No. 39, 2022
Index
- Nebraska Choice of Law: a Synthesis
- Appellate Practice in Nebraska: a Thorough, Though Not Exhaustive, Primer in How to Do it and How to Be More Effective
- Corrosion by Codification: the Deficiencies in the Statutory Versions of the Implied Warranty of Workmanlike Construction
- Waltzing to R.a.p
- The Nebraska Supreme Court Adopts the Howe Test to Correctly Determine the Enforceability of a Cooperation Agreement in State v. Wacker
- Zoucha v. Touch of Class Lounge: the Supreme Court of Nebraska Distorted Provisions of the Nebraska Workers' Compensation Act and Misapplied the Parking Lot Rule
- 2005: a Consumer Bankruptcy Odyssey
- A Small Question in the Big Statute: Does Section 402 of Sarbanes-oxley Prohibit Defense Advancements?
- Boerner v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Co.: the Eighth Circuit Misapplied the Second Gore Guidepost to Erroneously Decide a Punitive Damages Award Was Excessive
- Forfeiture by Wrongdoing: a Panacea for Victimless Domestic Violence Prosecutions
- Debtor Discharge and Creditor Repayment in Chapter 13
- Lessons from Pharaoh and the Hebrew Midwives: Conscientious Objection to State Mandates as a Free Exercise Right
- Charitable Choice Programs and Title Vii's Co-religionist Exemption
- Altering the Posse Comitatus Act: Letting the Military Address Terrorist Attacks on U.s. Soil
- Electing Federal Judges and Justices: Should the Supra-legislators Be Accountable to the Voters?
- Bidding Farewell to the Ball and Chain: the United States Supreme Court Unconvincingly Prohibits Shackling in the Penalty Phase in Deck v. Missouri
- Nothing Sacred: in Van Orden v. Perry, the United States Supreme Court Erroneously Abandoned the Establishment Clause's Foundational Principles Outlined in Lemon v. Kurtzman
- Whom to Hire: Rampant Misrepresentations of Credentials Mandate the Prudent Employer Make Informed Hiring Decisions
- Judicial Enforcement of Lifesaving Treatment for Unwilling Patients
- The Gramm-leach-bliley Act: Five Years After Implementation, Does the Emperor Wear Clothes?
- The Flip Side of Privacy: the Right of Publicity, the First Amendment, and Constitutional Line Drawing - a Presumptive Approach
- Ventura v. the Cincinnati Enquirer: the Sixth Circuit Correctly Determined a News Reporter's Disclosure of a Confidential News Source's Criminal Acts to Law Enforcement Was Absolutely Privileged, but the Court Improperly Ignored