University of Pennsylvania Law Review - 1994
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Manufacturing evidence for trial: the prejudicial implications of videotaped crime scene reenactments.
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Discrimination by managers and supervisors: recognizing agent liability under Title VII.
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The Case of the Prisoners and the origins of judicial review.
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Home visiting and family values: the powers of conversation, touching, and soap.
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Sameness and subordination: the dangers of a universal solution.
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Action and aberration.
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The actus reus of Dr. Caligari.
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Motive crimes and other minds.
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Miranda deconstitutionalized: when the Self-Incrimination Clause and the Civil Rights Act collide.
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Is there an act requirement in the criminal law?
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"Viewer discretion is advised": a structural approach to the issue of television violence.
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Criminal liability and the duty to aid the distressed.
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On the moral irrelevance of bodily movements.
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Learning from experience: the impact of research about family support programs on public policy.
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Rewriting the law of resale price maintenance: the Kodak decision and transaction cost economics.
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The role of luck in the criminal law.
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Moore on intention and volition.
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More on 'Act and Crime.' (Symposium: Act & Crime)
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Action and crime: a fine-grained approach.
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Switching time and other thought experiments: the Hughes Court and constitutional transformation.
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Keeping women out of the executive suite: the courts' failure to apply Title VII scrutiny to upper-level jobs.
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Culpability and control.
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Judges, behavioral scientists, and the demands of humanity.
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Proximate cause in Michael Moore's 'Act and Crime.' (Symposium: Act & Crime)
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A reaffirmation: the authenticity of the Roberts memorandum, or Felix the non-forger.
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Playing by pornography's rules: the regulation of sexual expression.
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Becoming gentlemen: women's experiences at one Ivy League law school.
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Rodrigo's ninth chronicle: race, legal instrumentalism, and the rule of law.
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The deceptive nature of rules.
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"Join the Sierra Club!": imposition of ideology as a condition of probation.
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Action, omission, and the stringency of duties.
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Volition, intention, and responsibility.