Do Judges Think - Comments on Several Papers Presented at the Duke Law Journal's Conference on Measuring Judges and Justice
Henry, Robert
Academic Journal
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58 Duke L.J. 1703 (2008-2009) / Duke Law Journal, Vol. 58, Issue 7 (April 2009), pp. 1703-1724
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TECH PLATFORMS AND THE COMMON LAW OF CARRIERS.
SITARAMAN, GANESH;RICKS, MORGAN
Academic Journal
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Duke Law Journal. Feb2024, Vol. 73 Issue 5, p1037-1100. 64p.
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Duke journal of constitutional law & public policy sidebar [electronic resource].
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SOVEREIGNTY AND DEPENDENCE IN THE AMERICAN EMPIRE: NATIVE NATIONS, TERRITORIES, AND OVERSEAS COLONIES.
PADILLA-BABILONIA, ALVIN
Academic Journal
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Duke Law Journal. Feb2024, Vol. 73 Issue 5, p943-1035. 93p.
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NEGLECTED DISCOVERY.
TURNER, JENIA I.;WRIGHT, RONALD F.;BRAUN, MICHAEL
Academic Journal
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Duke Law Journal. Mar2024, Vol. 73 Issue 6, p1173-1228. 56p.
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"WE'RE NOT SELLING ICE CREAM HERE"1: PLCAA, THE PREDICATE EXCEPTION, AND PROVIDING RELIEF FOR PLAINTIFFS.
KILROY, EMMA
Academic Journal
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Duke Law Journal. Mar2024, Vol. 73 Issue 6, p1295-1337. 43p.
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The Duke Project on Custom and Law
Bradley, Curtis A.;Gulati, Mitu
Academic Journal
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62 Duke L.J. 529 (2012-2013) / Duke Law Journal, Vol. 62, Issue 3 (December 2012), pp. 529-534
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"CHILDREN ARE DIFFERENT" AND THEIR LAWYERS SHOULD BE TOO.
LAWRENCE, SAMUEL K.
Academic Journal
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Duke Law Journal. Feb2024, Vol. 73 Issue 5, p1101-1139. 39p.
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FACT STRIPPING.
BLOCHER, JOSEPH;GARRETT, BRANDON L.
Academic Journal
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Duke Law Journal. Nov2023, Vol. 73 Issue 2, p1-65. 65p.
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Duke journal of constitutional law & public policy [electronic resource].
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"RACE-BLIND" REDISTRICTING ALGORITHMS.
SWAN, KAYLA
Academic Journal
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Duke Law Journal. Feb2024, Vol. 73 Issue 5, p1141-1172. 32p.
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BRUEN, GUN RIGHTS, AND THE SHACKLES OF HISTORY.
CHARLES†, JACOB D.
Academic Journal
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Duke Law Journal. Nov2023, Vol. 73 Issue 2, p67-155. 89p.
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HYBRID-STATUS IMMIGRANT WORKERS.
HAMBURGER, JACOB
Academic Journal
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Duke Law Journal. Jan2024, Vol. 73 Issue 4, p737-799. 63p.
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THE DEAD HAND OF A SILENT PAST: BRUEN, GUN RIGHTS, AND THE SHACKLES OF HISTORY.
CHARLES, JACOB D.
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Duke Law Journal. Oct2023, Vol. 73 Issue 1, p67-155. 89p.
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Twenty Years of Law Journal Publishing: A Comparative Analysis of International Publication Trends.
Christián, László;Háló, Gergő;Demeter, Márton
Academic Journal
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Publishing Research Quarterly. Mar2022, Vol. 38 Issue 1, p1-17. 17p. 4 Diagrams, 4 Charts, 1 Graph.
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The analyses of publishing trends are gaining importance across various disciplines, y...
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Twenty Years of Law Journal Publishing: A Comparative Analysis of International Publication Trends.
Publishing Research Quarterly. Mar2022, Vol. 38 Issue 1, p1-17. 17p. 4 Diagrams, 4 Charts, 1 Graph.
The analyses of publishing trends are gaining importance across various disciplines, yet we have limited knowledge on the extent to which international publication processes have developed within the field of legal studies. Based on bibliometric and network analyses focusing on the past two decades, our research investigates publishing and internationalization processes in the pool of Scopus-indexed law journals , as well as the publication patterns of the most prolific Law scholars. Results indicate that most legal studies journals are concentrated in the hands of a few global publishers and university presses, and, while the number of Scopus-indexed law journals are high, the level of internationalization is relatively low. Consequently, further efforts are prompted to enhance geographical diversity and increase the level of international collaboration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Subject terms:
Periodical publishing - University presses - Globalization - Comparative studies - Trend analysis - Comparative educationContent provider:
Communication & Mass Media Complete
EXTRATERRITORIAL STATE CRIMINAL LAW , POST-DOBBS.
BROWN, DARRYL K.
Academic Journal
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Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology. Spring2024, Vol. 113 Issue 4, p853-887. 35p.
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Like the federal government, states can apply their laws to people beyond their border...
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EXTRATERRITORIAL STATE CRIMINAL LAW , POST-DOBBS.
Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology. Spring2024, Vol. 113 Issue 4, p853-887. 35p.
Like the federal government, states can apply their laws to people beyond their borders. Statutes can reach out-of-state conduct, such as fraud, that has effects within the state, and in some circumstances, states can prosecute their own citizens for out-of-state conduct. Many applications of extraterritorial jurisdiction are well established and uncontroversial; state common law and the Model Penal Code provide for such authority. The practice draws little attention when states ' criminal laws are broadly similar and treat the same activities as crimes. In the wake of the Supreme Court's decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, however, state laws now sharply conflict over conduct related to abortion services. In addition to prohibiting in-state activities that facilitate access to abortions, some state legislatures and local prosecutors seek to extend criminal liability to persons acting in states in which their conduct is legal. Louisiana, for example, made it a crime for anyone outside of Louisiana to ship "abortion- inducing drugs " to a Louisiana resident. This article analyzes the principles of state extraterritorial criminal jurisdiction and the longstanding state laws that authorize criminal jurisdiction over actors in other states. It then turns to the existing and proposed state criminal laws that target abortion services beyond a state's own borders. In some cases, such laws are well grounded; for others, the validity of extraterritorial application is unclear. But even for statutes with valid extraterritorial reach, barriers to enforcement remain. In many circumstances, cross-border enforcement depends on state cooperation, especially in extraditing defendants and obtaining out-of-state evidence and witness testimony. Federal law requires states to fulfill other states ' extradition requests only for "fugitives," which creates a gap between the law of extradition and of extraterritorial jurisdiction. Those who violate one state's criminal law while in another state are not fugitives, which means pro-choice states can refuse to extradite their residents for other states ' abortion-related prosecutions. A few states have already changed their laws to permit this kind of resistance--another sign of diminished comity between states. Finally, the article briefly surveys constitutional doctrines that might constrain extraterritorial prosecutions. Few of those doctrines provide clear limits, suggesting that, if the post-Dobbs world leads to extraterritorial prosecutions, the constitutional parameters for that practice will be one of the new battlegrounds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Subject terms:
CRIMINAL law - EXTERRITORIALITY - COMMON law - FRAUD - SURVEYSContent provider:
Psychology and Behavioral Sciences Collection
Shading Sunshine: The Proliferation of Exemptions to State Open Record Laws
Reid, Cat
Academic Journal
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73 Duke L.J. 424 (2023-2024) / Duke Law Journal, Vol. 73, Issue 2 (November 2023), pp. 424-462
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THE SYMPOSIUM AT FIFTY.
MAY, RANDOLPH
Academic Journal
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Duke Law Journal. May2020, Vol. 69 Issue 8, p1681-1686. 6p.
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Guest Editors' Introduction.
Wong, Diane;Kuo, Rachel
Academic Journal
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Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies. 2024, Vol. 45 Issue 1, pxi-xix. 9p.
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This document is the guest editors' introduction to a special issue of the journal Fro...
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Guest Editors' Introduction.
Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies. 2024, Vol. 45 Issue 1, pxi-xix. 9p.
This document is the guest editors' introduction to a special issue of the journal Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies. The editors reflect on recent instances of violence and loss, including the Atlanta shootings, deportations of Vietnamese community members, and mass shootings in Indianapolis. They argue that mass shootings, police violence, and militarism are interconnected forms of state-sanctioned violence. The special issue aims to explore Asian American political critique and abolition feminisms as ways to challenge and dismantle systems of violence and oppression. The editors emphasize the importance of collective movement building and envisioning alternative possibilities for liberation and transformation. [Extracted from the article]