Search results for: "A" (4254 results)
Andrew J. DeFilippis | Yale Law Journal Andrew J. DeFilippis 115 Yale L.J. 1086 (2006) This Note argues for judicial recognition of a Fourth
witnesses developed against a cultural background that equated a woman’s “honor,” and thus her credibility, with her sexual virtue. The idea that a woman’s
Pamela Samuelson | Yale Law Journal Pamela Samuelson 111 Yale L.J. 1575 (2002) Reverse engineering has a long history as an accepted practice. What
unlikely to develop in civil-law countries and transitional economies for a variety of reasons, including (1) the absence of adequate legal protections for minority...
politics have emphasized, incorrectly, a narrative that begins with Plessy v. Ferguson and ends with Brown v. Board of Education. That traditional
operating in a concentrated product market. This Feature considers how antitrust laws might be applied to this: identifying a theory of harm and how it matches the law, as well as ...
of educational adequacy lawsuits in state courts is a welcome development. But the potential of this legal strategy to advance a national goal of equal
Courts tripartite split in Shady Grove, federal courts have struggled to determine whether a Federal Rule of Civil Procedure and a state law conflict
profound harms it causes, and pursue a reform agenda to combat it. New technology threatens the security of information about our intimate lives—our
Blake Emerson | Yale Law Journal Blake Emerson The Supreme Court is inventing a new brand of administrative law, in which the President holds all