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Arizona State Law Journal

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Prominent Articles

 

  

The Arizona State Law Journal strives to publish only the highest quality articles. The Journal accepts a wide array of article forms. These forms include traditional scholarly articles, symposium pieces, transcribed essays, and student notes and comments. This page highlights some noteworthy articles published by the Journal over the last 40 years.

Scholarly Articles:
Why Do We Regulate Lawyers?: An Economic Analysis of the Justifications for Entry and Conduct Regulation
By Benjamin Hoorn Barton

The Increasing Federalization of Crime
By Susan A. Ehrlich

Miranda Thirty-Five Years Later: A Close Look at the Majority and Dissenting Opinions in Dickerson
By Yale Kamisar

Terrorism Risk in a Post 9/11 Economy: The Convergence of Capital Markets, Insurance, and Government Action
By Robert J. Rhee

Symposium Pieces:
Conceptualizing Booker
By Douglas A. Berman

The Need to Clarify the Meaning of U.S. Supreme Court Remands: The Lessons of Punitive Damages’ Cases
By Erwin Chemerinsky and Ned Miltenberg

Federal Sentencing Guidelines and the Policy Paradox of Early Disposition Programs: A Primer on “Fast-Track” Sentences
By Jane L. McClellan and Jon M. Sands

Transcribed Essays:
Why Buckley v. Valeo is Basically Right
By Eugene Volokh

Student Notes and Comments:
When is a Combat Veteran a Combat Veteran?: The Evidentiary Stumbling Block for Veterans Seeking PTSD Disability Benefits
By Alison Atwater

From the Boardroom to the Cellblock: The Justifications for Harsher Punishment of White-Collar and Corporate Crime (Burton Award Winner 2006)
By J. Scott Dutcher

A Case for Strengthening School District Jurisdiction to Punish Off-Campus Incidents of Cyberbullying
By Todd D. Erb

  
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Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law ASU College of Law College of Law
Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law
1100 S. McAllister Ave.
P.O. Box 877906
Tempe, AZ 85287
(480) 965-6181