William and Mary Law Review - 2004
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High alert: the government's war on the financing of terrorism and its implications for donors, domestic charitable organizations, and global philanthropy.
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Gimme shelter: does the Fair Housing Amendments Act of 1988 require accommodations for the financial circumstances of the disabled?
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When equality leaves everyone worse off: the problem of leveling down in equality law.
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Escaping a rigid analysis: the shift to a fact-based approach for crime of violence inquiries involving escape offenses.
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A difficult question in deed: a cost-benefit framework for titling programs.
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Barking up the wrong tree: the misplaced furor over the Feeney Amendment as a threat to judicial independence.
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American Insurance Ass'n v. Garamendi and executive preemption in foreign affairs.
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Regulatory takings and the original understanding of the takings clause.
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The Hershey Trust's quest to diversify: redefining the state Attorney General's role when charitable trusts wish to diversify.
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Contributions legal scholars can make to development economics: examples from China.
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A systems approach to corporate governance reform: why importing U.S. corporate law isn't the answer.
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Not so meaningful anymore: why a law library is required to make a prisoner's access to the courts meaningful.
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Property rights, community public goods, and household time allocation in urban squatter communities: evidence from Peru.
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Statehood as the new personhood: the discovery of fundamental 'states' rights'.
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Reveille for Congress: a challenge to revise rape law in the military.
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Amateur-to-amateur.
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Inverting choice of law in the wired universe: thermodynamics, mass, and energy.
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No good deed goes unpunished? Establishing a self-evaluate privilege for corporate internal investigations.
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'Power over this unfortunate race': race, politics and Indian law in United States v. Rogers.
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Who speaks Latin anymore? Translating de minimis use for application to music copyright infringement and sampling.
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Technological evolution and the devolution of corporate financial reporting.
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Conspiracy theory: the use of the conspiracy doctrine in times of national crisis.
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Lessons from the rise and (possible) fall of Chinese township-village enterprises.
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Adjudicating in anarchy: an expressive theory of international dispute resolution.
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Gaps, inexperience, inconsistencies, and overlaps: crisis in the regulation of genetically modified plants and animals.
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Foreword.
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Circling back to the obvious: the convergence of traditional and reverse discrimination in Title VII proof.
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Why family cap laws just aren't getting it done.
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Evaluating the Federal Communications Commission's national television ownership cap: what's bad for broadcasting is good for the country.
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A pattern-oriented approach to fair use.
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The futile quest for racial neutrality in capital selection and the Eight Amendment argument for abolition based on unconscious racial discrimination.
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Errata.
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Connecting the dots: Grutter, school desegregation, and federalism.
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Medical research oversight from the corporate governance perspective: comparing institutional review boards and corporate boards.
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The once and future federal grazing lands.
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Solving problems vs. claiming rights: the Pragmatist challenge to Legal Liberalism.
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Relative burdens: family ties and the safety net.
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Should juvenile adjudications count as prior convictions for Apprendi purposes?
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An industrial organization approach to copyright law.
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Collateral damage: the endangered center in American politics.
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Cross burning, cockfighting, and symbolic meaning: toward a First Amendment ethnography.