Seton Hall Law Review

Volume Thirty One -- Book Three

SYMPOSIUM
TORT LIABILITY, THE STRUCTURAL CONSTITUTION AND THE STATES

Panel One:  State Attorney General Litigation:  Regulation Through Litigation and the Separation of Powers

The State Tobacco Litigation and the Separation of Powers in State Governments: Repairing the Damage Michael DeBow

Comment

 

 

Comment

Hubert Humphrey, III
 

William Pryor
 

The Multistate Settlement Agreement and the Problem of Social Regulation Beyond the Power of State Government Christopher Schroeder

Panel Two:  Redressing Harm:  Who Decides?

Presentation Charles Fried &
David Rosenberg
Defending Courts: A Brief Rejoinder to Professors Fried and Rosenberg David Vladeck
Roundtable Discussion

Panel Three:  Does Tort Reform Threaten Judicial Independence?

Separation of Powers and Civil Justice Reform: A Crisis of Legitimacy for Law and Legal Institutions Stephen Presser

Comment

Hon. Stanley Feldman

 

In Defense of Fundamental Principles: The Unconstitutionality of Tort Reform Robert Peck
The Constitutionality of State Tort Reform Legislation and Lochner George Priest
Judicial Nullification of Tort Reform: Ignoring History, Logic, and Fundamentals of Constitutional Law Victor Schwartz
Roundtable Discussion

Panel Four:  Tort Law in our Federal System:  An Exchange on Constitutional and Policy Considerations

Respecting a State's Tort Law, While Confining its Reach to that State John Baker, Jr.
The Conflict Between Federalism and Corporate Interests Arthur Bryant
The Tort Reform Debate: A View from Colorado Allison Eid

Comment

Theodore B. Olson
 
Comment Richard Willard
Roundtable Discussion

ARTICLES

Constructing Professionalism:  The Professional Project of the Israeli Judiciary Issachar Rosen-Zvi
A Career Choice Critique of Legal Ethics Theory Andrew M. Perlman

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