South Dakota Law Review - 2013
- "Profession, a lawyer": recent scholarship sheds light on Abraham Lincoln's law practice.
- Doors to remain open during business hours: maintaining the media's (and public's) First Amendment right of access in the face of changing technology.
- Defining the Brunner test's three parts: time to set a national standard for all three parts to determine when to allow the discharge of federal student loans.
- The law and philosophy of personhood: where should South Dakota abortion law go from here?
- Catching the wind: a legal and economic comparison between South Dakota's Renewable, Recycled and Conserved Energy Objective and a Renewable Portfolio Standard.
- Presumed dead: laying to rest the whereabouts unknown.
- Fox-hunting the conscience of the king into a shallow grave: sovereign immunity and discovery as applied to Indian tribes in Alltel Communications, L.L.C. v. DeJordy and its implications for discovery practice.
- Agricultural cooperatives and the law: obsolete statutes in a dynamic economy.
- Competition, intellectual property rights, and transgenic seed.
- Katz-ing up and (not) losing place: tracking the Fourth Amendment implications of United States v. Jones and prolonged GPS monitoring.
- Metaphors and persuasion.
- Antitrust and competition in America's heartland.
- South Dakota's solutions to soppy soil: changes to water management.
- Why all or nothing? A middle ground to subrogation law will protect South Dakota's insureds.
- Economic power, Henry Simons, and a lost antitrust vision of economic conservatism.
- Ex parte contacts revisited.
- Under siege: the U.S. live cattle industry.
- Dedication.
- Grantor trusts in South Dakota: preserving a planning tool to maintain the state's trust friendly status.
- Under siege: the U.S. live cattle industry.
- The failure of corporate governance standards and antitrust compliance.
- Mixed motives speak in different tongues: doctrine, discourse, and judicial function in class-of-one equal protection theory.
- The beef with big meat: meatpacking and antitrust in America's heartland.
- Mississippi is burning Georgia's peaches because Alabama is no longer a sweet home: a legislative analysis of Southern discomfort regarding illegal immigration.
- Mixed motives speak in different tongues: doctrine, discourse, and judicial function in class-of-one equal protection theory.