This collection includes works of scholarship submitted by the faculty of Suffolk University Law School.
Submissions from 1998
Hybrid Personal Jurisdiction: It’s Not General Jurisdiction or Specific Jurisdiction, But Is It Constitutional?, Linda Sandstrom Simard
Submissions from 1997
Default Rules in Contract Law as Response to Status Competition in Negotiation, Stephen M. McJohn
Fair Use of Copyrighted Software, Stephen M. McJohn
Coordinating Civil Procedure with Legal Research and Writing: A Field Experiment, Linda Sandstrom Simard, Joseph W. Glannon, Terry J. Seligmann, and Medb M. Sichko
New LR&W Teachers Alert! 14 Ways to Avoid Pitfalls in Your First Year of Teaching, Kathleen Elliott Vinson
Submissions from 1996
Standing Alone: Do We Still Need the Political Question Doctrine?, Linda Sandstrom Simard
Standing Alone: Do We Still Need the Political Question Doctrine?, Linda Sandstrom Simard
Submissions from 1995
The Impact of United States v. Lopez: The New Hybrid Commerce Clause, Stephen M. McJohn
"Common Sense Legal Reform" and Bell's Toll: Eliminating Punitive Damage Claims from Jurisdictional Amount Calculations in Federal Diversity Cases, Russell G. Murphy
Submissions from 1994
Person or Property? On the Legal Nature of the Bankruptcy Estate, Stephen M. McJohn
Daubert's Gatekeeper: The Role of the District Court Judge in Admitting Expert Testimony, Linda Sandstrom Simard and William G. Young
Submissions from 1993
Assignability of Letter of Credit Proceeds: Adapting the Code to New Commercial Practices, Stephen M. McJohn
On Uberty: Legal Reasoning by Analogy and Peirce's Theory of Abduction, Stephen M. McJohn
Submissions from 1992
The Flip Side of Twist Cap: Letters of Credit as Executory Contracts in Bankruptcy, Stephen M. McJohn
Submissions from 1990
Celebrating human rights : papers from the Bicentennial Symposium on Human Rights, Margaret Collins Weitz, David L. Robbins, and Valerie Epps
Submissions from 1984
Constitutional Bases for a Right of Access to Counsel at the Pre-trial Stages of Drunk Driving Prosecutions: A Study in Conflicting Rights, Russell G. Murphy