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, 2012

  • A blanket too short and too narrow: California's nonpartisan blanket primary.

  • March 22, 2013

  • Foreword.

  • The economics of legal education: a concern of colleagues.

  • January 01, 2014

  • The central-local relationship.

  • Local fiscal autonomy requires constraints: the case for fiscal menus.

  • Property taxes and their limits: evidence from New York City.

  • Housing changing households: regulatory challenges for micro-units and accessory dwelling units.

  • The new exclusionary zoning.

  • From urban renewal and displacement to economic inclusion: San Francisco affordable housing policy 1978-2014.

  • How a civil right to counsel can help dismantle concentrated poverty in America's inner cities.

  • The right to stay gay: SB 1172 and SOCE.

  • Arena development and environmental review reform under SB 743.

  • March 22, 2014

  • Prosecuting cyberterrorists: applying traditional jurisdictional frameworks to a modern threat.

  • Prosecuting cyberterrorists: applying traditional jurisdictional frameworks to a modern threat.

  • The law of cyber warfare: quo vadis?

  • Duck-rabbits and drones: legal indeterminacy in the war on terror.

  • Automated warfare.

  • The system of domestic counterterrorism law enforcement.

  • The Victims' Bill of Rights - thirty years under Proposition 8.

  • The Victims' Bill of Rights - thirty years under Proposition 8.

  • No prisoner left behind? Enhancing public transparency of penal institutions.

  • January 01, 2015

  • Protecting the children: when can schools restrict harmful student speech?

  • The reliability of assault victims' immediate accounts: evidence from trauma studies.

  • A community mental health model in corrections.

  • A reflection on the madness in prisons.

  • Judges as framers of plea bargaining.

  • Judges as framers of plea bargaining.

  • Involuntary outpatient commitment: the limits of prevention.

  • Involuntary outpatient commitment: the limits of prevention.

  • A reputational theory of corporate law.

  • A reputational theory of corporate law.

  • The conundrum of family reunification: a theoretical, legal, and practical approach to reunification services for parents with mental disabilities.

  • Deference (not equal to) abdication: application of Youngberg to prolonged seclusion and restraint of the mentally ill.

  • March 22, 2015

  • Constitutional contraction: religion and the Roberts court.

  • Addressing three problems in commentary on Catholics at the Supreme Court by reference to three decades of Catholic Bishops' amicus briefs.

  • The originalist case against vouchers: the First Amendment, religion, and American public education.

  • Markets in everything and another view of the cathedral: religious freedom and Coasian bargaining.

  • Post-Windsor prospects for morals legislation: the case of polygamous immigrants.

  • Archetypes of faith: how Americans see, and believe in, their Constitution.

  • What DNA can and cannot say: perspectives of immigrant families about the use of genetic testing in immigration.

  • A reversal of Pacific States in Article III garb.

  • Knowledge is power: assessing the legal challenges of teaching character in charter schools.

  • To protect and spy: the San Francisco Police Department & the Civil Rights Ordinance.

  • March 22, 2017

  • WHY SPORTS LAW?

  • THE AMATEURISM MYTH: A CASE FOR A NEW TRADITION.

  • CHANGING SEX/GENDER ROLES AND SPORT.

  • EMPLOYEE-ATHLETES, ANTITRUST, and the FUTURE OF COLLEGE SPORTS.

  • PROFESSIONAL SPORTS LEAGUES' BIG BET: 'EVOLVING' ATTITUDES ON GAMBLING.

  • January 01, 2018

  • THE SETTLEMENT PROBLEM IN PUBLIC INTEREST LAW.

  • GENDER SIDELINING AND THE PROBLEM OF UNACTIONABLE DISCRIMINATION.