(Excerpt) Part I of this Article briefly examines the existing legal and conceptual frameworks that purport to manage protected information in the judicial system. It compares and contrasts the civil and criminal approaches, and it notes challenges to the existing processes and proposed changes from policymakers and scholars. Part I also discusses the questions and problems raised by potential changes-and even by the status quo. Part II explores secret information: its creation by individuals and agencies; its synthesis into finished intelligence; its various uses; and the challenges it poses for the legal process. Part III offers three proposals for how courts should treat secret information to avoid or counteract the problems discussed ...
In Bl(a)ck Tea Society v. City of Boston, the First Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed, without disse...
The author of the article discusses the meaning of information as an object of legal relations. In ...
The Obama Administration has initiated six prosecutions of government employees for leaking classifi...
(Excerpt) Part I of this Article briefly examines the existing legal and conceptual frameworks that ...
Much attention has been paid of late to unauthorized disseminations of classified information. A gra...
Cases implicating classified information can pose difficult legal issues for Article III courts, and...
Much attention has been paid of late to unauthorized disseminations of classified information. A gra...
The debate over discovery confidentiality has raged for over twenty years, since before the Supreme...
Disclosing confidential information, which in the national jurisdictions is referred to as secret of...
Government secrecy frequently fails. Despite the executive branch’s obsessive hoarding of certain ki...
Now that federal court records are available online, anyone can obtain criminal case files instantly...
As noted by President Obama\u27s recent Review Group on Intelligence and Communications Technologies...
This Article offers support for the argument that protective orders for discovery confidentiality sh...
At the core of every lawsuit is a mix of information-revealing documents that chronicle a party\u27s...
American law has yet to reach a satisfying conclusion about public access to information on governme...
In Bl(a)ck Tea Society v. City of Boston, the First Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed, without disse...
The author of the article discusses the meaning of information as an object of legal relations. In ...
The Obama Administration has initiated six prosecutions of government employees for leaking classifi...
(Excerpt) Part I of this Article briefly examines the existing legal and conceptual frameworks that ...
Much attention has been paid of late to unauthorized disseminations of classified information. A gra...
Cases implicating classified information can pose difficult legal issues for Article III courts, and...
Much attention has been paid of late to unauthorized disseminations of classified information. A gra...
The debate over discovery confidentiality has raged for over twenty years, since before the Supreme...
Disclosing confidential information, which in the national jurisdictions is referred to as secret of...
Government secrecy frequently fails. Despite the executive branch’s obsessive hoarding of certain ki...
Now that federal court records are available online, anyone can obtain criminal case files instantly...
As noted by President Obama\u27s recent Review Group on Intelligence and Communications Technologies...
This Article offers support for the argument that protective orders for discovery confidentiality sh...
At the core of every lawsuit is a mix of information-revealing documents that chronicle a party\u27s...
American law has yet to reach a satisfying conclusion about public access to information on governme...
In Bl(a)ck Tea Society v. City of Boston, the First Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed, without disse...
The author of the article discusses the meaning of information as an object of legal relations. In ...
The Obama Administration has initiated six prosecutions of government employees for leaking classifi...