Volume 16
1982-83
Issue 1
- A Proposed Analysis for Gender-based Practices and State Public Accommodations Laws
- Affirmative Duty and Constitutional Tort
- Evaluating Michigan's Guilty but Mentally Ill Verdict: An Empirical Study
- Alternative Mortgage Instruments: Authorizing and Implementing Price Level Adjusted Mortgages
- Constitutional Constraints on the Admissibility of Grand Jury Testimony: The Unavailable Witness, Confrontation, and Due Process
- Commercial Treaties and Foreign Companies: The Mutually Reinforcing Principles of Remedial Antitrust and National Treatment
- The Constitutionality of the Special Prosecutor Law
Issue 2
- Challenging the Employment-At-Will Doctrine Through Modern Contract Theory
- Introduction
- Protection Against Unjust Discharge: The Need for a Federal Statute
- A Right of Fair Dismissal: Enforcing a Statutory Guarantee
- Employment Problems of the Handicapped: Would Title VII Remedies be Appropriate and Effective?
- Preface
- Exploring Voluntary Arbitration of Individual Employment Disputes
- Protecting the Whistleblower from Retaliatory Discharge
- Reforming At-Will Employment Law: A Model Statute
- Employment-At-Will Doctrine: Providing a Public Policy Exception to Improve Worker Safety
Issue 3
- Habeas Corpus Review of State Trial Court Failure to Give Lesser Included Offense Instructions
- Preface
- Government Compensation for the Costs of Producting Subpoenaed Documents: A Proposal for Legislative Reform
- Annual Index
- Soliciting Sophisticates: A Modest Proposal for Attorney Solicitation
- The Deduction of Unemployment Compensation from Back-Pay Awards Under Title VII
- Improving Jury Deliberations: A Reconsideration of Lesser Included Offense Instructions
- An Appellate Court Dilemma and a Solution Through Subject Matter Organization
- The Organized Bar: A Catalyst for Court Reform
- Reducing Court Costs and Delay: An Overview
- Colorado's Answer to the Local Rules Problem
- Appellate Caseload: Meeting the Challenge in Rhode Island
- Court-Annexed Arbitration
- Oral Argument and Expediting Appeals: A Compatible Combination