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.
Vol.
33, No. 3, Spring 2007: Process
Opening Statement: Crisis Does Not Suspend the Constitution | ![]()
Kim J. Askew
What happens to the rule of law in times of calamity? This past year, the Section of Litigation prepared the Principles for the Rule of Law in Times of Calamity, a set of principles that would guide the justice system, and those of us who work within it, in times of disaster. The Principles cannot hope to avert catastrophe, but they can help ready the bar and the nation to respond to its challenges.…
The following articles from the Spring 2007 issue
are available to Section members and are in PDF format (
):
- » From
the Bench: Our Constitution’s Intelligent Design
John E. Jones - » Trying
the ABA’s Principles for Juries and Jury Trials
James F. Holderman - » Rolling the Dice in Corporate Fraud Prosecutions
F. Joseph Warin and Peter E. Jaffe - » Crafting a Closing Argument
Linda L. Listrom - » Practical Use and Risky Consequences of Rule 68 Offers of Judgment
Teresa Rider Bult - » Judging Credibility
John L. Kane - » Cross-Examination That Hurts the Witness, Not You
Charles J. Faruki - » Traps for the Unwary in Removal and Remand
Milton I. Shadur - » Strategies for Handling a Hostile Judge
Judith S. Stainbrook - » Legal Lore: The King Who Lost His Head The Trial of Charles I
Robert and Marilyn Aitken - » Sidebar: A Rant
Kenneth P. Nolan - » Advance Sheet
Robert E. Shapiro - » Literary Trials: Resolution
Denise Mina



