Skip to content
Volume 91 - Issue 3

Note, Protecting Communities from Unwarranted Environmental Risks: A NEPA Solution for ICCTA Preemption

By Shata L. Stucky. Full text here. In 1995, Congress passed the Interstate Commerce Commission Termination Act (ICCTA) in an effort to relieve the railroad industry of burdensome regulation. The ICCTA preempts local land-use regulations that communities formerly used to protect valuable resources such as drinking water supplies. Under some circumstances, the National Environmental Policy Act…

Continue Reading

Essay, Revisiting Dreyfus: A More Complete Account of a Trial by Mathematics

By D.H. Kaye. Full text here. Legal literature and case law depict the infamous conviction of Alfred Dreyfus for treason and espionage in 1899 as a prime example of the power of even grossly fallacious mathematical demonstrations to overwhelm a legal tribunal. This Essay shows that Dreyfus is not a case of mathematics run amok, unchecked…

Continue Reading

Sex Torts

By Deana A. Pollard. Full text here. America has a serious sexual problem. The sexual practices of a small percentage of Americans have created an unprecedented disease rate that is costing the American public about $20 billion per year. Lawsuits seeking damages for sexual disease transmission are on the rise, yet current sex tort law is…

Continue Reading

Parental Support of Adult Children with Disabilities

By Sande L. Buhai. Full text here. It is generally agreed that parents should (morally) and must (legally) be required to support their children until they reach the age of majority. This article examines the circumstances in which parents should or must support their children thereafter. Do parents have an indefinite obligation to provide financial support…

Continue Reading

A Simple Statutory Solution to Minority Oppression in the Closely Held Business

By John H. Matheson & R. Kevin Maler. Full text here. Disputes involving closely held businesses come in primarily two varieties. When, as is often the case, the business fails, creditors regularly seek to pierce the corporate veil in an attempt to reach the assets of the business owners. When the business succeeds, on the other…

Continue Reading

Crossing the Color Line: Racial Migration and the One-Drop Rule, 1600-1860

By Daniel J. Sharfstein. Full text here. Scholars describe the one-drop rule—the idea that any African ancestry makes a person black—as the American regime of race. While accounts of when the rule emerged vary widely, ranging from the 1660s to the 1920s, most legal scholars have assumed that once established, the rule created a bright line…

Continue Reading

Citizen Journalism and the Reporter's Privilege

By Mary-Rose Papandrea. Full text here. The reporter’s privilege is under attack, and “pajama-clad bloggers” are largely to blame. Courts and commentators have argued that because the rise of bloggers and other “citizen journalists” renders it difficult to define who should be considered a reporter entitled to invoke the privilege, the continued existence of the…

Continue Reading