Stanford Law Review

COPYRIGHT TV Trade Media, Inc.
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

April 01, 2000

  • Goodbye to Hammurabi: analyzing the atavistic appeal of restorative justice.

  • Gender, violence, race, and criminal justice.

  • Prosecuting violence/reconstructing community.

  • A presumption of innocence, not of even odds.

  • The death of contra.

  • Sex and the peremptory strike: an empirical analysis.

  • Unleashing the limited public forum: a modest revision to a dysfunctional doctrine.

  • Sovereignty: Organized Hypocrisy.

  • April 01, 2001

  • The First Amendment's purpose.

  • Market discrimination and groups.

  • Understanding the reasons for and impact of legislatively mandated benefits for selected workers.

  • Resuscitating the constitutional "theory" of academic freedom: a search for a standard beyond Pickering and Connick.

  • Father time: flexible work arrangements and the law firm's failure of the family.

  • Of kitsch and kachinas: a critical analysis of the Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990.

  • Counting on the Census? Race, Group Identity, and the Evasion of Politics.

  • April 01, 2002

  • Statutes with multiple personality disorders: the value of ambiguity in statutory design and interpretation.

  • Pragmatism versus purposivism in First Amendment analysis.

  • A reply to Posner.

  • Forcible medication of mentally ill criminal defendants: the case of Russell Eugene Weston, Jr.

  • Brown footnote eleven in historical context: social science and the supreme court's quest for legitimacy.

  • Republic.com.

  • April 01, 2003

  • Engineering a venture capital market: lessons from the American experience.

  • The language of property: form, context, and audience.

  • Shooting down the "more guns, less crime" hypothesis.

  • Confirming "more guns, less crime".

  • The latest misfires in support of the "More Guns, Less Crime" hypothesis.

  • Screening versus plea bargaining: exactly what are we trading off?

  • Honesty and opacity in charge bargains.

  • Patriotic or unconstitutional? The mandatory detention of aliens under the USA Patriot Act.

  • The Rehnquist Choice: The Untold Story of the Nixon Appointment That Redefined the Supreme Court.

  • February 01, 2004

  • Liability rules for constitutional rights: the case of mass detentions.

  • Toward a new constitutional anatomy.

  • Architecture of consent: Internet protocols and their legal implications.

  • Fourth Amendment yard work: curtilage's mow-line rule.

  • March 01, 2005

  • Defining dicta.

  • Crime-facilitating speech.

  • The USPTO's proposal of a biological research tool patent pool doesn't hold water.

  • From Jim Crow to Civil Rights: The Supreme Court and the Struggle for Racial Equality.

  • February 01, 2006

  • Separation of powers and the criminal law.

  • Outside director liability.

  • What the right of publicity can learn from trademark law.

  • Realizing two-tiered innovation policy through drug regulation.

  • Defining the boundaries of "personal injury": Rainer v. Union Carbide Corp.

  • February 01, 2007

  • The second-order structure of immigration law.

  • Choosing immigrants, making citizens.

  • Taking compensation private.

  • Are congressionally authorized wars perverse?

  • The (unnoticed) demise of the doctrine of equivalents.

  • "A nation of minorities": race, ethnicity, and reactionary colorblindness.

  • The law of falling objects: Byrne v. Boadle and the birth of res ipsa loquitur.