.

  • From proxy to principle: fraudulent joinder reconsidered.

  • Justice Jackson's draft opinions in The Steel Seizure Cases.

  • Taking private property to build an urban sports arena: a valid exercise of eminent domain powers?

  • Trustee-beneficiaries, creditors, and New York's EPTL: the surprises that result and how the UTC solves them.

  • Controlling conduct: the emerging protection of sodomy in the military.

  • June 22, 2007

  • Tribute to Judith S. Kaye.

  • Dedication to Judith S. Kaye.

  • Now and always our chief: the honorable Judith S. Kaye.

  • Honoring Chief Judge Judith S. Kaye.

  • State Constitutional Law and the state high courts in the 21st century: February 16, 2007.

  • Forgotten law and judicial duty.

  • Changing roles: the Supreme Court and the state high courts in safeguarding rights.

  • The role of ideology in the selection of appellate judges.