Litigation, published four times a year, is the preeminent journal in the field. The publication offers practical yet lively information on common problems and interests for the lawyers who try cases and the judges who decide them. All members of the Section of Litigation receive Litigation. To subscribe, join the Section today.
Volume 29, No. 3, Spring 2003: Prejudice
Opening Statement: Nobody Does It Better | ![]()
Scott Atlas
I never thought I would be picked as a juror. It is something that I, like many litigators, had long wanted. But the understandable reluctance of litigators to pick other lawyers (especially trial lawyers) for the jury always seemed to work agains me. Even random jury pool assignments hurt my prospects.…
The following articles from the Spring 2003 issue are available to Section members and are in PDF format (
):
- » From the Bench: Judicial Neutrality and Independence: Current Challenges
Charles P. Kocoras - » Tilting the Playing Field
Kenneth P. Nolan - » The Most Impertinent Question
Michael E. Tigar - » The Poston-Horn Principles of Wartime Freedom and Security
Peter D. Baird - » Gender Bias: Continuing Challenges and Opportunities
Rebecca Korzec - » Defending the Church
Patrick J. Schiltz - » Prosecuting and Defending Popular Public Figures
Dan Small - » Associating with the “Enemy”: Defending the Rights of Muslims in Post-9/11 America
Matthew H. Simmons - » Excuse Me, Your Jurisdiction Is Missing
Janet S. Kole - » Free Press and the Illusion of Prejudice
Thomas B. Kelley and Steven D. Zansberg - » Legal Lore: The Spelling Game: Russell’s Cross-Examination of Pigott
Robert Aitken - » Litigator’s Bookshelf: Churchill’s Prewar Speeches
William Pannill - » Advance Sheet
Robert E. Shapiro - » Literary Trials: Madame Célestin’s Divorce
Kate Chopin
