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, 2009

  • Policing parole: the constitutional limits of back-end sentencing.

  • January 01, 2010

  • Complexities in legislative Suppression of diploma mills.

  • Academic integrity and legal scholarship in the wake of Exxon Shipping, footnote 17.

  • A movement, a lawsuit, and the integrity of sponsored law and economics research.

  • Combating the funding effect in science: what's beyond transparency?

  • Corporate manipulation of research: strategies are similar across five industries.

  • Academic fraud today: its social causes and institutional responses.

  • EC in D.C.: an analysis of Washington D.C.'s emergency contraception legislation.

  • Online voter registration in Oregon: towards an election administration triple bottom line.

  • A delicate balance: Connecticut's minimum water flow statute.

  • March 22, 2010

  • An examination of whether U.S. country of origin labeling legislation plays a role in protecting consumers from contaminated food.

  • Nutrient pollution from land applications of manure: discerning a remedy for pollution.

  • On (cr)edibility: why food in the United States may never be safe.

  • E pluribus unum: data and operations integration in the California criminal justice system.

  • Striking back: using death penalty cases to fight disproportionate sentences imposed under California's three strikes law.

  • Return to sender: responses to Professor Carrington et al. regarding four proposals for a Judiciary Act of 2009.

  • Imagining immigration without DOMA.

  • June 22, 2010

  • Labor law beyond U.S. borders: does what happens outside of America stay outside of America?

  • The ILO's Better Factories Cambodia program: a viable blueprint for promoting international labor rights?

  • The WTO distraction.

  • The evolution of labor provisions in U.S. free trade agreements: lessons learned and remaining questions examining the Dominican Republic-Central America-United States Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA-DR).

  • The ILO and the impact of labor standards: working on the ground after an ILO Commission of inquiry.

  • Extraterritoriality by other means: how labor law sneaks across borders, conquers minds, and controls workplaces abroad.

  • January 01, 2011

  • Lawyers at war.

  • Electronic surveillance in an era of modern technology and evolving threats to national security.

  • Indefinite detention under the laws of war.

  • Human shields in modern armed conflicts: the need for a proportionate proportionality.

  • Effect of the national security paradigm on criminal law.

  • PTSD in returning wounded warriors: ensuring medically appropriate evaluation and legal representation through legislative reform.

  • The new wages of war - devaluing death and injury: conceptualizing duty and employment in combat zones.

  • Thinking the unthinkable: has the time come to offer combatant immunity to non-state actors?

  • 'To care for him who shall have borne the battle': the recent development of veterans treatment courts in America.

  • All groundwater is local: California's new groundwater monitoring law.

  • January 01, 2012

  • Fighting the pornification of America by enforcing obscenity laws.

  • The obscenity conundrum, contingent harms, and constitutional consistency.

  • The obscenity conundrum, contingent harms, and constitutional consistency.

  • ICANN, the '.xxx' debate, and antitrust: the adult Internet industry's next challenge.

  • Sex exceptionalism in intellectual property.

  • Sex exceptionalism in intellectual property.

  • Shooting the messenger: an analysis of theories of criminal liability used against adult-themed online service providers.

  • An analysis of potential liability within the adult film industry stemming from industry practices related to sexually transmitted infections.

  • '(A)nything that forces itself into my vagina is by definition raping me ...' - adult film performers and occupational safety and health.

  • Trouble in Sin City: protecting sexy workers' civil rights.

  • March 22, 2012

  • Drawing voters back into the electoral process: why and how.

  • Drawing lines in shifting sands: the DOJ, the VRA, and the 2011 redistricting process.

  • Democrats at DOJ: why partisan use of the Voting Rights Act might not be so bad after all.

  • Seats, votes, citizens, and the one person, one vote problem.

  • Drafting proper short bill titles: do states have the answer?

  • The cure for what ails: a realistic remedy for the medical malpractice 'crisis'.

  • Reforming public pensions in Rhode Island.