Our faculty have practiced law with large firms in major metropolitan cities; with small firms in rural county seats; in legal aid societies; in the Judge Advocates General Corps; and with the United States Department of Justice. They have debated legal issues on national television and in the press, testified before Congress, and argued cases before the United States Supreme Court. This series represents a sampling of their wide-ranging scholarship and scholarly interests.

Submissions from 2008

Equality in Germany and the United States, Edward J. Eberle

Aliens in the Garden, Jared A. Goldstein

Allies Not Adversaries: Teaching Collaboration to the next Generation of Doctors and Lawyers to Address Social Inequality, Elizabeth Tobin Tyler

Submissions from 2007

Art As Speech, Edward J. Eberle

The Architecture of First Amendment Free Speech, Edward J. Eberle

The German Idea of Freedom, Edward J. Eberle

Absentee Landlords, Rent Control, and Healthy Gentrification: A Policy Proposal to De-concentrate the Poor in Urban America, Jorge O. Elorza

Habeas Without Rights, Jared A. Goldstein

Like a Sturgeon?: Royal Fish, Royal Prerogative and Modern Executive Power, Jonathan M. Gutoff

The Future of Federal Sentencing Policy: Learning Lessons from Republican Judicial Appointees, David M. Zlotnick

Submissions from 2006

Witness, Nancy L. Cook

Submissions from 2005

Looking for Justice on a Two-Way Street, Nancy L. Cook

Religion and State in the Classroom: Germany and the United States, Edward J. Eberle

Law and Poetry, Edward J. Eberle and Bernhard Grossfeld

Coerced Labor and Implied Congressional Powers: The Example of Deserting Sailors and Fugitive Slaves, Johnathan M. Gutoff

Mixed Signals and Subtle Cues: Jury Independence and Judicial Appointment of the Jury Foreperson, Andrew Horwitz

Submissions from 2004

Above Contempt?: The Attorney General, the Courts, and Informational Overreaching in Terrorism Prosecutions, Peter Margulies

Submissions from 2003

Researching the Laws of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, Gail I. Winson