The Unusual Man in the Usual Place
In The Unusual Man in the Usual Place, Professor Bowers supports his argument from Punishing the Innocent by individually addressing… Continue reading →
In The Unusual Man in the Usual Place, Professor Bowers supports his argument from Punishing the Innocent by individually addressing… Continue reading →
The current system of discovery in the federal courts can produce enormous costs for both litigants and the court system.… Continue reading →
In Law and Humanity, Michael Serota argues that legal scholarship and the humanities can and should complement each other. His… Continue reading →
This Comment addresses this dearth in scholarship by identifying eight ways lower courts use history to analyze the experience prong… Continue reading →
In response to Barry E. Adler & Marcel Kahan, The Technology of Creditor Protection, 161 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1773… Continue reading →
The University of Pennsylvania Law Review Online presents the first installment of “Independent and Accountable Courts in Perilous Times: Perspectives… Continue reading →
Professors Ayotte & Morrison argue in their recent article from Volume 167 of The University of Pennsylvania Law Review that “the use… Continue reading →
The University of Pennsylvania Law Review is registered with the Copyright Clearance Center (CCC), and we refer all permission requests to them… Continue reading →
Every contemporary American lawyer who has engaged in litigation is familiar with the now fifty-four-volume treatise, Federal Practice and Procedure.… Continue reading →
To encourage scholars who plan to enter legal academia, the Editorial Board of Volume 155 of the University of Pennsylvania… Continue reading →