Why Contempt Is Different: Agency Costs and "Petty Crime" in Summary Contempt...
112 Yale L.J. 1223 (2003)For as long as they have existed, contempt proceedings have been the source of significant controversy, their necessity and abuse hotly contested by the legal community, the...
View ArticleLimiting Locke: A Natural Law Justification for the Fair Use Doctrine
112 Yale L.J. 1179 (2003)Focusing a discussion of intellectual property on a 300-year-old text may seem unusual, but John Locke's Two Treatises of Government has an uncommon place in American...
View ArticleSame-Sex Privacy and the Limits of Antidiscrimination Law
112 Yale L.J. 1257 (2003)Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, as it has been interpreted by the courts, is an uncompromising statute. It bars adverse employment actions taken on the basis of race,...
View ArticleThe Limits on University Control of Graduate Student Speech
112 Yale L.J. 1295 (2003)In the spring of 1999, Christopher Brown, a master's degree candidate in material sciences at the University of California at Santa Barbara (UCSB), submitted his thesis for...
View ArticleChaos and Rules: Should Responses to Violent Crises Always Be Constitutional?
112 Yale L.J. 1011 (2003)This Article suggests that legal models that have been traditionally invoked in the context of fashioning responses to emergencies may not always be adequate. Rather, there may...
View ArticleWhat Ails Us?
112 Yale L.J. 1135 (2003)Is American democracy sick? If so, what ails it? More importantly, can the disease be cured? Can its symptoms be alleviated by imaginative and well-crafted laws? Or is it a...
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