The Legal Studies Research Papers series presents scholarly articles and book chapters written by Washington College of Law faculty and staff. These works were initially deposited as manuscript drafts in the Social Science Research Network (SSRN) to engage professional communications among scholars and researchers. When accepted for publication in academic journals and law reviews, the authors may repost them as Accepted Papers in the Legal Research Paper Series of the SSRN.
Submissions from 2014
Registering Offense: The Prohibition of Slurs as Trademarks, Christine Haight Farley
Territorial Exclusivity in U.S. Copyright and Trademark Law, Christine Haight Farley
Submissions from 2011
Targeted Killing and Drone Warfare: How We Came to Debate Whether There is a ‘Legal Geography of War’, Kenneth Anderson
Submissions from 2009
Debunking the Myth of Civil Rights Liberalism: Visions of Racial Justice in the Thought of T. Thomas Fortune, 1880-1890, Susan D. Carle
Understanding the Federal Tort Claims Act: A Different Metaphor, Paul F. Figley
Financial Crisis Containment, Anna Gelpern
Promises of Accession: Reassessing the Trade Relationship Between Turkey and the European Union, Fernanda G. Nicola
On Becoming ‘Professor’: A Semi-Serious Look in the Mirror, Ezra Rosser
Toward a Broadband Public Interest Standard, Anthony E. Varona
AEDPA, Saucier, and the Stronger Case for Rights-First Constitutional Adjudication, Stephen I. Vladeck
Boumediene’s Quiet Theory: Access to Courts and the Separation of Powers., Stephen I. Vladeck
The Problem of Jurisdictional Non-Precedent, Stephen I. Vladeck
Submissions from 2008
Global Governance: The Problematic Legitimacy Relationship Between Global Civil Society and the United Nations, Kenneth Anderson
Q: Do International NGOs Have Too Much Power?, Kenneth Anderson
The New York Times and the Information Theory of the Leisure Class, Kenneth Anderson