Suffolk University Law Review

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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

September 22, 2014

  • Evidence - admitting prior conviction for drug possession in later prosecution for drug distribution is reversible error - United States v. Lee.

  • January 01, 2015

  • Cocktails on campus: are libations a liability?

  • Cocktails on campus: are libations a liability?

  • In memoriam: Honorable John E. Fenton, Jr.: remembering an extraordinary teacher, leader, and friend.

  • Schools, worship, and the First Amendment.

  • Schools, worship, and the First Amendment.

  • Vermont vs. the patent troll: is state action a bridge too far?

  • Crowdfunding & investor education: empowering investors to mitigate risk & prevent fraud.

  • In memoriam: Honorable John E. Fenton, Jr., a teacher and friend extraordinaire.

  • Let's not frack this up: state-based solutions for the regulation of hydraulic fracturing and the disposal of flowback water.

  • The freedom to be "converted"? An analysis of the First Amendment implications of laws banning sexual orientation change efforts.

  • Containing cell phones? Restoring the balance between privacy and government interests in Fourth Amendment cell phone searches and seizures.

  • A change of Hart: an argument favoring the transformative use test in right-of-publicity cases.

  • Free speech, free press, free religion? The clash between the Affordable Care Act and the for-profit, secular corporation.

  • January 01, 2016

  • How the SEC's crowdfunding rules for funding portals save the two-headed snake: drawing the proper balance between integrity and cost.

  • Congressional funding speaks louder than presidential words: cold, hard cash versus the recognition power.

  • If the shoe fits: sizing up the applicability of IvI exclusions to the FDIC.

  • The puzzling persistence of acquitted conduct in federal sentencing, and what can be done about it.

  • Brought back to life: Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court resuscitates parole eligibility for juveniles convicted of first degree murder.

  • Are you afraid of the dark? How the New York Attorney General is shedding light on dark pools and high frequency trading.

  • Overdosing on authority: negative side effects of the FDA's proposal for generic label changes may include increased costs and liabilities.

  • War and justiciability.

  • March 22, 2016

  • Can you hear me now? Time to consider whether cell phone providers are state actors.

  • Experience, not logic: adapting spoliation doctrine to the brave new world of digital documents.

  • Data after death: an examination into heirs' access to a decedent's private online account.

  • Patent law - divided infringement of method claims: Federal Circuit broadens direct infringement liability, retains single entity restriction - Akamai Technologies, Incorporated v. Limelight Networks, Incorporated.

  • Post-Lexmark: status of prudential standing in patent law.

  • Fertile ground for corruption: implementing the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act in the fragmented state of Afghanistan.

  • The crusade against misleading labels: are manufacturers the protectors of consumer interests?

  • June 22, 2016

  • Process without procedure: national security letters and First Amendment rights.

  • The world of content neutrality: effective approaches to a problematic area of the First Amendment.

  • The "PEAC" of digital estate legislation in the United States: should states "like" that?

  • Rationed justice.

  • September 22, 2016

  • Trademark law.

  • How concerned should we be? The conundrum of Kiobel's touch and concern test and corporate liability under the Alien Tort Statute.

  • The current state of digitized images necessitates congressional action to protect authors and content providers from online infringement.

  • Business law.

  • Williams plurality relies on inherently unreliable forensic evidence: confrontation clause analyses across the nation in disarray.

  • January 01, 2017

  • Planning your career in law practice.

  • Ab(ju)dication: how procedure defeats civil liberties in the "War on Terror".

  • Human capital contracts and bankruptcy: balancing the equities between exception to discharge and the opportunity to prove undue hardship.

  • Keeping Laches: the loss of the Laches Defense in copyright infringement cases does not mean depriving patent attorneys of the time-honored defense.

  • Selfie-informed voting: how the ballot selfie contributes to rational ignorance.

  • Evolution of the trial advocate: from Quintilian to Quanta in the contemporary courtroom.

  • Expanding the executive branch's foreign relations power: an analysis of the Iran nuclear agreement.

  • A new structured rule of reason approach for high-tech markets.

  • Cybersecurity reform in the wake of the OPM breach.

  • January 01, 2019

  • Remembering a Renowned Teacher, Inspirational Human Being, and Cherished Friend.

  • Proving the Point: Connections Between Legal and Mathematical Reasoning.

  • Delegating the Administration of Justice: The Need to Update the Federal Arbitration Act.