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Browsing Oregon Law Review : Vol.102, No.2 (2024) by Title
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Bregant, Jessica; Dillof, Anthony M.
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2024-05-20)
Is torts ready for a revolution? Momentous changes in law are exceedingly rare. In torts, one such change was the advent of comparative fault. Originally codified in the early twentieth century, comparative fault represented ...
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Graffy, Colleen P.; Caldwell, Harry M.; Sood, Gautam K.
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2024-05-20)
Peremptory challenges in jury selection are being used in a biased and discriminatory manner. The Batson v. Kentucky safeguards are not working as intended and have not resolved the problem of jury bias. States now need ...
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Dorsey, Lauren
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2024-05-20)
This Comment harnesses an interdisciplinary legal, economic, and equity lens to attempt to holistically evaluate the opportunities and limitations facing United States water markets as a tool for efficient and equitable ...
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Tewari, Geeta
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2024-05-20)
The law and literature movement is transforming into something new. This Article will discuss what that newness is, how it came about, and the different shapes it takes to provide the legal community with a platform to ...
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Hayden, Juliet
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2024-05-20)
This Comment will begin by exploring the history and current status of the housing crisis on a national scale and the direct impacts of the housing crisis on the state of Oregon. The Comment will then describe the mechanics, ...
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Vukadin, Katherine T.
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2024-05-20)
This Article posits that, to guide law students properly in their professional identity, law professors must connect with practice. Connection can consist of a sabbatical or other period of time spent fully immersed in ...
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Cassidy, R. Michael
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2024-05-20)
The topic of this Article is the little understood and seldom invoked Rule of Professional Conduct 5.1, and how that disciplinary rule can be more aggressively enforced to detect and deter prosecutorial misconduct. The ...
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