New York University Law Review 2000 - Abstracts

New York University Law Review 2000
TitleSubjectAuthors
A letter to the Supreme Court regarding the missing argument in Brzonkala v. Morrison.LawSager, Lawrence G.
Antitrust and regulatory federalism: races up, down, and sideways.LawFox, Eleanor M.
Beyond the limits of equity jurisprudence: no-fault equitable subordination.LawPardo, Rafael Ignacio
Civil challenges to the use of low-bid contracts for indigent defense.LawLemos, Margaret H.
Corporate governance lessons from Russian enterprise fiascoes.LawFox, Merritt B., Heller, Michael A.
Is there a doctor in the house? Using failure to warn liability to enhance the safety of online prescribing.LawChiuang, Chester
No promo homo: the sedimentation of antigay discourse and the channeling effect of judicial review.LawEskridge, William N., Jr.
Punishment postgenocide: from guilt to shame to civis in Rwanda.LawDrumbl, Mark A.
RCRA in the workplace: using environmental law to combat dangerous conditions in sweatshops.(Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976)LawMigdal, Ariela
Seventy-fifth anniversary retrospective: most influential articles.(from the New York University Law Review)LawEstreicher, Samuel, Law, Sylvia A., Dorsen, Norman, Adler, Barry E., Hamilton, Marci A., Neuborne, Burt, Chevigny, Paul G., Sexton, John E., Lowenfeld, Andreas F., Shapiro, David L., Slain, John J., Morrison, Alan B., Eisgruber, Christopher L., Guggenheim, Martin, Friedman, Barry, Hershkoff, Helen, Geistfeld, Mark, Stewart, Richard B., Richards, David A.J.
The distinction between legislative and adjudicative decisions.(Case Note)LawReznik, Inna
The heuristics of intellectual due process: a primer for triers of science.LawBeecher-Monas, Erica
The public's vicinage right: a constitutional argument.(right of a community to have a trial heard where the the crime was committed rather than have the venue changed)LawEngel, Steven A.
The revolution in welfare administration: rules, discretion, and entrepreneurial government.LawDiller, Matthew
You say "fair trial" and I say "free press": British and American approaches to protecting defendants' rights in high profile trials.LawBrandwood, Joanne Armstrong
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