By Gary Muldoon | August 6, 2019
This is likely not a book to be read from cover to cover but used instead as a reference for when we know there’s got to be a better way to express our clients’ responsibilities and duties.
By Raymond J. Dowd | July 31, 2019
If you care about the future of innovation, creativity, technology, free speech and privacy and are going to read one book on copyright, give the second version of 'Copyright's Highway' a shot. It captures the human drama of battles past, gives a sense of our present, and provides a glimpse into the future.
By Dennis A. Stubblefield | July 29, 2019
Professor Marc I. Steinberg has provided us with a very rare and useful contribution.
By Jeffrey M. Winn | July 24, 2019
Just before his recent death, Justice John Paul Stevens published his full-length memoir, the likes of which had not been penned by a retired Supreme Court justice since William O. Douglas, whom Stevens replaced in 1975.
By Greg Berman | June 27, 2019
In writing about focused deterrence and other anti-violence strategies, Thomas Abt is driven by a question that many of the current books about criminal justice do not even bother to ask: how can we change the behavior of those who are involved in the most damaging kinds of criminal conduct?
By Joseph W. Bellacosa | June 26, 2019
While religious beliefs and sacred notions are often suspect and even radioactive in the elite academic intellectual world that typically prefers aloof enlightenment attitudes, Sexton boldly pushes against that bias.
By Jeffrey M. Winn | June 24, 2019
Crimes and Punishments: Entering the Mind of a Sentencing JudgeBy Frederic BlockABA Book Publishing, Chicago, 210 pages, $34.95Describing the…
By Gerald Lebovits and Julian M. Rodriguez | June 18, 2019
Unanticipated evidentiary issues often arise during trial. How litigators deal with unexpected evidentiary issues will make all the difference. Litigators must be ready to object quickly and to respond to objections quickly.
By Alexander H. Schmidt | June 11, 2019
Confident leaders of the bar will learn of a world few of them know exists, where highly intelligent and outwardly accomplished students and lawyers suffer internal turmoil moored in an insidious sense of inadequacy.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Jeffrey M. Winn | May 29, 2019
The memoir portion of the book is both engrossing and guarded. It was written in Kaye's final years after she became afflicted with the lung cancer that eventually took her life. Looking back from the high hill of her mid-seventies, she realized that the time to write about your life is when the end is near, beginning the story when you know the end.
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