| I. The Media and Criminal Law:
Fact, Fiction, and Reality TV Symposium |
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| Jury
Nullification, Race, and The Wire | | James M. Keneally |
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| From
Hero to Villain: The Corresponding Evolutions of Model Ethical Codes and
the Portrayal of Lawyers in Film | | Amy S.
Beard |
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| The
Media, the Jury, and the High-Profile Defendant: A Perspective on the
Media Circus | | John C.
Meringolo |
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| Handcuffing
the Press: First Amendment Limitations on the Reach of Criminal Statutes as
Applied to the Media | | Lee Levine,
Nathan E. Siegel, and Jeanette Melendez
Bead |
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| Fictionalized
Criminal Law and Youth Legal
Consciousness | | Avi Brisman | |
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| II. Special Feature
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| The
Constitution as an Exploding Cigar and Other "Historian's
Heresies" About a Constitutional Orthodoxy | | R.B.
Bernstein |
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| III. Notes
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| Misinterpreted
Justice: Problems with the Use of Islamic Legal Experts in U.S. Trial
Courts | | Peter W. Beauchamp
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| Extending
the Fraud-on-the-Market Presumption Beyond Basic: A Case of Poor
Anaologies and Over-Eager Courts | | Dana Lai
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| IV. Comments
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| People
v. Guardino: Examined on Appeal in People c.
Hecker | | Luna
Droubi |
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| American
Academy of Religion v. Napolitano | | Margaret
Laufman |
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| Anand
v. Kapoor | | David Pepper
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