Fall 2016

WHY FEMINIST LEGAL THEORY STILL NEEDS MARY JOE FRUG: THOUGHTS ON CONFLICTS IN FEMINISM
Elizabeth M. Schneider

BEHAVIORAL APPROACH TO LAWYER MISTAKE AND APOLOGY

Catherine Gage O’Grady

AIN’T MISBEHAVING: ETHICAL PITFALLS AND REST’S MODEL OF MORAL JUDGMENT

Milton C. Regan, Jr. & Nancy L. Sachs

LAWYERS, IMPRESSION MANAGEMENT, AND THE FEAR OF FAILURE

Donald C. Langevoort

LAWYERING PRACTICE: UNCOVERING UNCONSCIOUS INFLUENCES BEFORE RATHER THAN AFTER ERRORS OCCUR

Wallace J. Mlyniec

MORAL COURAGE IN INDIGENT DEFENSE

Tigran W. Eldred

CRYING FOWL OVER CHURCH’S CHICKEN SANDWICH TRADEMARK: How EMPLOYEES LOSE OWNERSHIP RIGHTS TO THEIR IDEAS

Somto C. Ojukwu

READING, WRITING, AND RETHINKING DISCIPLINE: EVALUATION OF THE MEMORANDA OF UNDERSTANDING BETWEEN LAW ENFORCEMENT AND SCHOOL DISTRICTS IN MASSACHUSETTS

Dara Yaffe

WHISTLEBLOWING FROM THE BENCH

Zachary J. Gregoricus

WHY FICTION?
Alafair S. Burke

KOOKS, CROOKS, BRUTES, OR RHADAMANTHINE OPACITIES: SOME THOUGHTS ON THE DEPICTION OF JUDGES IN POPULAR FICTION

Michael A. Ponsor

RE-READING ALAFAIR BURKE’S THE Ex

I. Bennett Capers

NARRATIVES OF CRIMINAL PROCEDURE FROM DOYLE TO CHANDLER TO BURKE

Simon Stern

THE CHOW: DEPICTIONS OF THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM AS A CHARACTER IN CRIME FICTION

Marianne Wesson

LAW and Noir

Peter Manus

“TARGET STANDING”: CONSTITUTIONAL VIOLATIONS GOING UNDETERRED AND THE EXCLUSIONARY RULE THE MASSACHUSETTS SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT SHOULD HAVE ADOPTED

Ashley Peel

OBSCENE TERRORISM: CAN THE FIRST AMENDMENT’S OBSCENITY FRAMEWORK BE APPLIED TO TERRORIST SPEECH?

Alexander Conley

“ASTEROIDS FOR SALE”: PRIVATE PROPERTY RIGHTS IN OUTER SPACE, AND THE SPACE ACT OF 2015

Justin Rostoff

RESURRECTING ROE AND REINVENTING CASEY: TAKING BACK A WOMAN’S RIGHT TO CHOOSE

Elizabeth P. Dailey

FIFA: FOR THE GAME OR FOR-PROFIT?

Rachael E. Bandeira

SHOOTING IN HIGH DEFINITION: How HAVING TOUGH POLICIES IN PLACE MAKES THE USE OF BODY CAMERAS IN LAW ENFORCEMENT COMPORT WITH
THE FOURTH AMENDMENT

Richard Shiller

The Varieties of Constitutional Change
Lawrence Friedman

Courts and Informal Constitutional Change in the States

Jonathan L. Marshfield.

The Difficulty of Mathematically Measuring the Many Factors Driving Constitutional Change in Our State Supreme Courts: Judicial Perspective

Scott L. Kafker

State Constitutions Are Slippery: Reply to Professor Marshfield

Justin R. Long

New Light on State Constitutional Change

Robert F. Williams

Active Judicial Governance

James A. Gardner

Unconstitutional Constitutional Change by Courts

Yaniv Roznai

Orange is the New Participation: How Expansion of the Public Figure Doctrine in LaChance v. Boston Herald Endangers Internet Users

Amanda Palmeira

Down the Rabbit Hole: How the Lack of Protection for Fashion Designs Creates a Free-for-All both in the Courtroom and in the Fashion Industry

Somfo Oiukwu

Fugitive Disentitlement Doctrine: A Stricter Standard for the Burden of Proof to Label Someone a Fugitive

Alexandra M. Collins

New England Law Review Avatar

Tagged in :

Discover more from New England Law Review

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading