University of Pennsylvania Law Review - 1995
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Dynamic Statutory Interpretation.
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Don't put my article online!: Extending copyright's new-use doctrine to the electronic publishing media and beyond.
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Natural preservation and the race to develop.
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Comments on Alex M. Johnson, Jr.'s 'Destabilizing race.' (in this issue, p. 1595)(Symposium - Shaping American Communities: Segregation, Housing & the Urban Poor)
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Girls and the getaway: cars, culture, and the predicament of gendered space.
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Response to Gary Orfield.
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Racialized space and the culture of segregation: "hewing a stone of hope from a mountain of despair."(Symposium - Shaping American Communities: Segregation, Housing & the Urban Poor)
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The desirability of punitive damages in securities arbitration: challenges facing the industry regulators in the wake of Mastrobuono.
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The feminist challenge in criminal law.
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The assumption of risk defense and the sexual transmission of AIDS: a proposal for the application of comparative knowledge.
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Keynote address.
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Defining the boundaries of the adverse domination doctrine: is there any repose for corporate directors?
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Equality of opportunity and investment in creditworthiness.
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Pitfalls of housing redistribution.
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The spatial bias of federal housing law and policy: concentrated poverty in urban America.
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Where inner-city students live versus how they learn.
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Black rage and the criminal law: a principled approach to a polarized debate.
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The central mistake of sex discrimination law: the disaggregation of sex from gender.
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Comment on Douglas S. Massey's 'Getting away with murder: segregation and violent crime in urban America.' (in this issue, p. 1203)(Symposium - Shaping American Communities: Segregation, Housing & the Urban Poor)
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Federalism and families.
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Market failure and community investment: a market-oriented alternative to the Community Reinvestment Act.
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How race and poverty intersect to prevent integration: destabilizing race as a vehicle to integrate neighborhoods.
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A response to Schill and Wachter's 'The spatial bias of federal housing law and policy.' (article by Michael H. Schill and Susan M. Wachter in this issue, p. 1285)(Symposium - Shaping American Communities: Segregation, Housing & the Urban Poor)
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The Community Reinvestment Act reconsidered.
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The Confirmation Mess: Cleaning up the Federal Appointment Process.
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Troubles at the doorstep: the Fair Housing Amendments Act of 1988 and group homes for recovering substance abusers.
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Portioning punishment: constitutional limits on successive and excessive penalties.
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The political economy of private legislatures.
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Ever again: legal remembrance of administrative massacre.
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Segregation, whiteness, and transformation.
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"To promote the progress of science and useful arts": a role for federal regulation of intellectual property as collateral.
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Housing and the justification of school segregation.
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The exclusion and detention of aliens: lessons from the lives of Ellen Knauff and Ignatz Mezei.
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"And the wisdom to know the difference": confidentiality vs. privilege in the self-help setting.
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What was it like to try a rat?
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The metaphor is the key: cryptography, the Clipper Chip, and the Constitution.
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Intentional racial discrimination and segregation by the federal government as a principal cause of concentrated poverty: a response to Schill and Wachter.
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Getting away with murder: segregation and violent crime in urban America.
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Standing and social choice: historical evidence.
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Checkbook journalism, free speech and fair trials.