Stanford Law Review

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COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved

from November 1998
Last Number: June 2023

Stanford Law School
ISSN 0038-9765


Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 1000

June 01, 2002

  • The profession and the public interest.

  • May 01, 2003

  • Clarification.

  • Foreword: on American Exceptionalism.

  • Compulsory licensing and the duty of good faith in TRIPS.

  • International delegations, the structural Constitution, and non-self-execution.

  • The International Criminal Court and the political economy of antitreaty discourse.

  • Navigating law and politics: the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court and the independent counsel.

  • Liberal democracy and cosmopolitan duty.

  • The new confederalism: treaty delegations of legislative, executive, and judicial authority.

  • Toward an institutional theory of sovereignty.

  • Does power trump law?

  • The cost of commitment.

  • Human rights and constitutional rights: harmony and dissonance.

  • Do states have a moral obligation to obey international law?

  • Adding insult to injury: questioning the role of dignity in conceptions of sovereignty.

  • International agreements and the political safeguards of federalism.

  • Treaties, international law, and constitutional rights.

  • Relational sovereignty.

  • Unsigning.

  • The end of sovereignty and the new humanism.

  • June 01, 2003

  • An introduction to legal thought: four approaches to law and to the allocation of body parts.

  • Should the EPA regulate under TSCA and FIFRA to protect foreign environments from chemicals used in the United States?

  • Cultural rights and the immutability requirement in disparate impact doctrine.

  • The need for coherence: states' civil commitment of sex offenders in the wake of Kansas v. Crane.

  • Foreword: revisioning the constellations of critical race theory, law and economics, and empirical scholarship.

  • Developing a taste for not being discriminated against.

  • Prevention perspectives on "different" kinds of discrimination: from attacking different "isms" to promoting acceptance in critical race theory, law and economics, and empirical research.

  • Taking measures.

  • The elusive nature of discrimination.

  • Is discrimination elusive?

  • Subject unrest.

  • April 01, 2004

  • Much respect: toward a hip-hop theory of punishment.

  • Too severe?: a defense of the federal sentencing guidelines (and a critique of federal mandatory minimums).

  • The Constitution and punishment.

  • Punishing hatred and prejudice.

  • Convictions and doubts: retribution, representation, and the debate over felon disenfranchisement.

  • Updating the study of punishment.

  • Domination & dissatisfaction: prosecutors as sentencers.

  • The social and moral cost of mass incarceration in African American communities.

  • On lawful lawlessness: George Ryan, executive clemency, and the rhetoric of sparing life.

  • May 01, 2004

  • Reducing digital copyright infringement without restricting innovation.

  • Inequitable injunctions: the scandal of private judging in the U.S. courts.

  • Issues of method in analyzing the policy response to emergencies.

  • Emergencies and political change: a reply to Tushnet.

  • Unequal protection: comparing former felons' challenges to disenfranchisement and employment discrimination.

  • The Death Penalty: An American History.

  • January 01, 1999

  • The private law of race and sex: an antebellum perspective.

  • Why start-ups?

  • Impeachment and the Independent Counsel: a dysfunctional union.

  • Where is the common knowledge? Empirical support for requiring expert testimony in sexual harassment trials.