Vol. 77 No. 4, June - June 2014
Index
- Editor's foreword.
- Dedication.
- Exceeding federal standards.
- Exceeding federal standards.
- Judicial independence: is it preserved or impaired by the election of judges?
- New York State constitutional law - today unquestionably accepted and applied as a vital and essential part of New York jurisprudence.
- Do precedents take precedence? Stare decisis and Oregon constitutionalism.
- Realigning the constitutional pendulum.
- Constitutional "stuff": house cleaning the New York Constitution.
- Constitutional "stuff": house cleaning the New York Constitution.
- Avoiding the appearance of impropriety: Missouri and Kansas Supreme Court decisions on the constitutionality of caps on noneconomic damages demonstrate the need for objective procedures in the selection of special judges.
- Balancing the Sixth Amendment on the scales of justice: is the lawyer or the client in control of the proceedings?
- Stops, frisks, and police encounters: the New York Court of Appeals's strict application of the De Bour standard.
- Restraining notices.
- Restraining notices.
- Restraining notices.
- Restraining notices.
- "Our constitution, our precedents, and (our) own best human judgments": a survey of free exercise state constitutional interpretation in the wake of Oregon v. Smith.