Washington University Law Review

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COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved

from May 2008
Last Number: August 2023

Washington University, School of Law
ISSN 2166-8000




Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 659

December 01, 2010

  • New twists on an old plot: investors look to avoid the wash sale rule by harvesting tax losses with exchange-traded funds.

  • The scope of Congress's Thirteenth Amendment enforcement power after City of Boerne v. Flores.

  • Measuring the true cost of government bailout.

  • Tremendous upside potential: how a high-school basketball player might challenge the National Basketball Association's eligibility requirements.

  • Justice Souter and the civil rules.

  • January 01, 2011

  • What Elena Kagan could have and should have said (and still have been confirmed).

  • Elena Kagan can't say that: the sorry state of public discourse regarding constitutional interpretation.

  • What Elena Kagan could have and should have said (and still have been confirmed): a reply.

  • May 01, 2011

  • Constitutional rights and judicial independence: lessons from Iowa.

  • December 01, 2010

  • In search of a theory of deference: the Eighth Amendment, democratic pedigree, and constitutional decision making.

  • January 01, 2011

  • The political Fourth Amendment.

  • Just negotiation.

  • ERISA & uncertainty.

  • Kimbrough, Spears, and categorical rejection: the latest additions to the family of federal sentencing policy cases.

  • The scope of "plaintiffs' harm" in environmental preliminary injunctions.

  • March 01, 2011

  • A tisket, a tasket: basketing and corporate tax shelters.

  • Overcoming tradeoffs in the taxation of punitive damages.

  • Natural law and the rhetoric of empire: Reynolds v. United States, polygamy, and imperialism.

  • Sucking the air out of wind energy: nuisance litigation and its effect on wind energy development.

  • From preservative to transformative: squaring socioeconomic rights with liberty and the American constitutional framework.

  • How the U.S. government's market activities can bolster mobile banking abroad.

  • May 01, 2011

  • Using litigation to address violence in urban public schools.

  • Rationalizing costs in investment treaty arbitration.

  • Disentangling child pornography from child sex abuse.

  • Cooperation's cost.

  • Sweet dreams aren't made of these: how the VA's disability compensation program leaves veterans alone in the nightmare of posttraumatic stress disorder.

  • Shake and bake: the meth threat and the need to rethink 21 U.S.C.

  • July 01, 2011

  • The "youngest profession": consent, autonomy, and prostituted children.

  • A realist defense of the Alien Tort Statute.

  • Jurisdiction by cross-reference.

  • Purging contempt: eliminating the distinction between civil and criminal contempt.

  • How the professional judgment standard could undermine the validity of sexually violent predator laws.

  • Revisiting class-based affirmative action in government contracting.

  • Executive weapons to combat infection of the art market.

  • September 01, 2011

  • Why is the Japanese Supreme Court so conservative?

  • Why has judicial review failed in Japan?

  • Constitutional adjudication in Japan: context, structures, and values.

  • Stealth activism: norm formation by Japanese courts.

  • The Supreme Court of Japan: commentary on the recent work of scholars in the United States.

  • The Japanese Constitution as law and the legitimacy of the Supreme Court's constitutional decisions: a response to Matsui.

  • Judicialization of politics and the Japanese Supreme Court.

  • Looking through the wrong end of the telescope: the Japanese judicial response to steel partners, Murakami, and Horie.

  • "Chosakan": research judges toiling at the stone fortress.

  • The role of precedent at Japan's Supreme Court.

  • Constitutional precedents in Japan: a comment on the role of precedent.

  • Do school cliques dominate Japanese bureaucracies? Evidence from Supreme Court appointments.

  • Reserved seats on Japan's Supreme Court.

  • The Supreme Court and the push for transparency in lower court appointments in Japan.

  • Judicial recruitment and promotion: responses to professors Ramseyer and Repeta.

  • Concerning the Japanese public's evaluation of Supreme Court justices.