No. 48-3, March 1997
Index
- Bennis v. Michigan: the Supreme Court Clings to Precedent and Denies Innocent Owners a Defense to Forfeiture - Mark E. Beatty
- Bmw of North America, Inc. v. Gore: the Supreme Court Rejects a Punitive Damage Award on Due Process Grounds - Rob S. Register
- Gaining Appellate Review by "manufacturing" a Final Judgment Through Voluntary Dismissal of Peripheral Claims - Rebecca A. Cochran
- Glide Path to an "inclusionary Rule": How Expansion of the Good Faith Exception Threatens to Fundamentally Change the Exclusionary Rule - James P. Fleissner
- How Many Times Was Lochner-era Substantive Due Process Effective? - Michael J. Phillips
- Jaffee v. Redmond: the Supreme Court Adopts a Federal Psychotherapist-patient Privilege and Extends the Scope to Encompass Licensed Social Workers - Melanie Stephens Stone
- Legal Writing as a Kind of Philosophy - Joel R. Cornwell
- Mccabe v. Life-line Ambulance Service: Another Extension of the Over-extended Administrative Search Exception - Anne Tunnessen
- Models of the Will and Negative Disinheritance - Frederic S. Schwartz
- The Jurisdiction of Trademark and Copyright Infringement on the Internet - James H. Aiken
- The Legal Advice Requirement of the Attorney-client Privilege: a Special Problem for In-house Counsel and Outside Attorneys Representing Corporations - Grace M. Giesel
- The Managed Care Dilemma: Can Theories of Tort Liability Adapt to the Realities of Cost Containment? - Barbara A. Noah
- United States v. Armstrong: Permissible Prosecutorial Discretion? - Robert C. Brand
- United States v. Ursery: the Long Arm of the Law Gets Reattached - Brian C. Max