Suffolk University Law Review

COPYRIGHT TV Trade Media, Inc.
COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved

from December 2007
Last Number: March 2023

Suffolk University Law School
ISSN 0039-4696


Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 508

February 01, 2013

  • Restitutionary recovery: the appropriate standard of care for emergency rescue reimbursement by hikers.

  • Constitutional law - Maryland District Court finds government's acquisition of historical cell site data immune from Fourth Amendment - United States v. Graham.

  • Constitutional law - Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court distinguishes Thompkins's unambiguous invocation requirement of right to remain silent - Commonwealth v. Clarke.

  • Constitutional law - Supreme Court of Minnesota upholds warrantless DNA sample of individual convicted of misdemeanor - State v. Johnson.

  • The stream of commerce flows on.

  • Reforming alimony: Massachusetts reconsiders postdivorce spousal support.

  • Targeted hate speech and the first amendment: how the supreme court should have decided Snyder.

  • Cluttered apartments and complicated tenancies: a collaborative intervention approach to tenant "hoarding" under the Fair Housing Act.

  • Where angels fear to tread: Islamic arbitration in probate and family law, a practical perspective.

  • Paper Tiger: the validity of CFTC position-limit rulemaking under Dodd-Frank.

  • What the founders did not see coming: the fourth amendment, digital evidence, and the plain view doctrine.

  • The doctor will see you for the last time now: physician-assisted suicide in Massachusetts.

  • Criminal law - First Circuit upholds restitution order without requiring evidence of defendant's causal contribution to victim's losses - United States v. Kearney.

  • A recipe for mistaken convictions: why federal rule of evidence 403 should be used to exclude unreliable eyewitness-identification evidence.

  • March 01, 2014

  • Having your cake and eating it, too: making the benefit corporation work in Massachusetts.

  • Constitutional law - search-incident-to-arrest exception to prohibition against warrantless searches inapplicable to cell phone searches - Smallwood v. State.

  • Planned Parenthood, nonprofit marketization, and law school employment-placement statistics: how three seemingly unrelated topics could potentially expand the scope of Chapter 93A of the Massachusetts General Laws.

  • Constitutional law - plain view observation of bullet warrants protective sweep of vehicle despite potential lawful explanations.

  • Does the SEC rule the job creation roost? Squaring SEC rulemaking with the JOBS Act's relaxation of the prohibition against general solicitation and advertising.

  • Constitutional law - evidence seized based on reasonable police mistake of law held admissible in North Carolina court - State v. Heien.

  • You're asking the wrong question - the effect of a licensor's rejection on the trademark license.

  • Saying "no" after Pleau: exploring the conflict between the Interstate Agreement on Detainers Act and the federal writ ad prosequendum.

  • From trash to treasure: converting America's contaminated land into renewable energy havens.

  • From trash to treasure: converting America's contaminated land into renewable energy havens.

  • Constitutional law - Fourth Circuit applies intermediate scrutiny to Second Amendment challenge - Woollard v. Gallagher.

  • Do the new pleading standards set out in Twombly and Iqbal meet the needs of the replica jurisdictions?

  • Tort law - no duty for physician to warn guards of inmate's communicable disease.

  • April 01, 2014

  • Bare-naked ladies (and gentlemen): analyzing protection of nude protesting under the First Amendment and state constitutions.

  • Abuse of diplomatic immunity in family courts: there's nothing diplomatic about domestic immunity.

  • The constitutional protection of information in a digital age.

  • An unexpected friend: liberalism's response to corporate political spending.

  • Pirate patents: arguing for improved biopiracy prevention and protection of indigenous rights through a new legislative model.

  • Connecting the spheres of trade and gender: creating a gender-conscious World Trade Organization.

  • Multifactors, multiconfusion? Refining "likelihood of confusion" factors for reverse-confusion trademark infringement claims to achieve more consistent and predictable results.

  • Patent law - first-sale doctrine does not extinguish patentee's rights in self-replicating organisms - Bowman v. Monsanto Co.

  • Evidence - admission of autopsy reports and surrogate testimony of medical examiners does not violate Confrontation Clause - United States v. James.

  • June 01, 2014

  • Securities law - Eighth Circuit rejects knowledge requirement in assessing civil liability for corporate executives who deceive auditors.

  • The Fourth Amendment and the intuitive relationship between child molestation and child pornography crimes.

  • Tax law - U.K. windfall tax constitutes U.S. income tax under I.R.C. 901(b) (1) - PPL Corp. v. Commissioner.

  • Ending the military's courts of criminal appeals de novo review of findings of fact.

  • Ending the military's courts of criminal appeals de novo review of findings of fact.

  • The EU-27, U.S., U.K., and China should dump cap-and-trade as a policy option and adopt a carbon tax with reinvestment to reduce global emissions.

  • The EU-27, U.S., U.K., and China should dump cap-and-trade as a policy option and adopt a carbon tax with reinvestment to reduce global emissions.

  • Resolving the cross-border discovery catch-22.

  • Transsexual prisoners and the Eighth Amendment: a reconsideration of Kosilek v. Spencer and why prison officials may not be constitutionally required to provide sex-reassignment surgery.

  • Frisky business: adapting New York City policing practices to ameliorate crime in modern day Chicago.

  • March 22, 2011

  • Exploring how municipal boards can settle appeals of their land use decisions within the framework of the Massachusetts open meeting law.

  • Constitutional law - Ninth Circuit characterizes taser as 'intermediate' level of force requiring justification of strong governmental interest.

  • But see Guiney: revisiting mandatory random suspicionless drug testing of Massachusetts public-sector safety-sensitive employees in light of house bill 2210.

  • 'You have the right to an attorney,' but not right now: combating Miranda's failure by advancing the point of attachment under article XII of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights.