Search results for: "AlB" (1144 results)
SCHUBERT, THE JUDICIAL MIND: THE ATTITUDES AND IDEOLOGIES OF SUPREME COURT JUSTICES 1946-1963, at 220 (1965); see also Jeffrey A. Segal & Albert D
Colombian experience, albeit with emphasis on the “dialogic” aspects of the judiciary and its capacity to “mobilize” civil society, see, respectively
formalism of the pre-Holmes period and the nihilism of Legal Realism. Its adherents included scholars such as Her- bert Wechsler, Henry Hart, Albert
constraint on management during the 1980s takeover wave). Albert O. Hirschman, Exit, Voice, and Loyalty: Responses to Decline in Firms, Organizations
and the nihilism of Legal Realism. Its adherents included scholars such as Her- bert Wechsler, Henry Hart, Albert Sacks, Lon Fuller, John Hart Ely, and
punishment, regardless of its severity, will probably have a much greater impact on behavior—albeit substantially less of an impact than non-instrumental
description of this role of the jury—as well as its place in the Bill of Rights—see AMAR, supra note 19, at 81-118. See also Albert W. Alschuler & Andrew G
rumors of race did not compel mob action. The local tolerance of a certain, albeit small, amount of racial ambiguity in Spencer v. Looney was not
Dangerous Branch, 105 YALE L.J. 1725, 1727 (1996). 118. E.g., Memorandum from Jay S. Bybee, Assistant Attorney Gen., to Alberto R. Gonzales, Counsel to
their goals. Threats of disruption and in-your-face behavior were their means. The law school complied, albeit cautiously, on all fronts. It did