Vol. 42 No. 4, September 2009
Index
- The politics of law and film study: an introduction to the symposium on legal outsiders in American Film.
- Outsider citizens: film narratives about the internment of Japanese Americans.
- Notes on 'Minority Report'.
- Living Deadwood: imagination, affect, and the persistence of the past.
- Michael Clayton, Hollywood's contemporary hero-lawyer: beyond outsider within and insider without.
- "Western" notions of justice: legal outsiders in American cinema.
- The legal nocturne.
- Big dig confidential: why Massachusetts needs a statutory journalist's shield law if it wants to keep the big stories coming.
- The rule of reason after Leegin: reconsidering the use of economic analysis in the antitrust arena.
- The great standby rate debate: analysis of a key barrier to the influx of needed new alternative energy sources.
- The Massachusetts approach to the intersection of governmental attorney-client privilege and open government laws.
- Cloaking police misconduct in privacy: why the Massachusetts anti-wiretapping statute should allow for the surreptitious recording of police officers.
- Criminal law - First Circuit deems aggravated identity theft statute ambiguous and applies rule of lenity - United States v. Godin.
- Employee benefits law - drunk driving fatality determined not accidental under ERISA-governed insurance plan - Stamp v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.