Editors: Profs.
Mark Kende and
Peter K. Yu The
Drake University Law School Legal Studies Research Paper Series features legal scholarship in all subject areas from faculty members, visiting scholars, affiliates and students of Drake University Law School. Founded in 1865, the Law School is one of the 25 oldest law schools in the United States. It aims to provide an exceptional learning environment that integrates legal theory and the development of professional skills; promotes critical thinking and effective problem solving; examines international perspectives; and instills the ideals of ethics and professionalism. The Law School is also the home of nationally-renowned centers in agricultural law, children's rights, constitutional law, intellectual property law and legislative practice.
2011 11-01
The U.S. Supreme Court, the War on Terror, and the Need for Thick Constitutional Review
Mark Kende
11-02
New Day at the Pool: State Preemption, Common Pool Resources, and Non-Place Based Municipal CollaborationsJonathan D. Rosenbloom
11-03
An Ethical Rabbit Hole: Model Rule 4.4, Intentional Interference with Former Employee Non-Disclosure Agreements and the Threat of Disqualification, Part I & Part IIMaura I. Strassberg
11-04
Intellectual Property and Human Rights in the Nonmultilateral EraPeter K. Yu
11-05
Son of the Trust Code--The Iowa Trust Code after Ten YearsMartin D. Begleiter
11-06
Science Court: Past Proposals, Current Considerations, and a Suggested StructureAndrew W. Jurs
11-07
The L3C Illusion: Why Low-Profit Limited Liability Companies Will Not Stimulate Socially Optimal Private Foundation Investment in Entrepreneurial VenturesJ. William Callison (Faegre & Benson) & Allan Vestal
11-08
Sinic Trade AgreementsPeter K. Yu
11-09
Protection for the Powerless: Political Economy History Lessons for the Animal Welfare MovementJerry L. Anderson
11-10
What, Me Worry? Tort Liability Risks for Participants in LLCs
Matthew G. Dore
11-11
Forfeiture of the Confrontation Right in Giles: Justice Scalia’s Faint-Hearted Fidelity to the Common LawEllen L. Yee
11-12
Six Secret (and Now Open) Fears of ACTA
Peter K. Yu
11-13
Balancing Legal Process with Scientific Expertise: A Comparative Assessment of Expert Witness Methodology in Five Nations, and Suggestions for Reform of Post-Daubert U.S. Reliability Determinations
Andrew W. Jurs
11-14
Farming an Uncertain Climate Future: What Cop 15 Means for Agriculture
Neil D. Hamilton
11-15
Now We’re Cooking!: Adding Practical Application to the Recipe for Teaching Sustainability
Jonathan D. Rosenbloom
11-16
The TRIPS Enforcement DisputePeter K. Yu
11-17
Constitutional Rights in Two Worlds, South Africa and the United States: Introduction ChapterMark Kende
11-18
What's Messing with Texas Death Sentences?David McCord
11-19
The Graduated ResponsePeter K. Yu
11-20
The Political Economy of Data ProtectionPeter K. Yu
11-21
Farms, Food, and the Future: Legal Issues and Fifteen Years of the ‘New Agriculture’
Neil D. Hamilton
11-22
Government Entrepreneurs: Incentivizing Sustainable Businesses as Part of Local Economic Development StrategiesJonathan D. Rosenbloom
11-23
Digital Copyright and Confuzzling RhetoricPeter K. Yu
11-24
Digital Copyright Reform and Legal Transplants in Hong KongPeter K. Yu
11-25
Teaching Comparative Perspectives in the Domestic Constitutional Law Class: A Step by Step PrimerMark Kende
11-26
HeinOnline and Law Review Citation PatternsKaren L. Wallace & M. Sara Lowe
11-27
Enforcement, Economics and Estimates
Peter K. Yu
11-28
Moral Rights 2.0Peter K. Yu
11-29
Moving Toward Food Democracy: Better Food, New Farmers, and the Myth of Feeding the World
Neil D. Hamilton
11-30
Free Exercise of Religion: A Pragmatic and Comparative AssessmentMark Kende
11-31
TRIPS and Its Achilles' HeelPeter K. Yu
11-32
TRIPS Enforcement and Developing CountriesPeter K. Yu