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    • Volume 95
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Issue 1

The Legal Stranger: Colorado’s Two-Legal-Parent Limit Leaves Nontraditional Families Behind

by Allison K. DudleyIssue 1, Volume 94Posted on January 25, 2023February 12, 2023No Comments

Introduction Within the last century, and even the last fifty years, concepts of parenthood in the United States have increasingly moved beyond the nuclear family[1] model. Take, for example, family …

Read more “The Legal Stranger: Colorado’s Two-Legal-Parent Limit Leaves Nontraditional Families Behind”

Keeping It Real: Property Analogies For Graffiti Infringement

by Shelby Pickar-DennisIssue 1, Volume 94Posted on January 25, 2023February 12, 2023No Comments

Introduction On a stroll through downtown, something in your peripheral vision strikes your eye. It is a graffiti wall: a colorful work of uninhibited creativity, simultaneously random and cohesive, deeply …

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The Visible Trial: Judicial Assessment as Adjudication

by Tracey E. George & Albert H. YoonIssue 1, Volume 94Posted on January 25, 2023February 12, 2023No Comments

Only a small fraction of lawsuits ends in trial—a phenomenon termed the “vanishing trial.” Critics of the declining trial rate see a remote, increasingly regressive judicial system. Defenders see a …

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Oppression in American, Islamic, and Jewish Private Law

by Rabea BenhalimIssue 1, Volume 94Posted on January 25, 2023February 12, 2023No Comments

American, Islamic, and Jewish law all limit the enforcement of private law agreements in cases of oppression and exploitation. But each system uses a different justification. The common thread among …

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Minding Accidents

by Teneille R. BrownIssue 1, Volume 94Posted on January 25, 2023February 12, 2023No Comments

Tort doctrine states that breach is all about conduct. Unlike in the criminal law context, where jurors must engage in amateur mindreading to evaluate mens rea, jurors are told that …

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A Deliberative Democratic Theory of Precedent

by Glen StaszewskiIssue 1, Volume 94Posted on January 25, 2023February 12, 2023One Comment

Stare decisis is widely regarded as a vital mechanism for promoting the rule of law. Yet high courts can always overrule prior decisions with a special justification, and different justices …

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