Abraham S. Goldstein was an extraordinary legal scholar. His law review articles and books are now classics in a broad array of criminal law fields: (i) conspiracy law, (2) trial procedures, (3) the insanity defense, (4) comparative criminal procedure, (5) prosecutorial discretion and plea bargaining, (6) victims\u27 rights, and (7) the criminal jury. While now classics, each of his writings was path-breaking when published. Moreover, each soon became the seminal work in the area -by which I mean that each Goldstein contribution spawned an immense amount of further research and scholarship, including many subsequent books and articles by his former students here at Yale Law School
The practice of teaching and writing in the field of criminal law has changed dramatically in the la...
Legal scholars and critics contribute to the development of law in many ways: the comprehensive trea...
Kamisar, Yale (1929- ). Law professor. Born in the Bronx, N.Y., to an immigrant, working-class famil...
Joseph Goldstein was a member of the Yale Law School faculty for more than 40 years. He is remembere...
abraham samuel goldstein (1925-2005) served as the eleventh deanof the Yale Law School during the ye...
Joseph Goldstein and I had so many convergences besides bearing the same last name. We were both art...
On April 2, 1986, Professor of Law, John Kaplan of Stanford University, delivered the Georgetown Law...
A Review of Criminal Law. By Richard C. Donnelly, Joseph Goldstein and Richard D. Schwartz
While George Fletcher\u27s book, Rethinking Criminal Law, is justly celebrated as the most widely ci...
Criminal law, for much of the nineteenth century and part of the twentieth, was at the forefront of ...
When I was originally approached to participate in this Symposium on the work and legacy of Joel Fei...
In the early 1980s, when he was a young professor at the University of Houston Law Center, the autho...
'The limits of criminal law scholarship' (review essay on H. Packer, The Limits of the Crirninal San...
Lawrence M. Friedman has achieved a singular preeminence as a legal historian for articulating a new...
Abe Goldstein was a boundary crosser. During his half-century on the faculty, he enriched the life o...
The practice of teaching and writing in the field of criminal law has changed dramatically in the la...
Legal scholars and critics contribute to the development of law in many ways: the comprehensive trea...
Kamisar, Yale (1929- ). Law professor. Born in the Bronx, N.Y., to an immigrant, working-class famil...
Joseph Goldstein was a member of the Yale Law School faculty for more than 40 years. He is remembere...
abraham samuel goldstein (1925-2005) served as the eleventh deanof the Yale Law School during the ye...
Joseph Goldstein and I had so many convergences besides bearing the same last name. We were both art...
On April 2, 1986, Professor of Law, John Kaplan of Stanford University, delivered the Georgetown Law...
A Review of Criminal Law. By Richard C. Donnelly, Joseph Goldstein and Richard D. Schwartz
While George Fletcher\u27s book, Rethinking Criminal Law, is justly celebrated as the most widely ci...
Criminal law, for much of the nineteenth century and part of the twentieth, was at the forefront of ...
When I was originally approached to participate in this Symposium on the work and legacy of Joel Fei...
In the early 1980s, when he was a young professor at the University of Houston Law Center, the autho...
'The limits of criminal law scholarship' (review essay on H. Packer, The Limits of the Crirninal San...
Lawrence M. Friedman has achieved a singular preeminence as a legal historian for articulating a new...
Abe Goldstein was a boundary crosser. During his half-century on the faculty, he enriched the life o...
The practice of teaching and writing in the field of criminal law has changed dramatically in the la...
Legal scholars and critics contribute to the development of law in many ways: the comprehensive trea...
Kamisar, Yale (1929- ). Law professor. Born in the Bronx, N.Y., to an immigrant, working-class famil...