by charlebois | Mar 20, 2014 | Volume 64, Volume 64, Issue 3
Alfred C. Server and William J. Casey Volume 64, Issue 3, 561-640 Supreme Court decisions regarding the doctrine of patent exhaustion have drawn a bright line for determining when patent exhaustion occurs. If a sale of a patented product is authorized, exhaustion...
by charlebois | Mar 20, 2014 | Volume 64, Volume 64, Issue 3
Sara Gordon Volume 64, Issue 3, 643-678 “Through the Eyes of Jurors” is the first law journal article to consider all of the major cognitive psychology studies that examine how “schemas,” or the preexisting notions jurors have about the law, shape jurors’ use of jury...
by charlebois | Mar 20, 2014 | Volume 64, Volume 64, Issue 3
Hila Keren Volume 64, Issue 3, 679-738 This Article highlights a disturbing gap between what is currently known about stress across a range of disciplines and the way stress is treated at law. It does so by focusing on parties who seek relief from contractual...
by charlebois | Mar 20, 2014 | Volume 64, Volume 64, Issue 3
Ari Ezra Waldman Volume 64, Issue 3, 739-780 The national debate over marriage discrimination against gay and lesbian Americans is playing out in state legislatures, at the ballot, and in the federal courts under the conventional notion that liberal rhetoric, the...
by charlebois | Mar 20, 2014 | Volume 64, Volume 64, Issue 3
Aaron H. Caplan Volume 64, Issue 3, 781-862 Every year, U.S. courts entertain hundreds of thousands of petitions for civil harassment orders, i.e., injunctions issued upon the request of any person against any other person in response to words or behavior deemed...
by charlebois | Mar 20, 2014 | Volume 64, Volume 64, Issue 3
Ian Kanig Volume 64, Issue 3, 863-904 Corporations are beholden to a deeply flawed system of corporate governance known as shareholder wealth maximization. This norm dictates that corporations optimize profits at all costs to compensate equity investors for their...