Yale Law Journal

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COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved

from October 1991
Last Number: February 2024

Yale University, School of Law
ISSN 0044-0094


Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 1726

May 01, 1999

  • The modern Lanham Act and the death of common sense.

  • Breakfast with Batman: the public interest in the advertising age.

  • Law's empire and the final frontier: legalizing the future in the early Corpus Juris Spatialis.

  • Jury sentencing in noncapital cases: an idea whose time has come (again)?

  • Clearing the smoke-filled room: women jurors and the disruption of an old-boys' network in Nineteenth-century America.

  • Culture as sameness: toward a synthetic view of provocation and culture in the criminal law.

  • Equal protection and the status of stereotypes.

  • Fragmenting procreation.

  • Why we should discount the views of those who discount discounting.

  • Discounting life.

  • June 01, 1999

  • Constitutional change and the politics of history.

  • The super-legality of the Constitution, or, a Federalist critique of Bruce Ackerman's neo-Federalism.

  • The election of 1800: a study in the logic of political change.

  • The Americans' higher-law thinking behind higher lawmaking.

  • The strange career of the Reconstruction Amendments.

  • Constitutional history and constitutional theory: reflections on Ackerman, Reconstruction, and the transformation of the American Constitution.

  • Legitimating Reconstruction: the limits of legalism.

  • When the people spoke, what did they say? the election of 1936 and the Ackerman thesis.

  • Constitutional theory transformed.

  • Law, politics, and the New Deal(s).

  • Transitions.

  • Constitutional moments and punctuated equilibria: a political scientist confronts Bruce Ackerman's We the People.

  • Revolution on a human scale.

  • Ethical eating: applying the Kosher food regulatory regime to organic food.

  • Are Asians black? The Asian-American civil rights agenda and the contemporary significance of the black/white paradigm.

  • Colonial courts and secured credit: early American commercial litigation and Shays' Rebellion.

  • No cure for a broken heart.

  • October 01, 1999

  • A common law for our age of colonialism: the judicial divestiture of Indian tribal authority over nonmembers.

  • The right-remedy gap in constitutional law.

  • The McCulloch theory of the Fourteenth Amendment: City of Boerne v. Flores and the original understanding of section 5.

  • Word Crimes: Blasphemy, Culture, and Literature in Nineteenth-Century England.

  • November 01, 1999

  • Rethinking cost-benefit analysis.

  • Schools, race, and money.

  • Contract bankruptcy: a reply to Alan Schwartz.

  • Bankruptcy contracting reviewed.

  • Bankruptcy contracting revised: a reply to Alan Schwartz's new model.

  • Rejecting the logic of confinement: care relationships and the mentally disabled under tort law.

  • December 01, 1999

  • A consumer-welfare approach to the mandatory unbundling of telecommunications networks.

  • On hate and equality.

  • Taking the Constitution Away from the Courts.

  • Ruling by numbers: political restructuring and the reconsideration of democratic commitments after Romer v. Evans.

  • Parental initiative in the age of signal bleed.

  • Death, life, and uncertainty: allocating the risk of error in the decision to terminate life support.

  • January 01, 2000

  • Setting incorporationism straight: a reinterpretation of the Slaughter-House Cases.

  • Unbending Gender: Why Family and Work Conflict and What to Do About It.

  • A Nineteenth Amendment defense of the Violence Against Women Act.

  • Performing whiteness: naturalization litigation and the construction of racial identity in America.

  • A house with a view.

  • March 01, 2000

  • Plea bargaining's triumph.

  • Is there a design defect in the Restatement (Third) of Torts: Products Liability?