Stanford Law & Policy Review

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COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved

from January 2007
Last Number: June 2023

Stanford Law School
ISSN 1044-4386




Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 236

March 22, 2011

  • The new frontier of public safety.

  • Captive constituents: prison-based gerrymandering and the current redistricting cycle.

  • Normative elements of parole risk.

  • American prison culture in an international context: an examination of prisons in America, the Netherlands, and Israel.

  • Foreigners in a carceral age: immigration and imprisonment in the United States.

  • Bringing transparency and accountability to criminal justice institutions in the South.

  • The passage and implementation of the Prison Rape Elimination Act: legal endogeneity and the uncertain road from symbolic law to instrumental effects.

  • The origins of back-end sentencing in California: a dispatch from the archives.

  • The efficacy of severe child pornography sentencing: empirical validity or political rhetoric?

  • Rethinking indirect victim eligibility for U non-immigrant visas to better protect immigrant families and communities.

  • A critical appraisal of the Department of Justice's new approach to medical marijuana.

  • January 01, 2011

  • Debt to society? The Washington State Legislature's efforts to restore voting rights to persons with felony convictions.

  • June 22, 2010

  • Tribute to professor Brian Bercusson.

  • March 22, 2012

  • Communities and the California Commission.

  • Communities and the California Commission.

  • Redistricting in today's shifting racial landscape.

  • January 01, 2012

  • The secondary-effects doctrine: stripping away First Amendment freedoms.

  • January 01, 2013

  • The defenseless marriage act: the legitimacy of President Obama's refusal to defend DOMA s. 3.

  • No such thing as a free lunch: paternalism, poverty, and food justice.

  • No such thing as a free lunch: paternalism, poverty, and food justice.

  • Eliminating regulatory reliance on credit ratings: restoring the strength of reputational concerns.

  • Preserving Roe v. Wade ... when you win only half the loaf.

  • Standing for something.

  • The upside of abortion disclosure laws.

  • Roe's ragged remnant: viability.

  • Roe v. Wade's 40th Anniversary: a moment of truth for the antiabortion-rights movement?

  • Cristina's world: lessons from El Salvador's ban on abortion.

  • March 22, 2013

  • The failure of Crits and Leftist law professors to defend progressive causes.

  • Things that I learned during my first year on the bench that I wish I had known as a trial lawyer.

  • No law student left behind.

  • Knots in the pipeline for prospective lawyers of color: the LSAT is not the problem and affirmative action is not the answer.

  • Law school training: bridging the gap between legal education and the practice of law.

  • Getting real about globalization and legal education: potential and perspectives for the U.S.

  • Crises, crisis rhetoric, and competition in legal education: a sociological perspective on the (latest) crisis of the legal profession and legal education.

  • Regulating lawyers in a liberalized legal services market: the role of education and training.

  • Not in my digital backyard: Proposition 35 and California's sex offender username registry.

  • Making an urban agriculture small business sector feasible in San Francisco: a "Williamson Act" for California's cities.

  • Advisory initiatives as a cure for the ills of direct democracy? A case study of Montana Initiative 166.

  • January 01, 2007

  • Introduction.

  • Limiting progress of science and useful arts: legislating as a means of enhancing market leverage.

  • Technology unbound: will funded libertarianism dominate the future?

  • The government at the standards bazaar.

  • The penguin's paradox: the political economy of international intellectual property and the paradox of open intellectual property models.

  • Stem cell research and the cloning wars.

  • As the Enterprise Wheel turns: new evidence on the finality of labor arbitration awards.

  • March 22, 2007

  • Introduction.

  • Boundary-based restrictions in boundless broadcast media markets: McConnell v. FEC's underinclusive overbreadth analysis.

  • So there are campaign contribution limits that are too low.

  • The politics of faith: rethinking the prohibition on political campaign intervention.

  • Defining 'partisan' law enforcement.