Now showing items 1243-1262 of 1354

    • Ruhl, J.B.; Vandenbergh, Michael P.; Dunaway, Sarah E. (Journal of Legal Education, 2020)
      Almost as soon as the ink was dry on the first U.S. News & World Report (U.S. News) ranking of law schools in 1987, scholars began developing rankings to replace or complement the U.S. News rankings. Over the past several ...
    • Edelman, Paul H. (Northwestern University Law Review, 1998)
      In these pages,1 Steven Lubet recently reviewed A Tour of the Calculus, by David Berlinski.2 Inspired by both the beauty of calculus and Berlinski's description of it, Lubet waxes poetic on the many parallels between the ...
    • Edelman, Paul H. (Northwestern University Law Review, 1998)
    • Ruhl, J. B. (St. Thomas Law Review, 2005)
      This article suggests ways in which the common law can integrate concepts of ecosystem services to fulfill pragmatic objectives of common law doctrine. Rather than requiring a radical departure from traditional common law ...
    • Slobogin, Christopher, 1951- (Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law, 2003)
      Numerous authors, from all points on the political spectrum, have advocated that police interrogations be taped. But police rarely record custodial questioning, at least in full, and only a handful of courts have found ...
    • Gervais, Daniel J. (Marquette Intellectual Property Law Review, 2005)
      This paper argues that international copyright treaties, such as the WTO TRIPS Agreement, should no longer be developed as sets of minimum standards with a standardized exception filter, namely the three-step test, but ...
    • Ruhl, J. B. (Baylor Law Review, 1986)
      This Article joins the enormous and growing body of literature examining the need for reform of toxic tort remedies for cases of exposure to hazardous substances released into the environment. It is different from most ...
    • Meyer, Timothy; Sitaraman, Ganesh (California Law Review, 2019)
      There are two paradigms through which to view trade law and policy within the American constitutional system. One paradigm sees trade law and policy as quintessentially about domestic economic policy. Institutionally, under ...
    • Sitaraman, Ganesh; Meyer, Timothy (California Law Review, 2019)
      There are two paradigms through which to view trade law and policy within the American constitutional system. One paradigm sees trade law and policy as quintessentially about domestic economic policy. Institutionally, under ...
    • Meyer, Timothy; Sitaraman, Ganesh (California Law Review, 2019)
      This Article makes three contributions. First, we argue that the current discontent over trade is not just a matter of the distribution of economic gains and losses but a matter of the distribution of constitutional powers. ...
    • Gervais, Daniel J. (Michigan State Law Review, 2005)
      Should intellectual property provide a means for strengthening the range of incentives that local communities need for conserving and developing genetic resources and traditional knowledge (TK)? If so, how and at what cost? ...
    • Slobogin, Christopher, 1951- (Mississippi Law Journal, 2005)
      This symposium article is the second of two on regulation of government efforts to obtain recorded information for criminal prosecutions. More specifically, it explores the scope and regulation of "transaction surveillance," ...
    • Ruhl, J.B.; Gosnell, Hannah; Chaffin, Brian C.; Arnold, Craig Anthony; Craig, Robin K.; Benson, Melinda H.; Devenish, Alan (Ecology and Society, 2017)
      The Endangered Species Act (ESA) is often portrayed as a major source of instability and crisis in river basins of the U. S. West, where the needs of listed fish species frequently clash with agriculture dependent on federal ...
    • Newbern, Alistair E.; Suski, Emily F. (Clinical Law Review, 2013)
      Clinical teaching is a Baby Boomer. After an extended infancy, it came of age in the 1960s. It challenged the entrenched isolation and aloofness of law school by questioning the very methods by which law is taught. Channeling ...
    • Newbern, Alistair E.; Suski, Emily F. (Clinical Law Review, 2013)
      Clinical teaching is a Baby Boomer. After an extended infancy, it came of age in the 1960s. It challenged the entrenched isolation and aloofness of law school by questioning the very methods by which law is taught. Channeling ...
    • Rossi, Jim, 1965- (Duke Environmental Law & Policy Forum, 2005)
      During most of the twentieth century, state and local regulatory bodies coordinated the siting or power plants and transmission lines. These bodies focused on two important issues: 1) the determination of need, so as to ...
    • Gervais, Daniel J. (Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law, 2001)
      This Article examines the status of copyright laws in several countries as they pertain to transmissions of music on the Internet. Because the exact legal ramifications of music transmissions over the Internet are currently ...
    • Wuerth, Ingrid Brunk (German Law Journal, 2009)
      I am tasked today with talking about transnationalization, in particular the question of whether public law in the United States is undergoing some process of transnationalization today. My response, based on the work ...
    • Moran, Beverly I. (Southern California Review of Law and Women's Studies, 2002)
      Feminist psychologists postulate that women are more people focused than men and therefore less likely to be attracted to rule oriented cultures that do not take into account personal differences and needs. This work ...
    • Slobogin, Christopher, 1951- (Texas Tech Law Review, 2013)
      The number of juveniles transferred to adult court has skyrocketed in the past two decades and has only recently begun to level off. This symposium article argues that, because it wastes resources, damages juveniles, and ...