Washington University Law Review

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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

May 01, 2010

  • PICS, Grutter, and elite public secondary education: using race as a means in selective admissions.

  • Left behind, and then pushed out: charting a jurisprudential framework to remedy illegal student exclusions.

  • Closing the legislative experience gap: how a legislative law clerk program will benefit the legal profession and Congress.

  • July 01, 2010

  • Financing the next Silicon Valley.

  • Complimentary discrimination and complementary discrimination in faculty hiring.

  • The procedural foundation of substantive law.

  • Left behind: the paternalistic treatment of status offenders within the juvenile justice system.

  • Administrative monopoly and China's new Anti-Monopoly Law: lessons from Europe's state aid doctrine.

  • The case for employee referenda on transformative transactions as shareholder proposals.

  • September 01, 2010

  • A no-excuse approach to transitional justice: reparations as tools of extraordinary justice.

  • Teaching teachers about teaching students.

  • Supervision and collaboration requirements: the vulnerability of nurse practitioners and its implications for retail health.

  • Taste of child labor not so sweet: a critique of regulatory approaches to combating child labor abuses by the U.S. chocolate industry.

  • Diversity and the federal bench.

  • The argot of equality: on the importance of disentangling 'diversity' and 'remediation' as justifications for race-conscious government action.

  • Rediscovering Oyama v. California: at the intersection of property, race, and citizenship.

  • November 01, 2010

  • A fixer-upper for finance.

  • Rodrigo's portent: California and the coming neocolonial order.

  • The unintentional rapist.

  • All in your head: a comprehensive approach to somatoform disorders in adult disability claims.

  • Return to sender: evaluating the medical repatriations of uninsured immigrants.

  • A proposed fat-tail risk metric: disclosures, derivatives, and the measurement of financial risk.

  • December 01, 2011

  • Key implications of the Dodd-Frank Act for independent regulatory agencies.

  • In defense of the substance-procedure dichotomy.

  • Activist distressed debtholders: the new barbarians at the gate?

  • Missouri's health care battle and differential judicial review of popular lawmaking.

  • Bringing RICO to the ring: can the anti-mafia weapon target dogfighters?

  • Offsetting and the consumption of social responsibility.

  • January 01, 2012

  • Of meat and manhood.

  • Market makers and vampire squid: regulating securities markets after the financial meltdown.

  • Judges who settle.

  • Sex offenders are different: extending Graham to categorically protect the less culpable.

  • Effective taxation of carried interest: a comprehensive pass-through approach.

  • Amputating the long arm of the law: an analysis of the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Morrison and why s. 10(b) still reaches issuers of ADRs.

  • March 01, 2012

  • Marginalizing risk.

  • Theorizing mental health courts.

  • Arbitrary death: an empirical study of mitigation.

  • Social networking v. the employment-at-will doctrine: a potential defense for employees fired for facebooking, terminated for twittering, booted for blogging, and sacked for social networking.

  • How 'reasonable' has become unreasonable: a proposal for rewriting the lasting legacy of Jackson v. Indiana.

  • Like deck chairs on the Titanic: why spectrum reallocation won't avert the coming data crunch but technology might keep the wireless industry afloat.

  • May 01, 2012

  • Changing the marriage equation.

  • Cybersecurity and executive power.

  • Judging, expertise, and the rule of law.

  • Setting the pace for energy efficiency: the rise, fall, and (potential) return of property assessed clean energy.

  • ICANN's escape from antitrust liability.

  • Bridging the great divide - a response to Linda Greenhouse and Reva B. Siegel's 'Before (and after) Roe v. Wade: new questions about backlash'.

  • July 01, 2012

  • Salazar v. Buono: the failed landmark case and its illustration of the two sides of plurality opinions.

  • Corporate social responsibility after disaster.

  • Sampling the circuits: the case for a new comprehensive scheme for determining copyright infringement as a result of music sampling.

  • Constitutionalized negligence.