Volume 49, Issue 2 Faculty Presentation Day II 2004
This issue is a compilation of original articles presented by New York Law School Faculty at the law school’s second annual Faculty Presentation Day, addressing issues in areas such as legal education, law and the humanities, tax, commerce, segregation, criminal law, sexuality, legal writing, and even fiction.Articles
Introduction
Richard A. Matasar and Cameron Stracher
The Rise and Fall of American Legal Education
Richard A. Matasar
Reflections on the Essential Role of Legal Scholarship in Advancing Causes of Citizen Groups
Nadine Strossen
The Use and Abuse of Social Science in the Same-Sex Marriage Debate
Stephen A. Newman
If I Implore You and Order You to Set Me Free
Robert Blecker
Innocence and The Sopranos
Seth D. Harris
Bad Writing: Some Thoughts on the Abuse of Scholarly Rhetoric
Jethro K. Lieberman
Social Citizen as “Guest Worker”: A Comment on Identities of Immigrants and the Working Poor
Frank W. Munger
Suing Amy: A Love Story
Cameron Stracher
Cancellation of Debt and Other Incidental Items of Income: Puritan Tax Rules in the U.S.
Richard C.E. Beck
Democratizing Capital: The History, Law, and Reform of the Community Reinvestment Act
Richard D. Marsico
The Rule of Law and the Achievement of Unanimity in Brown
Stephen Ellmann
Separate but Equal Education in the Context of Gender
Isabelle Katz Pinzler
Rombach v. Chang: To 9(b) or not to 9(b)
Scott D. Woller