Submissions from 2010
No Good Deed Goes Unpublished: Precedent-Stripping and the Need for a New Prophylactic Rule, Edward Cantu
Approaches To Protecting Victims of Intimate Partner Violence in The United States and Ireland: People, Property, And Politics, Barbara Glesner Fines
Bilski: Assessing the Impact of a Newly Invigorated Patent Eligibility Doctrine on the Pharmaceutical Industry and the Future of Personalized Medicine, Christopher M. Holman
Maintaining Incentives for Healthcare Innovation: Response to the FTC's Report on Follow-On Biologics, Christopher M. Holman
The Role of Patent Eligibility in Policing Claim Scope, Christopher M. Holman
Charitable Gifts Made by Corporations: Opportunities and Challenges, Christopher R. Hoyt
Rethinking Roth IRA Conversions in 2010, Christopher R. Hoyt
Electronic Evidence Annotated Bibliography, Nancy Levit
Familial and Matrimonial Agreements: An Annotated Bibliography, Nancy Levit
Theorizing and Litigating the Rights of Sexual Minorities, Nancy Levit
Personal Autonomy: Towards a New Taxonomy for Privacy Law, Yvonne F. Lindgren
The Anticipation Misconception, Colin P. Marks
Did the Madisonian Compromise Survive Detention at Guantanamo?, Lumen N. Mulligan
Federal Courts Not Federal Tribunals, Lumen N. Mulligan
Missouri's Public Defender Crisis: Shouldering the Burden Alone, Sean O'Brien
Values In Transition: The Chiricahua Apache from 1886-1914, John W. Ragsdale Jr
Protecting the Unsophisticated Tenant: A Call for a Cap on Late Fees in the Housing Choice Voucher Program, Wendy Tolson Ross
The Negro National Anthem Controversy, Wendy Tolson Ross
Insurance Law between Business Law and Consumer Law, Jeffrey E. Thomas
Insurance Perspectives on Federal Financial Regulatory Reform: Addressing Misunderstandings and Providing View from Different Paradigm, Jeffrey E. Thomas
Understanding Rule of Law / Supremacy of Law and Underlying Obstacles in Turkey and Around the World, Jeffrey E. Thomas
You're On Your Own, Kid... But You Shouldn't Be, Daniel B. Weddle
Submissions from 2009
Cette finance fraduuleuse que l’on ne veut pas voir, William K. Black
Those Who Forget the Regulatory Successes of the Past Are Condemned to Failure, William K. Black