130 research outputs found

    Hardball in City Hall: Public Financing of Sports Stadiums

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    Roger I. Abram’s article on public financing of sports stadiums is an unedited portion of Chapter 9 from Abram’s forthcoming book, Playing Tough: The World of Sports and Politics, published by University Press of New England (2013)

    Law and the Chicken: An Eggs-aggerated Curriculum Proposal

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    For decades, legal educators have debated two important curricular issues: How do we introduce law students to the study of law

    The New Nova Curriculum: Training Lawyers For The Twenty-First Century

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    Periodically, law faculty rethink the nature of legal education

    The Lawyer as an Artist

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    The lawyer as an artist. It must seem oxymoron

    Cases and Materials on Labor Law (8th Ed.) by Archibald Cox, Derek Curtis Bok, and Robert Gorman

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    The All Star Baseball Law Team

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    Cases and Materials on Labor Law (8th Ed.) by Archibald Cox, Derek Curtis Bok, and Robert Gorman

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    The Integrity of the Arbitral Process

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    Over twenty years ago Dean Shulman and Professor Cox debated through the pages of the Harvard Law Review the question of the role law should play in labor arbitration. Shulman urged that the law stay out, while Cox argued that courts would come to understand the special nature of the arbitration process and would accordingly limit the extent of judicial intervention. The impact of their discussion has, of course, been mooted by the numerous judicial decisions implanting private arbitration within the federal law of the collective agreement. From the Supreme Court has come a formidable legal superstructure for the labor arbitration process, and support for labor arbitration is now a paramount national policy. It is not the object of this Article either to belabor the wisdom of these decisions or to suggest fundamental changes in the labor arbitration system. The question does remain, however, of how to ensure that labor arbitration continues to merit its preferred status. In offering an answer to that question, this Article suggests that the key to private arbitration\u27s future contributions to the national labor law system lies in maintenance of the integrity of arbitral procedures. Thus the focus of the inquiry will be directed at the basic elements of arbitration procedure essential to the achievement of accurate results in an efficient manner acceptable to the parties. The legal developments of the past two decades demand a thorough reexamination of how labor arbitration is to be conducted
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