William and Mary Law Review

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

COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved

from January 1997
Last Number: May 2023

College of William and Mary, Marshall Wythe School of Law
ISSN 0043-5589


Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 1171

December 01, 2001

  • Entity theory as myth in the origins of the corporate income tax.

  • Communis Opinio and the methods of statutory interpretation: interpreting law or changing law.

  • The local law of global antitrust.

  • The 1972 U.S.-Soviet ABM treaty: cornerstone of stability or relic of the cold war?

  • The slippery slope of secrecy: why patent law preempts reverse-engineering clauses in shrink-wrap licenses.

  • February 01, 2002

  • Congressional power over presidential elections: lessons from the past and reforms for the future.

  • The radical possibility of limited community-based interpretation of the Constitution.

  • Outlaws and outlier doctrines: the serious misconduct bar in tort law.

  • Disability harassment in the public schools.

  • Preparing for the clothed public square: teaching about religion, civic education, and the Constitution.

  • Determining the intended beneficiaries of the ADA in the aftermath of Sutton: limiting the application of the disabling corrections corollary.

  • Confusion and solution: Chapter 11 bankruptcy trustee's standard of care for personal liability.

  • March 01, 2002

  • The use that the future makes of the past: John Marshall's greatness and its lessons for today's Supreme Court Justices.

  • John Marshall, McCulloch v. Maryland, and 'we the people': revisions in need of revising.

  • The lives of John Marshall.

  • John Marshall through the eyes of an admirer: John Quincy Adams.

  • A judge for all seasons.

  • Some alarming aspects of the legacies of judicial review and of John Marshall.

  • Judicial power in the constitutional theory of James Madison.

  • John Marshall: remarks of October 6, 2000.

  • Judicial review and institutional choice.

  • Easing the spring: strict scrutiny and affirmative action after the redistricting cases: 2001 Cutler Lecture.

  • Judges as altruistic hierarchs: 2001 George C. Wythe Lecture.

  • The team production theory of corporate law: a critical assessment.

  • Why premerger review needed reform, and still does.

  • Expedited removal and discrimination in the asylum process: the use of humanitarian aid as a political tool.

  • April 01, 2002

  • Counting guns in early America.

  • Procedural justice: tempering the state's response to domestic violence.

  • Taking behavioralism too seriously? The unwarranted pessimism of the new behavioral analysis of law.

  • Spinning in a hot IPO: breach of fiduciary duty or business as usual?

  • Yet another constitutional crisis?

  • In need of enlightenment: the International Trade Commission's misguided analysis in sunset reviews.

  • Leveling the playing field: applying the doctrines of unconscionability and condition precedent to effectuate student-athlete intent under the National Letter of Intent.

  • October 01, 2002

  • The Legislator-in-Chief.

  • A proposed antitrust approach to high technology competition.

  • The stumbling block: freedom, rationality, and legal scholarship.

  • Judicial review of administrative policymaking. .

  • Stare decisis, Chevron, and Skidmore: do administrative agencies have the power to overrule courts?

  • The failure of words: Habeas Corpus Reform, the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act, and when a judgment of conviction becomes final for the purposes of 28 U.S.C. s. 2255(1).

  • December 01, 2002

  • Commercial activity and charitable tax exemption.

  • The random muse: authorship and indeterminacy.

  • Ties in the Supreme Court of the United States.

  • An outcomes analysis of scope of review standards.

  • Law as largess: shifting paradigms of law for the poor.

  • An economic analysis of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act: auctions as an efficient alternative to judicial intervention.

  • Putting the plaintiff class' needs in the lead: reforming class action litigation by extending the lead plaintiff provision of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act.

  • February 01, 2003

  • Foreword: disability and identity.

  • The Americans with Disabilities Act as welfare reform.

  • Labor force participation and income of individuals with disabilities in sheltered and competitive employment: cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses of seven states during the 1980s and 1990s.

  • 'Never forget what they did here': civil war pensions for Gettysburg union army veterans and disability in nineteenth-century America.