Vol. 4 No. 2, September 2002
Index
- Judge, scholar, and friend.
- Document destruction after Arthur Andersen: is it still housekeeping or is it a crime?
- A few thoughts on the importance of an independent judiciary.
- Unpleasant duties: imposing sanctions for frivolous appeals.
- Accessing the law.
- From pens to pixels: text-media issues in promulgating, archiving, and using judicial opinions.
- On the Internet, nobody knows you're a judge: appellate courts' use of Internet materials.
- Neglecting the national memory: how copyright term extensions compromise the development of digital archives.
- Out of the frying pan and into the fire: the emergence of depublication in the wake of vacatur.
- Expanded rights through state law: the United States Supreme Court shows state courts the way.
- An argument for reviving the actual futility exception to the Supreme Court's procedural default doctrine.
- Seeing the appellate horizon: civil trial strategy and standards of review in the Eighth Circuit.
- Appellate malpractice.