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

January 01, 1995

  • To Keep and Bear Arms: The Origins of an Anglo-American Right.

  • March 01, 1995

  • Solomonic bargaining: dividing a legal entitlement to facilitate Coasean trade.

  • Reading the Constitution as spoken.

  • The death of a public intellectual.

  • An idea whose time has come: a comparative procedural history of the Civil Rights Acts of 1960, 1964, and 1991.

  • April 01, 1995

  • Celebrating Selma: the importance of context in public forum analysis.

  • Allocating the local apportionment pie: what portion for resident aliens?

  • How the elephant lost his tusks.

  • "Some of the most embarrassing questions": extraterritorial divorces and the problem of jurisdiction before Pennoyer.

  • An open letter to Congressman Gingrich.

  • May 01, 1995

  • Counseling at the limits of the law: an exercise in the jurisprudence and ethics of lawyering.

  • In search of a new paradigm.

  • Abundance and user control: renewing the Democratic heart of the First Amendment in the age of interactive media.

  • Anonymity, autonomy, and accountability: challenges to the First Amendment in cyberspaces.

  • Rights, camera, action: cyberspatial settings and the First Amendment.

  • Converging First Amendment principles for converging communications media.

  • The path of cyberlaw.

  • The First Amendment in cyberspace.

  • Cheap speech and what it will do.

  • Alex Bickel's law school and ours.

  • Stereotyping and difference: the future of sex discrimination law.

  • Law firms and associate careers: tournament theory versus the production-imperative model.

  • Democracy and the Problem of Free Speech.

  • Jurisprudence for a Free Society: Studies in Law, Science, and Policy.

  • June 01, 1995

  • Fashioning a Title VII remedy for transparently white subjective decisionmaking.

  • Let the money do the monitoring: how institutional investors can reduce agency costs in securities class actions.

  • My senior partner.

  • 'No relief but upon the terms of coming into the house' - controlled spaces, invisible disentitlements, and homelessness in an urban shelter system.

  • The Rushdie incident as law-and-literature parable.

  • Autonomy and democracy.

  • Compound-complex criminal statutes and the Constitution: demanding unanimity as to predicate acts.

  • History of the Supreme Court of the United States, vol. 8, Troubled Beginnings of the Modern State: 1888-1910.

  • Between the Lines: Interpreting Welfare Rights.

  • On Appeal: Courts, Lawyering and Judging.

  • October 01, 1995

  • Disaggregating gender from sex and sexual orientation: the effeminate man in the law and feminist jurisprudence.

  • The pursuit of 'popular intent': interpretive dilemmas in direct democracy.

  • How the butler was made to do it: the perverted professionalism of "The Remains of the Day.".

  • Do liability rules facilitate bargaining? A reply to Ayres and Talley.

  • Distinguishing between consensual and nonconsensual advantages of liability rules.

  • The incorporation of international human rights standards into sexual orientation asylum claims: cases of involuntary 'medical' intervention.

  • Following the lead of defamation: a definitional balancing approach to religious torts.

  • November 01, 1995

  • A political theory of corporate taxation.

  • The substantive origins of criminal procedure.

  • Film as witness: screening 'Nazi Concentration Camps' before the Nuremberg Tribunal.

  • The constitutionality of legislative supermajority requirements: a defense.

  • The Tower of Babel: bridging the divide between critical race theory and 'mainstream' civil rights scholarship.

  • The Confirmation Mess: Cleaning up the Federal Appointment Process.

  • Overcoming Law.

  • December 01, 1995

  • 'To feel the great forces': the times of Burke Marshall.

  • The contractarian basis of the law of trusts.