New England Law Review: Volume 48, Number 1 - Fall 2013
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- FormatePub
- ISBN978-1-61027-860-7
- EAN9781610278607
- Date de parution13/01/2015
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurMark Childress
Résumé
The New England Law Review now offers its issues in convenient and modern ebook formats for e-reader devices, apps, pads, smartphones, and computers. This first issue of Volume 48, Fall 2013, was published in 2014 and contains articles and presentations from leading figures of the academy, the judiciary, and the legal community. Contents of this issue include:Commencement Address at New England Law: Boston, May 24, 2013, by U.
S. Attorney Carmen M. OrtizArticles:Creamskimming and Competition, by Jim Chen"Give Me That Old Time Religion": The Persistence of the Webster Reasonable Doubt Instruction and the Need to Abandon It, by Hon. Richard E. Welch, IIIStanding Up to Clapper: How to Increase Transparency and Oversight of FISA Surveillance, by Alan ButlerNotes:Avoiding Unintended House Boats: Towards Sensible Coastal Land Use Policy in Massachusetts, by Keith RichardThe Moral Judiciary: Restoring Morality as a Basis of Judicial Decision-Making, by Erik HagenTales of the Dead: Why Autopsy Reports Should Be Classified as Testimonial Statements Under the Confrontation Clause, by Andrew HigleyComments:Putting Beer Goggles on the Jury: Rape, Intoxication, and the Reasonable Man in Commonwealth v.
Mountry, by Annalise H. ScobeyA Government of the People, by the People, for Whom? How In re Enforcement of a Subpoena Ensures that the Judiciary Is Unaccountable, by Lindsay Bohan
S. Attorney Carmen M. OrtizArticles:Creamskimming and Competition, by Jim Chen"Give Me That Old Time Religion": The Persistence of the Webster Reasonable Doubt Instruction and the Need to Abandon It, by Hon. Richard E. Welch, IIIStanding Up to Clapper: How to Increase Transparency and Oversight of FISA Surveillance, by Alan ButlerNotes:Avoiding Unintended House Boats: Towards Sensible Coastal Land Use Policy in Massachusetts, by Keith RichardThe Moral Judiciary: Restoring Morality as a Basis of Judicial Decision-Making, by Erik HagenTales of the Dead: Why Autopsy Reports Should Be Classified as Testimonial Statements Under the Confrontation Clause, by Andrew HigleyComments:Putting Beer Goggles on the Jury: Rape, Intoxication, and the Reasonable Man in Commonwealth v.
Mountry, by Annalise H. ScobeyA Government of the People, by the People, for Whom? How In re Enforcement of a Subpoena Ensures that the Judiciary Is Unaccountable, by Lindsay Bohan
The New England Law Review now offers its issues in convenient and modern ebook formats for e-reader devices, apps, pads, smartphones, and computers. This first issue of Volume 48, Fall 2013, was published in 2014 and contains articles and presentations from leading figures of the academy, the judiciary, and the legal community. Contents of this issue include:Commencement Address at New England Law: Boston, May 24, 2013, by U.
S. Attorney Carmen M. OrtizArticles:Creamskimming and Competition, by Jim Chen"Give Me That Old Time Religion": The Persistence of the Webster Reasonable Doubt Instruction and the Need to Abandon It, by Hon. Richard E. Welch, IIIStanding Up to Clapper: How to Increase Transparency and Oversight of FISA Surveillance, by Alan ButlerNotes:Avoiding Unintended House Boats: Towards Sensible Coastal Land Use Policy in Massachusetts, by Keith RichardThe Moral Judiciary: Restoring Morality as a Basis of Judicial Decision-Making, by Erik HagenTales of the Dead: Why Autopsy Reports Should Be Classified as Testimonial Statements Under the Confrontation Clause, by Andrew HigleyComments:Putting Beer Goggles on the Jury: Rape, Intoxication, and the Reasonable Man in Commonwealth v.
Mountry, by Annalise H. ScobeyA Government of the People, by the People, for Whom? How In re Enforcement of a Subpoena Ensures that the Judiciary Is Unaccountable, by Lindsay Bohan
S. Attorney Carmen M. OrtizArticles:Creamskimming and Competition, by Jim Chen"Give Me That Old Time Religion": The Persistence of the Webster Reasonable Doubt Instruction and the Need to Abandon It, by Hon. Richard E. Welch, IIIStanding Up to Clapper: How to Increase Transparency and Oversight of FISA Surveillance, by Alan ButlerNotes:Avoiding Unintended House Boats: Towards Sensible Coastal Land Use Policy in Massachusetts, by Keith RichardThe Moral Judiciary: Restoring Morality as a Basis of Judicial Decision-Making, by Erik HagenTales of the Dead: Why Autopsy Reports Should Be Classified as Testimonial Statements Under the Confrontation Clause, by Andrew HigleyComments:Putting Beer Goggles on the Jury: Rape, Intoxication, and the Reasonable Man in Commonwealth v.
Mountry, by Annalise H. ScobeyA Government of the People, by the People, for Whom? How In re Enforcement of a Subpoena Ensures that the Judiciary Is Unaccountable, by Lindsay Bohan














