• Books,  Harvard Law Review

    Harvard Law Review‘s Nov. 2013 issue reviews Supreme Court’s last Term, honors Justice Ginsburg, and features Siegel, Issacharoff, Klarman & Murphy

    The November issue, Number 1, is the special annual review of the U.S. Supreme Court’s previous Term. Each year, the issue is introduced by noteworthy and extensive contributions from recognized scholars. In this issue, for the 2012 Term, articles and essays include: • Foreword: “Equality Divided,” by Reva B. Siegel • Comment: “Beyond the Discrimination Model on Voting,” by Samuel Issacharoff • Comment: “Windsor and Brown: Marriage Equality and Racial Equality,” by Michael J. Klarman • Comment: “License, Registration, Cheek Swab: DNA Testing and the Divided Court,” by Erin Murphy The issue also features essays on substantive and procedural law, and judicial method, honoring Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and her…

  • Books,  Harvard Law Review,  QP Blog

    Harvard Law Review‘s June 2013 Issue Covers Racial Capitalism, Shallow Signals, Heirs, and Civil Rights Lawyers

    The Harvard Law Review is offered in a digital edition, featuring active Contents and URLs, linked notes, and proper ebook formatting. The contents of Issue 8 include: • Article, “Racial Capitalism,” by Nancy Leong • Essay, “Shallow Signals,” by Bert I. Huang • Book Review, “All Unhappy Families: Tales of Old Age, Rational Actors, and the Disordered Life,” by Ariela R. Dubler • Book Review, “Lawyers, Law, and the New Civil Rights History,” by Risa Goluboff • Note, “Recasting the U.S. International Trade Commission’s Role in the Patent System” • Note, “Juvenile Miranda Waiver and Parental Rights” • Note, “The Province of the Jurist: Judicial Resistance to Expert Testimony on Eyewitnesses…

  • Books,  Harvard Law Review,  QP Blog

    Harvard Law Review‘s May 2013 Symposium on Privacy & Tech; Issue Adds Articles on Administrative Review and the OIRA

    The Harvard Law Review is offered in a digital edition, featuring active Contents, linked notes, active URLs in notes, and proper ebook formatting. The contents of Issue 7 include scholarly articles and student case notes, as well as an extensive Symposium on Privacy and Technology. Subjects include: Article, “Agency Self-Insulation Under Presidential Review,” by Jennifer Nou Commentary, “The Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs: Myths and Realities,” by Cass R. Sunstein SYMPOSIUM: PRIVACY AND TECHNOLOGY “Introduction: Privacy Self-Management and the Consent Dilemma,” by Daniel J. Solove “What Privacy Is For,” by Julie E. Cohen “The Dangers of Surveillance,” by Neil M. Richards “The EU-U.S. Privacy Collision: A Turn to Institutions…

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    Harvard Law Review‘s April 2013 Issue features Developments on Immigration, Coase Theorem, and “Unwritten” Constitution

    The Harvard Law Review is offered in a digital edition, featuring active Contents, linked notes, and proper ebook formatting. The contents of Issue 6 include scholarly articles and student case notes, as well as as the extensive, annual survey of emerging Developments in the Law. This year’s subject is immigration law and policy. Topics include legal representation of immigrants in removal proceedings, the applicability of the Fourth Amendment and its exclusionary rule, the application of DOMA to immigrant applicants, and the state-federal problem of immigration law and enforcement. The issue also includes an article by Lee Anne Fennell on transaction costs, Coase, and “resource access costs,” as well as a…

  • Books,  Harvard Law Review,  QP Blog

    Harvard Law Review, March 2013, features Louis Kaplow on multistage adjudication and Nicola Lacey on criminal justice

    The Harvard Law Review is offered in a digital edition, featuring active Contents, linked notes, and proper ebook formatting. The contents of Issue 5 include: • Article, “Multistage Adjudication,” by Louis Kaplow • Book Review, “Humanizing the Criminal Justice Machine: Re-Animated Justice or Frankenstein’s Monster?,” by Nicola Lacey • Note, “Importing a Trade or Business Limitation into § 2036: Toward a Regulatory Solution to FLP-Driven Transfer Tax Avoidance” • Note, “The Benefits of Unequal Protection” • Note, “Diagnostic Method Patents and Harms to Follow-On Innovation” • Note, “Three Formulations of the Nexus Requirement in Reasonable Accommodations Law” In addition, student research explores Recent Cases on the intersection of age discrimination…

  • Books,  Harvard Law Review,  QP Blog

    Harvard Law Review‘s Feb. 2013 issue explores unbundled legal aid, presidential power, preemption, human trafficking, and Indian canon

    The Harvard Law Review is offered as an ebook, featuring active Contents, linked notes, and proper formatting. The contents of Issue 4 include: • Article, “The Limits of Unbundled Legal Assistance: A Randomized Study in a Massachusetts District Court and Prospects for the Future,” by D. James Greiner, Cassandra Wolos Pattanayak, and Jonathan Hennessy • Book Review, “Stochastic Constraint,” by Neal Kumar Katyal • Note, “Counteracting the Bias: The Department of Labor’s Unique Opportunity to Combat Human Trafficking” • Note, “Tilling the Vast Wasteland: The Case for Reviving Localism in Public Interest Obligations for Cable Television” • Note, “Preemption as Purposivism’s Last Refuge” • Note, “The Meaning(s) of ‘The People’…

  • Books,  Harvard Law Review,  QP Blog

    Harvard Law Review‘s January 2013 issue explores politicians and redistricting, copyright reform, the independent status of the SEC, & recent cases

    The Harvard Law Review is offered in a digital edition for ereaders and pads, featuring active Contents, linked notes, and proper ebook formatting. The contents of Issue 3, January 2013, include: • Article, “Politicians as Fiduciaries,” by D. Theodore Rave • Book Review, “Is Copyright Reform Possible?” by Pamela Samuelson • Note, “The SEC Is Not an Independent Agency” In addition, student research explores Recent Cases on the Fourth Amendment implications of “pinging” a GPS signal on a cellphone, the First Amendment and mandatory tobacco graphic warnings, the First Amendment and police impersonation statutes, whether software method claims are patent ineligible, defamation law and the changing “per se” status of…

  • Books,  Harvard Law Review

    Harvard Law Review‘s Issue 2 (Dec. 2012): separation of powers, class actions, fixing Washington, student loan bankruptcy, DOMA, and more

    Available in ebooks even before the print edition is sold, the Harvard Law Review is offered in a high-quality digital edition, featuring active Contents and linked notes. Issue 2 includes articles by such scholars as Margaret Lemos, Curtis Bradley & Trevor Morrison, and Richard Hasen, as well as extensive student commentary.

  • Books,  Harvard Law Review

    Harvard Law Review‘s new Supreme Court Issue Features Foreword by Pamela Karlan on Democracy and Disdain

    The Harvard Law Review is offered in a digital edition for ereaders, featuring active Contents, linked footnotes, legible tables, and proper ebook formatting. This current issue of the Review is November 2012, the first issue of academic year 2012-2013 (Volume 126). The November issue is the special annual review of the Supreme Court’s previous term. Each year, the issue is introduced by noteworthy and extensive articles from recognized scholars. In this issue, the Foreword is authored by Pamela Karlan, on “democracy and disdain.” Extensive Comments by Gillian Metzger and Martha Minow explore the Supreme Court’s decision on the Affordable Health Care Act and Chief Justice Roberts’s reasoning, while Stephanos Bibas…

  • Books,  Harvard Law Review

    Harvard Law Review issue 8, June 2012: Developments on Presidential power, article on Spatial Diversity & redistricting, and review essay on Constitutional Originalism

    The June 2012 issue features the Harvard Law Review‘s annual, extensive, and famous DEVELOPMENTS IN THE LAW section; this year’s subject examines Presidential Authority. Issue 8 also includes an article by Nicholas Stephanopoulos, “Spatial Diversity,” which analyzes redistricting and other concepts of population dispersion, and a Book Review by Michael Dorf, “The Undead Constitution,” which explores originalism and constitutional interpretation in light of recent books by David Strauss and Jack Balkin. The issue begins with a series of In Memoriam contributions celebrating Bernard Wolfman. In its Developments survey on executive authority, the student-authors analyze the subjects of: * The President’s Role in the Legislative Process * Presidential Power and the…