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

December 01, 1995

  • Racially based jury nullification: black power in the criminal justice system.

  • Trafficking in stolen information: a 'hierarchy of rights' approach to the private facts tort.

  • Residential associations as state actors: regulating the impact of gated communities on nonmembers.

  • Political Liberalism.

  • With Justice for Some: Victims' Rights in Criminal Trials.

  • January 01, 1996

  • The uneasy case for the priority of secured claims in bankruptcy.

  • The illegitimate president: minority vote dilution and the electoral college.

  • On "I know it when I see it." (Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart's famous opinion regarding pornography).

  • Faulty assumptions and undemocratic consequences of campaign finance reform.

  • Cyberspace, general searches, and digital contraband: the Fourth Amendment and the net-wide search.

  • Regulatory Takings: Law, Economics, and Politics.

  • Simple Rules for a Complex World.

  • Passions and Constraint: On the Theory of Liberal Democracy.

  • March 01, 1996

  • Controlling chronic misconduct in city spaces: of panhandlers, skid rows, and public-space zoning.

  • When should an offer stick? The economics of promissory estoppel in preliminary negotiations.

  • Adventures in the zone of twilight: separation of powers and national economic security in the Mexican bailout.

  • Jihad and the Constitution: the First Amendment implications of combating religiously motivated terrorism.

  • The pure theory as ideal type: defending Kelsen on the basis of Weberian methodology.

  • Fighting Words: Individuals, Communities, and Liberties of Speech.

  • Mothers in Law: Feminist Theory and the Legal Regulation of Motherhood.

  • To Secure These Rights: The Declaration of Independence and Constitutional Interpretation.

  • Incapacitation: Penal Confinement and the Restraint of Crime.

  • Constitutional Law as Fiction: Narrative in the Rhetoric of Authority.

  • April 01, 1996

  • Elusive advocate: reconsidering Brandeis as people's lawyer.

  • Telling the Court's story: justice and journalism at the Supreme Court.

  • Pitied but Not Entitled: Single Mothers and the History of Welfare.

  • The Color of Welfare: How Racism Undermined the War on Poverty.

  • Cheaters, not criminals: antitrust invalidation of statutes outlawing sports agent recruitment of student athletes.

  • (Net)workers' rights: the NLRA and employee electronic communications.

  • The thorny path to Thornhill: the origins at equity of the free speech overbreadth doctrine.

  • Public Lands and Private Rights: The Failure of Scientific Management.

  • Ownership and Control: Rethinking Corporate Governance for the Twenty-First Century.

  • Individual Justice in Mass Tort Litigation: The Effect of Class Actions, Consolidations, and Other Multiparty Devices.

  • The Law Firm and the Public Good.

  • May 01, 1996

  • The most dangerous branch.

  • The moral menace of Roman law and the making of commerce: some Dutch evidence.

  • Rethinking regulatory reform: toxics, politics, and ethics.

  • Arbitrating novel legal questions: a recommendation for reform.

  • Alien Nation: Common Sense About America's Immigration Disaster.

  • Indian Territory and the United States: 1866-1906, Courts, Government, and the Movement for Oklahoma Statehood.

  • The Myth of Democratic Failure.

  • Virtually Normal: An Argument About Homosexuality.

  • June 01, 1996

  • Foolish consistency: on equality, integrity, and justice in stare decisis.

  • 'The rule of love': wife beating as prerogative and privacy.

  • Original issue discount and the "LTV risk" reconsidered.

  • The practice of dissent in the Supreme Court.

  • The Idea of Private Law.

  • Commonsense Justice: Jurors' Notions of the Law.

  • Securing Religious Liberty: Principles for Judicial Interpretation of the Religion Clauses.

  • Slide Mountain, or The Folly of Owning Nature.