Search results for: "At" (3343 results)
is faithful to the Monroe model of statutory interpretation, but at odds with the differences among rights in enforcement strategies and opportunities....
Louis Reedt | Yale Law Journal Louis Reedt In this Essay, researchers at the United States Sentencing Commission respond to criticisms by Sonja Starr
The Supreme Court agreed with Gideon that the Sixth Amendment guaranteed him the right to counsel at trial. Recently, Galin Frye and Anthony Cooper
in criminal law favor the defendant. The asymmetry seems to disappear when physical evidence is at issue. One goal of this Essay...
4, 1882 “No individual is superior to the game.” —Commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti, Aug. 24, 1989 Introduction At his 2005 confirmation hearing
finding that all firms offer paid leave to new mothers, and many firms offer at least some leave to fathers as well. In...
Brian Netter | Yale Law Journal Brian Netter 115 Yale L.J. 1167 (2006) Two men are placed at the scene of a homicide. Each has an unsavory past and
efforts to isolate 9/11 detainees from all outsiders at Guantánamo Bay conceptually and legally unsustainable. Gideon, along with Miranda v. Arizona, is
Glenn R. Schmitt | Yale Law Journal Glenn R. Schmitt In this Essay, researchers at the United States Sentencing Commission respond to criticisms by
and shows that the rule of automatic reversal has led appellate courts to narrow the scope of the rights at issue. To avoid this effect, the Note