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Forthcoming Articles

2012, Volume 89

Tenth Circuit Survey

Preview: Prost v. Anderson and the Enigmatic Savings Clause of 2255: When is a Rememdy by Motion "Inadequate or Ineffective?"
Bryan Florendo

2011, Volume 88.4

Special Issue: Socioeconomic Diversity and American Legal Education

Foreword: Social Class, Race and Legal Education 
Joyce Sterling & Catherine E. Smith

Class in American Legal Education
Richard H. Sander

Reflections on Class in American Legal Education
Richard Lempert

Reflections on Richard Sander’s Class in American Legal Education
Richard D. Kahlenberg

Class Privilege in Legal Education: A Response to Sander
Deborah C. Malamud

Meeting Across the River: Why Affirmative Action Needs Race & Class Diversity
Deirdre M. Bowen, J.D., Ph.D.

An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure: Reframing the Debate about Law School Affirmative Action
Daniel Kiel

Class, Classes, and Classic Race-Baiting: What’s in a Definition?
Angela Onwuachi-Willig & Amber Fricke

Race as a Red Herring? The Logical Irrelevance of the Race vs. Class Debate
Arin N. Reeves

Race and Socioeconomic Diversity in American Legal Education: A Response to Richard Sander
Danielle Holley-Walker

Commentary on Professor Richard Sander’s Class in American Legal Education
L. Darnell Weeden

The Visibility of Socioeconomic Status and Class-Based Affirmative Action: A Reply to Professor Sander
Eli Wald

Listening to the Debate on Reforming Law School Admissions Preferences
Richard H. Sander

 

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Events & Announcements

KIND Drive starts Feb. 6

Dental care is something people take for granted. The health problems connected to poor dental care can be vast. Since 1912, Kids In Need of Dentistry (KIND) has helped thousands of children get the dental care they need. This year the Community Action Network of the Denver Bar Association is sponsoring the annual toothbrush drive to support KIND and the DULR Online is joining.

 

From Monday, February 6, through Thursday, February 9, we will be collecting child-sized toothbrushes, toothpaste (sugar-free with fluoride), waxed dental floss, as well as monetary donations (checks made payable to KIND) on Student Street in the law school. 
We appreciate your support!

 

Marijuana at the Crossroads: A Symposium

On January 27, the Denver University Law Review presented our annual symposium. This year we explored the state of medical marijuana laws today, the issues attorneys confront in practice, the constitutional issues, and the ethical issues. For more information, please click here. This event created some buzz with the local media.

Thanks to all our speakers and everyone who worked behind the scenes to help make this a successful event. 

Denver University Law Review Creating a Buzz  

Our most recent issue, Issue 88.4, on Socioeconomic Diversity and American Legal Education is already creating buzz in the legal and education community.

The ABA Journal recently highlighted Richard H. Sander's article "Class in American Legal Education," available here.

In addition, Richard Kahlenberg commented on Prof. Sander's article in The Chronicle of Higher Education blog. Click here to read Prof. Kahlenberg's article on The Chronicle of Higher Education, and here to read Profs. Sander's article and Kahlenberg's reflection. 

Subscriptions and Submissions

For information on how to subscribe to the Denver University Law Review, please click here.

For the guidelines on how to submit an article to Denver University Law Review, please click here. If you would like to submit a shorter piece to DULR Online, please contact the Online Editor at ntachibana12@law.du.edu.

FEATURED ARTICLES

Tuesday
Jan242012
spacer Tuesday, January 24, 2012 at 9:54 AM

U.S. v. Ludwig: An assault on individual rights

William Ross[1]

The Fourth Amendment’s prohibition against unreasonable search and seizures is one of the most fundamental rights guaranteed in the United States Constitution.[2] However, this right is not absolute and courts have traditionally limited its breadth in order to protect other liberties.[3] As a result, courts have developed several exceptions that allow for search and seizure if reasonable suspicion and probable cause are satisfied.[4]

While both the Supreme Court and Tenth Circuit have addressed reasonable suspicion and probable cause, the analysis of what satisfies these exceptions is heavily fact-dependent and thus has not been developed as a bright-line rule.[5] As a result, courts have seen an influx of defendants challenging the validity of reasonable suspicion and probable cause searches. In United States v. Ludwig,[6] the Tenth Circuit sought to clarify these issues.

Click here to read more ...

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Wednesday
Jan182012
spacer Wednesday, January 18, 2012 at 6:19 PM

Fighting for Space: Sharing Resources in Space with the International Community

Kaitlyn O’Hara[1]

For the past fifty years, we have commonly referred to space as the final frontier.  During that same fifty years, we have come to realize that space resources are quite finite and sharing such resources with the international community can and is creating global conflicts.  As a result, the methodology for allocating orbital locations used by the International Telecommunication Union (the “ITU”), an agency of the United Nations, will have a lasting impact on the growth and development of technologies dependent on space assets.  Due to the need for unanimous approval of all ITU rules, such rules, the Radio Regulations, often include broad language that allows for technological growth in the satellite industry, but also provides opportunities for speculation of orbital locations.  One example of such broad language is in the ITU’s requirements for demonstrating use of an orbital location.[2]  The 2012 World Radio Conference (the “WRC”) will continue the efforts of previous WRCs to address methods for ensuring efficient use of orbital locations.[3]  Any changes to the Radio Regulations must favor transparency to allow for space-faring nations to take on a greater role in enforcing the Radio Regulations and the ITU to better understand how orbital locations are truly used or not used, as the case may be.

Click here to read more ...

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