Symposium 2014: Rutgers Law Review and The Institute for Professional Education are pleased to announce When the Law is Guilty: Confronting the Mass Incarceration Crisis in the United States Friday,
Read FullVolume 67, Summer 2015, Issue 6 Articles NOTICE-POSTING OF EMPLOYEE RIGHTS: NLRB RULEMAKING AND THE UPCOMING BACKFIRE Duane Morris This Article reviews the past and present features and requirements of
Read FullTwenty-Sixth Issue on State Constitutional Law Introduction Robert F. Williams We are convinced, as in the past, that the publication of our Annual Issue on State Constitutional Law continues to
Read FullVolume 67, Summer 2015, Issue 4 Articles RESPECTING PARENTS’ FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS IN THE ADOPTION PROCESS: PARENTS CHOOSING PARENTS FOR THEIR CHILDREN Teri Dobbins Baxter This Article discusses the fundamental rights
Read FullVolume 67, Spring 2015, Issue 3 Forward AFTER ACTAVIS: SEVEN WAYS FORWARD Michael A. Carrier The Supreme Court’s decision in FTC v. Actavis is one of the most important antitrust decisions
Read FullVolume 67, Spring 2015, Issue 2 Articles A SCANDALOUS PERVERSION OF TRUST: MODERN LESSONS FROM THE EARLY HISTORY OF CONGRESSIONAL INSIDER TRADING Michael A. Perino The Stop Trading on Congressional
Read FullVolume 66, Fall 2014, Issue 4 Articles WHEN THE LAW IS GUILTY: CONFRONTING THE MASS INCARCERATION CRISIS IN THE UNITED STATES? Laura Cohen It was not supposed to happen to
Read FullVolume 66, Summer 2014, Issue 3 Articles INVIDIOUS DELIBERATION: THE PROBLEM OF CONGRESSIONAL BIAS IN FEDERAL HATE CRIME LEGISLATION Sarah K. Rankin This Article analyzes evidence of bias in over
Read FullVolume 66, Fall 2013, Issue 2 Articles FORMAL BUT FORGIVING: A NEW APPROACH TO PATENT ASSIGNMENTS Karen E. Sandrik This Article contributes to an emerging literature and jurisprudence regarding what
Read FullVolume 66, Fall 2013, Issue 1 Articles UN-TORTURING THE DEFINITION OF TORTURE AND EMPLOYING THE RULE OF IMMIGRATION LENITY Irene Scharf It is no small irony that the United Nations
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