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

April 01, 2006

  • William Rehnquist and Sandra Day O'Connor: an expression of appreciation.

  • Response.

  • A tribute to Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist.

  • For the chief.

  • The Chief as teacher.

  • Learning life's lessons.

  • Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist: prizing people, place, and history.

  • Justice Sandra Day O'Connor: no insurmountable hurdles.

  • Speeding up to smell the roses.

  • A wise justice, and a great boss.

  • In-version.

  • Lessons from working for Sandra Day O'Connor.

  • William Rehnquist, the separation of powers, and the riddle of the Sphinx.

  • The assumptions of federalism.

  • The federalism decisions of Justices Rehnquist and O'Connor: is half a loaf enough?

  • Young Mr. Rehnquist's theory of moral rights - mostly observed.

  • You've come a long way, baby: Rehnquist's new approach to pregnancy discrimination in Hibbs.

  • Problems with minimalism.

  • Freedom of expressive association and government subsidies.

  • The Rehnquist Court at twilight: the lures and perils of split-the-difference jurisprudence.

  • Contemporary theories of rights.

  • March 01, 2007

  • Keynote address.

  • Should international law be part of our law?

  • Why Justice Scalia should be a constitutional comparativist ... sometimes.

  • Condorcet and the Constitution: a response to the law of other states.

  • On learning from others.

  • My perceptions on the Iraqi constitutional process.

  • Terrorism and trial by jury: the vices and virtues of British and American criminal law.

  • Equality in the war on terror.

  • Keeping control of terrorists without losing control of constitutionalism.

  • April 01, 2007

  • The rise of independent directors in the United States, 1950-2005: of shareholder value and stock market prices.

  • Should we have lay justices?

  • Criminal procedure within the firm.

  • Genomics and toxic torts: dismantling the risk-injury divide.

  • Not a Suicide Pact: The Constitution in a Time of National Emergency.

  • Immunity for immunizations: tort liability, biodefense, and bioshield II.

  • A problem of proof: how routine destruction of court records routinely destroys a statutory remedy.

  • April 01, 2008

  • The market for bad legal advice: academic professional responsibility consulting as an example.

  • The market for bad legal scholarship: William H. Simon's experiment in professional regulation.

  • Transparency is the solution, not the problem: a reply to Bruce Green.

  • Legal barriers to innovation: the growing economic cost of professional control over corporate legal markets.

  • "If you can't join 'em, beat 'em!" The rise and fall of the black corporate law firm.

  • The rise and fall of the WASP and Jewish law firms.

  • The elastic tournament: a second transformation of the big law firm.

  • Professional independence in the Office of the Attorney General.

  • Lawfare and legal ethics in Guantanamo.

  • Public interest law: the movement at midlife.

  • Supply, demand, and the changing economics of large law firms.

  • Doctrines without borders: the "new" Israeli exclusionary rule and the dangers of legal transplantation.

  • May 01, 2000

  • President's Pages.