Litigation, published four times a year, is the preeminent journal in the field. The publication offers practical yet lively information on common problems and interests for the lawyers who try cases and the judges who decide them. All members of the Section of Litigation receive Litigation. To subscribe, join the Section today.
Volume 29, No. 1, Fall 2002: Crime and Punishment
Opening Statement: Have You
Ever Tried to Make Up Your Mind—About Arbitration? | ![]()
Scott Atlas
Is there a problem with arbitration? It seems as if every time I mention the word to a client who has arbitrated or a lawyer who has represented clients in arbitration, they want to tell me a story about some recent, unpleasant experience with the process. I have encountered similar complaints across a broad range of disputes—from domestic consumer, commercial, financial, and employment matters to international business disputes.…
The following articles from the Fall 2002 issue
are available to Section members and are in PDF format (
):
- » From
the Bench: Private Judicial Seminars: A Reply to Abner Mikva
A. Raymond Randolph - » Reflections on Sentencing by a Judge/Commissioner
Ruben Castillo - » Crimes of the State: Obtaining Justice for the Wrongfully Imprisoned
Peter M. King & William H. Jones - » Reasonable Doubt and Other Shibboleths
John L. Kane - » Military Commissions and the War on Terrorism
Christopher Schroeder - » Taking the Fifth in Civil Litigation
Richard L. Scheff, Scott A. Coffina and Jill Baisinge - » When the IRS Comes Knocking
Dennis G. Kainen - » Let’s Make a Deal: Negotiating and Defending Immunity for “Targets and Subjects”
Peter H. White - » Warding Off Criminal Liability with an Effective Compliance Program
Christopher Myers, Greg Baldwin, Jennifer Short and Leslie McAdoo - » Legal Lore: Hans Frank: Hitler’s Lawyer
Robert Aitken - » Advance Sheet
Robert E. Shapiro - » Literary Trials: The Black Prince
Iris Murdoch
