Yale Law Journal

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COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

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

February 01, 2016

  • The odd couple.

  • Bo Burt: in the whirlwind of his own making.

  • Connecting to what matters: remembering Bo Burt.

  • Robert Burt: repetition and insistence.

  • Two dreams.

  • A tribute to my friend, Professor Robert A. Burt.

  • Insider, outsider, Robert A. Burt.

  • The first patent litigation explosion.

  • The first patent litigation explosion.

  • The lost "effects" of the Fourth Amendment: giving personal property due protection.

  • The lost "effects" of the Fourth Amendment: giving personal property due protection.

  • Fifty shades of gray: sentencing trends in major white-collar cases.

  • Fifty shades of gray: sentencing trends in major white-collar cases.

  • Present at antitrust's creation: consumer welfare in the Sherman Act's state statutory forerunners.

  • In defense of "free houses".

  • Tort concepts in traffic crimes.

  • October 01, 1991

  • Tributes.

  • Does interest group theory justify more intrusive judicial review?

  • The promissory basis of Section 90.

  • Tribal courts' failure to protect Native American women: a reevaluation of the Indian Civil Rights Act.

  • Politicizing who dies.

  • The common law sovereignty of religious lawfinders and the free exercise clause.

  • Freedom and federalism: the First Amendment's protection of legislative voting.

  • Politics, Markets, and America's Schools.

  • December 01, 1992

  • Leaving civil rights to the 'experts': from deference to abdication under the professional judgment standard.

  • January 01, 1993

  • Understanding the Japanese keiretsu: overlaps between corporate governance and industrial organization.

  • March 01, 1993

  • Feminist Legal Theory: Readings in Law and Gender.

  • The Antislavery Debate: Capitalism and Abolitionism as a Problem in Historical Interpretation.

  • April 01, 1993

  • The freedom of speech.

  • A license to abuse: the impact of conditional status on female immigrants.

  • Withdrawal restrictions in the automobile insurance market.

  • Restoration: Congress, Term Limits, and the Recovery of Deliberative Democracy.

  • May 01, 1993

  • 'And our posterity.' (referring to Constitution's Preamble, this address discusses the past and future of the American constitutional people)

  • Abolishing coercion: the jurisprudence of American foreign policy in the 1920s.

  • Earth in the Balance: Ecology and the Human Spirit.

  • Order Without Law: How Neighbors Settle Disputes.

  • June 01, 1993

  • Industrial relations in transition: the paper industry example.

  • Retelling the International Paper story.

  • Colombian cartel launches bid for Japanese firms.

  • A cautionary note on drawing lessons from comparative corporate law.

  • Environmental regulation and international competitiveness.

  • The Earth as eggshell victim: a global perspective on domestic regulation.

  • Environmentally sustainable competitiveness: a comment.

  • The Nineteenth Amendment and women's equality.

  • Financial distress as a noncooperative game: a proposal for overcoming obstacles to private workouts.

  • Model Penal Code section 2.02(7) and willful blindness.

  • November 01, 1993

  • Autonomy, interdependence, and responsibility.

  • The jurisprudence of Justice Byron White.

  • Lawsuit, shmawsuit.

  • December 01, 1993

  • Men who own women: a Thirteenth Amendment critique of forced prostitution.