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The Perils of Evidentiary Manipulation
(Virginia Law Review, 9/24/2007)
The use of evidentiary rules to achieve substantive goals strikes me as a Faustian bargain, and, given Bierschbach and Stein's acknowledgedly tentative position, I hope to
dissuade them of the virtues of the practice. My ...
Opinion Specialization
(Judicature, 2008)
In accord with traditions celebrating the generalist judge, the federal judiciary has
consistently resisted proposals for specialized courts. Outward support for specialization, if it exists at all, is confined to narrow ...
Same Old, Same Old: Scientific Evidence Past and Present
(Michigan Law Review, 2006)
For over twenty years, and particularly since the Supreme Court's Daubert' decision in 1993, much ink has been spilled debating the problem of scientific evidence in the courts. Are jurors or, in the alternative, judges ...
Will Quants Rule the (Legal) World?
(Michigan Law Review, 2009)
Professor Ian Ayres, in his new book, Super Crunchers, details the brave new world of statistical prediction and how it has already begun to affect our lives.
For years, academic researchers have known about the considerable ...
Does Frye or Daubert Matter? A Study of Scientific Admissibility Standards
(Virginia Law Review, 2005)
Nearly every treatment of scientific evidence begins with a faithful comparison between the Frye and Daubert standards. Since 1993, jurists and legal scholars have spiritedly debated which standard is preferable and whether ...
Changing Scientific Evidence
(Minnesota Law Review, 2003)
A number of high-profile toxic tort cases, such as silicone breast implants, have followed a familiar and disturbing path: Early studies suggest a link between a suspected substance and a particular illness. Based on these ...
Mitochondrial DNA: Emerging Legal Issues
(Journal of Law and Policy, 2005)
This article will briefly survey some of the current and emerging legal issues surrounding mtDNA evidence. Parts I and II discuss basic evidentiary questions, including mtDNA's reliability and admissibility under Daubert7 ...
Reenvisioning Law Through the DNA Lens
(NYU Annual Survey of American Law, 2005)
In recent times, no development has transformed the practice of criminal justice as much as DNA evidence. In little over fifteen years, DNA profiling has produced nothing short of a paradigm shift.1 For police and prosecutors, ...
Constitutional Risks to Equal Protection in the Criminal Justice System
(Harvard Law Review, 2001)
This Note has examined the consequences of a shift in the equal protection context - a move from a traditional particularized harm perspective to a constitutional risk perspective focused on systemic harms. It has also ...
The Myth of the Generalist Judge
(Stanford Law Review, 2008-12)
Conventional judicial wisdom assumes and indeed celebrates the ideal of the generalist judge, but do judges really believe in it? This Article empirically tests this question by examining opinion assignments in the federal ...