135 results on '"TASLITZ, ANDREW E."'
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2. Rape and the Culture of the Courtroom
3. Respect and the Fourth Amendment
4. The Fourth Amendment in the Twenty-First Century: Technology, Privacy, and Human Emotions
5. CYBERSURVEILLANCE WITHOUT RESTRAINT? THE MEANING AND SOCIAL VALUE OF THE PROBABLE CAUSE AND REASONABLE SUSPICION STANDARDS IN GOVERNMENTAL ACCESS TO THIRDPARTY ELECTRONIC RECORDS
6. FOREWORD
7. WHAT IS PROBABLE CAUSE, AND WHY SHOULD WE CARE?: THE COSTS, BENEFITS, AND MEANING OF INDIVIDUALIZED SUSPICION
8. Foreword: The Political Geography of Race Data in the Criminal Justice System
9. Racial Auditors and the Fourth Amendment: Data with the Power to Inspire Political Action
10. Snitching: Criminal Informants and the Erosion of American Justice
11. The happy Fourth Amendment: history and the people's quest for constitutional meaning.
12. Fourth Amendment federalism and the silencing of the American poor.
13. Wrongful accused redux: how race contributes to convicting the innocent: the informants example.
14. Confessing in the human voice: a defense of the privilege against self-incrimination.
15. Privacy struggle.
16. Bullshitting the people: the criminal procedure implications of a scatological term.
17. Forgetting Freud: the court's fear of the subconscious in date rape (and other) cases.
18. The expressive Fourth Amendment: rethinking the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule.
19. Eyewitness identification, democratic deliberation, and the politics of science.
20. Fortune-telling and the Fourth Amendment: of terrorism, slippery slopes, and predicting the future.
21. Willfully blinded: on date rape and self-deception.
22. Racial profiling, terrorism, and time.
23. Cybersurveillance without restraint? The meaning and social value of the probable cause and reasonable suspicion standards in governmental access to third-party electronic records
24. 13. The Slave Power Undead
25. A feminist Fourth Amendment? Consent, care, privacy, and social meaning in Ferguson v. City of Charleston.
26. The people's peremptory challenge and Batson: aiding the people's voice and vision through the 'representative' jury
27. Race and two concepts of the emotions in date rape.
28. Defusing bomb-blast terrorism: a legal survey of technological and regulatory alternatives.
29. Condemning the racist personality: why the critics of hate crimes legislation are wrong.
30. What feminism has to offer evidence law.
31. Judging Jena's D.A.: the prosecutor and racial esteem.
32. Introduction.
33. An African-American sense of fact: the O.J. trial and black judges on justice.
34. Proving the Unprovable: The Role of Law, Science, and Speculation in Adjudicating Culpability and Dangerousness.
35. Plugging into the Fourth Amendment's matrix.
36. Sentencing lessons from the innocent movement.
37. Temporal adversarialism, criminal justice, and the Rehnquist court: the sluggish life of political factfinding.
38. Convicting the guilty, acquitting the innocent: recently adopted ABA policies.
39. Reading the Federal Rule of Evidence realistically: a response to Professor Imwinkelried.
40. What remains of reliability: hearsay and freestanding due process after Crawford v. Washington.
41. Convicting the guilty, acquitting the innocent: the ABA takes a stand.
42. Catering to the constable: the court's latest Fourth Amendment cases.
43. Digital juries versus digital lawyers.
44. Murder and the Reasonable Man: Passion and Fear in the Criminal Courtroom.
45. Wrongful rights.
46. Catharsis, the confrontation clause, and expert testimony.
47. Terrorism and the citizenry's safety.
48. Stories of Fourth Amendment disrespect: from Elian to the Internment.
49. Hate crimes, free speech, and the contract of mutual indifference.
50. Slaves no more!: the implications of the informed citizen ideal for discovery before Fourth Amendment suppression hearings.
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