Volume 18
1984-85
Issue 1
- European Integration Through Fundamental Rights
- Rights and Judges in a Democracy: A New Canadian Version
- Public Employees or Private Citizens: The Off-Duty Sexual Activities of Police Officers and the Constitutional Right of Privacy
- The Liability of Third Parties Under Title VII
- Towards a United Kingdom Bill of Rights
- Abusive Pro Se Plaintiffs in the Federal Courts: Proposals for Judicial Control
Issue 2
- Why I Teach Water Law
- Is Thinking Like a Lawyer Enough?
- Why Would Law Students Benefit from Studying Economics?
- Mediation and Negotiation: Learning to Deal With Psychological Responses
- The Law School of the University of Michigan: 1859-1984: An Intellectual History
- Preface
- The Nobel Prize for Law
- Doctrine in a Vacuum: Reflections on What a Law School Ought (and Ought Not) to Be
- Fairness in Teaching Advocacy
- Clinical Legal Education: Is Taking Rites Seriously a Fantasy, Folly, or Failure?
- A Proposal for Extension of the Occupational Safety and Health Act to Indian-Owned Businesses on Reservations
- Private Settlement as Alternative Adjudication: A Rationale for Negotiation Ethics
- Protecting the Independence of Administrative Law Judges: A Model Administrative Law Judge Corps Statute
Issue 3
- Pretextual Fourth Amendment Activity: Another Viewpoint
- Rejoinder: Truth, Justice, and the American Way--or Professor Haddad's "Hard Choices"
- Forcing Attorneys to Represent Indigent Civil Litigants: The Problems and Some Proposals
- A Moderate and Restrained Federal Product Liability Bill: Targeting the Crisis Areas for Resolution
- The Bottom Line Limitation to the Rule of Griggs v. Duke Power Company
- The Admissibility of Prior Silence to Impeach the Testimony of Criminal Defendants
Issue 4
- From Coitus to Commerce: Legal and Social Consequences of Noncoital Reproduction
- Divorce Bargaining: The Limits on Private Ordering
- Beyond State Intervention in the Family: For Baby Jane Doe
- Exclusion of Families with Children from Housing
- The Myth of State Intervention in the Family
- Introduction
- Coercive Freedom: A Response to Professor Chambers
- The Next Step: Definition, Generalization, and Theory in American Family Law
- The Incompetent Spouse's Election: A Pecuniary Approach
- House of Judah: The Problem of Child Abuse and Neglect in Communes and Cults