This humane and disturbing book discusses thirty-six examples, eighteen in detail, of the conviction of wholly innocent people. Clear and nontechnical descriptions of the cases by Barbara Frank are followed by critical analyses completed by her distinguished father just before his death
Lives of great lawyers are prescribed reading for the younger members of the profession and afford t...
Book Reviews: The Antitrust Penalties: A Study in Law and Economics By Kenneth G. Elzinga and Willia...
This book is a critical analysis for lawyers and laymen of the proceedings which resulted in the e...
This is a book by a philosopher, on a subject of urgent importance to legal scholars. Yet the truth ...
On July 7, 1865, the lives of three men and a frail and almost unconscious woman were deliberately e...
This humane and disturbing book discusses thirty-six examples, eighteen in detail, of the conviction...
reviewing, Charles J. Ogletree, Jr. & Austin Sarat eds., When Law Fails: Making Sense of Miscarriage...
A Review of Porter: The Never-Ending Wrong, and Meeropol & Meeropol: We Are Your Sons: The Legacy o...
Detained Without Cause is a collection of oral history accounts by six New York based Muslim immigra...
Here are four hundred and eighty-six pages of heavy discourse on the familiar doctrine of res ipsa l...
Professor Packer has taken the trouble to write a short and immensely readable book; it deserves equ...
The review of a book long out of print, over 110 years old and almost certainlynot soon to be reissu...
Book review of "The Supreme Court on Trial: How the American Justice System Sacrifices Innocent Defe...
This casebook is a welcome addition to the teaching tools available for teachers of torts. The senio...
In this essay, the student author reviews the book You Have the Right to Remain Innocent by James Du...
Lives of great lawyers are prescribed reading for the younger members of the profession and afford t...
Book Reviews: The Antitrust Penalties: A Study in Law and Economics By Kenneth G. Elzinga and Willia...
This book is a critical analysis for lawyers and laymen of the proceedings which resulted in the e...
This is a book by a philosopher, on a subject of urgent importance to legal scholars. Yet the truth ...
On July 7, 1865, the lives of three men and a frail and almost unconscious woman were deliberately e...
This humane and disturbing book discusses thirty-six examples, eighteen in detail, of the conviction...
reviewing, Charles J. Ogletree, Jr. & Austin Sarat eds., When Law Fails: Making Sense of Miscarriage...
A Review of Porter: The Never-Ending Wrong, and Meeropol & Meeropol: We Are Your Sons: The Legacy o...
Detained Without Cause is a collection of oral history accounts by six New York based Muslim immigra...
Here are four hundred and eighty-six pages of heavy discourse on the familiar doctrine of res ipsa l...
Professor Packer has taken the trouble to write a short and immensely readable book; it deserves equ...
The review of a book long out of print, over 110 years old and almost certainlynot soon to be reissu...
Book review of "The Supreme Court on Trial: How the American Justice System Sacrifices Innocent Defe...
This casebook is a welcome addition to the teaching tools available for teachers of torts. The senio...
In this essay, the student author reviews the book You Have the Right to Remain Innocent by James Du...
Lives of great lawyers are prescribed reading for the younger members of the profession and afford t...
Book Reviews: The Antitrust Penalties: A Study in Law and Economics By Kenneth G. Elzinga and Willia...
This book is a critical analysis for lawyers and laymen of the proceedings which resulted in the e...