Vol. 5 No. 1, March 2003
Index
- Death row and the cancer ward.
- Confirmation gridlock: the federal judicial appointments process under Bill Clinton and George W. Bush.
- Appellate judicial appointments during the Clinton presidency: an inside perspective.
- First arguments at the Supreme Court of the United States.
- A chilly reception at the court.
- A first argument in the tradition of many.
- A rarefied kind of dread.
- I couldn't wait to argue.
- Pretender in paradise.
- First argument in the United States Supreme Court.
- Why me?
- Learning (and teaching) from doing.
- Tilting at windmills.
- Once is not enough, or how about arguing your first two Supreme Court cases back to back ... and losing?
- First argument impressions of the Supreme Court.
- Twice grilled.
- Still grateful after all these years.
- Public rights, private rites: reliving Richmond Newspapers for my father.
- Applications for certificates of appealability and the Supreme Court's 'obligatory' jurisdiction.
- Judging federal regulations that preempt state law: the role of the presumption against preemption.
- The Holmes Group, Inc. v. Vornado Air Circulation Systems, Inc.: the return of patent appeals to the regional circuits.
- Legal and appellate weblogs: what they are, why you should read them, and why you should consider starting your own.
- Advice from Justice Jackson.
- Advocacy before the United States Supreme Court.