Fordham Urban Law Journal

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COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved

from June 2001
Last Number: May 2023

Fordham Urban Law Journal
ISSN 0199-4646


Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 987

April 01, 2008

  • A civic republican view of hospital closures and community health planning.

  • The healthy Washington initiative: blue-ribbon process, red-herring result.

  • No scrutiny whatsoever: deconstitutionalization of poverty law, dual rules of law, & dialogic default.

  • Loose standards, tight lips: why easy access to client data can undermine homeless management information systems.

  • January 01, 2004

  • A tale of three Northern Manhattan communities: case studies of political empowerment in the planning and development process.

  • Blighting the way: urban renewal, economic development, and the elusive definition of blight.

  • Let them rent cake: George Pataki, market ideology, and the attempt to dismantle rent regulation in New York.

  • The continuing crisis in affordable housing: systemic issues requiring systemic solutions.

  • Leaders, followers, and free riders: the community lawyer's dilemma when representing non-democratic client organizations.

  • Catholic clergy sexual abuse meets the civil law.

  • The First Amendment: churches seeking sanctuary for the sins of the fathers.

  • The collision of church and state: a primer to beth din arbitration and the New York secular courts.

  • March 01, 2004

  • How much protection do injunctions against enforcement of allegedly unconstitutional statutes provide?

  • Winter count: taking stock of abortion rights after Casey and Carhart.

  • What Lawrence v. Texas says about the history and future of reproductive rights.

  • Saving Roe is not enough: when religion controls healthcare.

  • Econometric analyses of U.S. abortion policy: a critical review.

  • The abortion debate thirty years later: from choice to coercion.

  • Casey and its impact on abortion regulation.

  • Lethal experimentation on human beings: Roe's effect on bioethics.

  • March 01, 2005

  • Even more wrongful death: statutes divorced from reality.

  • The future of sodomy.

  • Sexual minorities, criminal justice, and the death penalty.

  • "Soft immutability" and "imputed gay identity": recent developments in transgender and sexual-orientation-based asylum law.

  • Uncharted territory: choosing an effective approach in transgender-based asylum claims.

  • Reflections on "public service in a time of crisis".

  • Pro bono writ large: the New York legal community's response to September 11.

  • Policing the police: the role of the courts and the prosecution.

  • The unbearable "lite"ness of history: American sodomy laws from Bowers to Lawrence and the ramifications of announcing a new past.

  • January 01, 2006

  • A return to eyes on the prize: litigating under the restored New York City Human Rights Law.

  • Newfound religion: mothers, God, and infanticide.

  • No penis, no problem.

  • Women as perpetrators: does motherhood have a reformative effect on prostitution?

  • Sex before violence: girls, dating violence, and (perceived) sexual autonomy.

  • The construction of pregnant drug-using women as criminal perpetrators.

  • Lessons unlearned: women offenders, the ethics of care, and the promise of restorative justice.

  • Mad women and desperate girls: infanticide and child murder in law and myth.

  • Sexual abuse of women in United States prisons: a modern corollary of slavery.

  • Rare and inconsistent: the death penalty for women.

  • Mother of atrocities: Pauline Nyiramasuhuko's role in the Rwandan genocide.

  • Revisiting Anna Moscowitz Kross's critique of New York City's Women's Court: the continued problem of solving the "problem" of prostitution with specialized criminal courts.

  • March 01, 2006

  • Prosecuting judges for ethical violations: are criminal sanctions constitutional and prudent, or do they constitute a threat to judicial independence?

  • Miranda, please report to the principal's office.

  • A lie for a lie: false confessions and the case for reconsidering the legality of deceptive interrogation techniques.

  • Loyalty's reward - a felony conviction: recent prosecutions of high-status female offenders.

  • Land use and housing policies to reduce concentrated poverty and racial segregation.

  • Applying the laws of logic to the logic of law.

  • May 01, 2006

  • Managing the regulatory state: the experience of the Bush administration.

  • Monetizing the benefits of risk and environmental regulation.

  • How much is that doggy in the window? The inevitably unsatisfying duty to monetize.