Vol. 75 No. 3, June 2010
Index
- Symposium: broke and broken: can we fix our state indigent defense system?
- Legal representation for the poor: can society afford this much injustice?
- Ethical obligations of indigent defense attorneys to their clients.
- State constitutional challenges to indigent defense systems.
- Ensuring the ethical representation of clients in the face of excessive caseloads.
- Commentary.
- Public defender elections and popular control over criminal justice.
- Raising the bar: standards-based training, supervision, and evaluation.
- Missouri's public defender crisis: shouldering the burden alone.
- Litigating the ghost of Gideon in Florida: separation of powers as a tool to achieve indigent defense reform.
- Epiphenomenal indigent defense.
- Protecting the innocent: part of the solution for inadequate funding for defenders, not a panacea for targeting justice.
- Silencing the rebel yell: the Eighth Circuit upholds a public school's ban on Confederate flags.
- The role of invidious discrimination in free exercise claims: putting Iqbal in its place.
- Beyond equality and adequacy: equal protection, tax assessments, and the Missouri public school funding dilemma.
- Counselor, stop everything! Missouri's venue statutes receive an expansive interpretation.
- Resurrection of a dead remedy: bringing common law negligence back into employment law.