Issue 1
Articles
- The European Court of Human Rights: What It Is, How It Works, and Its Future by Paul L. McKaskle
- Torture, Slippery Slopes, Intellectual Apologists, and Ticking Bombs: An Australian Response to Bagaric and Clarke by Anne O’Rourke, Vivek Chaudhri, & Chris Nyland
- Daubert, Critique and Interpretation: What Empirical Studies Tell Us About the Application of Daubert by A. Leah Vickers
Comments
- Carpal Tunnel Syndrome Is Not an Injury in the Line of Dangerous Duty: Workers’ Compensation for Peace Officers and the Need for Reform by Cassie Coleman
- Fighting Speech with Speech: Combating Abuses of Section 527 Political Organizations with More Speech, Not Additional Regulation by James H. Oddie
- Reforming the Fair Labor Standards Act: Recognizing On-Call Time as a Distinct Category of Compensable Work by Loren Schwartz
Notes
- Finality of Conviction, the Right to Appeal, and Deportation Under Montenegro v. Ashcroft: The Case of the Dog That Did Not Bark by Ashwin Gokhale
Issue 2
Articles
- Causation and Attenuation in the Slavery Reparations Debate by Kaimipono David Wenger
- Lost in the Shuffle: State-Recognized Tribes and the Tribal Gaming Industry by Alexis Koenig & Jonathan Stein
- Antitrust Law on the Borderland of Language and Market Definition: Is There a Separate Spanish-Language Radio Market? A Case Study of the Merger of Univision and Hispanic Broadcasting Corporation by Catherine J. K. Sandoval
- The Instrumental Value of Beauty in the Pursuit of Justice by Nancy Perkins Spyke
The Torture Debate
- Is Coercive Interrogation of Terrorist Suspects Effective? A Response to Bagaric and Clarke by Philip N. S. Rumney
Comments
- An Undue Burden on an Otherwise Feasible Defense: California Courts’ Burden on the Defendant Moving for Summary Judgment Based on Federal Preemption in Certain Medical Device Cases by James E. Heffner
- California State Disability Insurance: Privatization Is the Answer to Employee Woes by Kelly L. Knudson
Issue 3
Symposium
- Some Scholarly Consensus: Modernization of the Antitrust Laws Is Generally Best Left to the Judiciary by Joshua P. Davis
Articles
- Civil Monetary Remedies Available to Federal Antitrust Enforcers by Stephen Calkins
- Half-Time at the Antitrust Modernization Commission by Albert A. Foer
- Federalism and Antitrust Reform by Herbert Hovenkamp
- Five Myths About Antitrust Damages by Robert H. Lande
- One More Challenge for the AMC: Repairing the Legacy of Illinois Brick by J. Thomas Prud’homme, Jr. & Ellen S. Cooper
The Torture Debate
- Tortured Responses (A Reply to Our Critics): Physically Persuading Suspects Is Morally Preferable to Allowing the Innocent to Be Murdered by Mirko Bagaric & Julie Clarke
Comments
- From Farm to Table: How This Little Piggy Was Dragged Through the Market by Justine Hinderliter
- An Approach to Certification Issues in Multi-State Diversity Class Actions in Federal Court After the Class Action Fairness Act of 2005 by Holly Kershell
Issue 4
Symposium
- Federalism in Securities Regulation: A Brief Introduction and Reflection by Christopher M. Wood
Keynote Address
- Federalism in Securities Regulation: An Economist’s Perspective by Joseph E. Stiglitz
Articles