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 32 Number 1, Fall 2005: Security
Opening Statement: Lawyers as Public Servants | ![]()
Brad D. Brian
As a boy I had two passions—baseball and American history. Age has cramped my batting style but whetted my appetite for biographies of great Americans. I’ve long been fascinated by prominent lawyers in American history. John Adams, Alexander Hamilton, Andrew Jackson, Henry Clay, Daniel Webster, Abraham Lincoln…
The following articles from the Fall 2005 issue are available to Section members and are in PDF format (
):
- » From the Bench: Public Faces, Private Fears
William S. Sessions - » Trial Balloon: Sarbanes-Oxley and the Myth of the Lawyer-Statesman
Stuart M. Speiser - » Litigation Under the “Cone of Silence”
Mark D. Colley - » Prosecuting Means More Than Locking Up Bad Guys
Bruce A. Green - » Bar Associations, Law Firms, and Other Medieval Guilds
Joel Henning - » Can Congress Legislate Litigation?
Bruce Angiolillo - » Bedside Manners for Lawyers
Peter D. Baird - » The Hillmon Case, the MacGuffin,and the Supreme Court
Marianne Wesson - » Creating Mini-MDL Statutes
Mark Herrmann, Geoffrey J. Ritts and Brian Ray - » Section 1927 Sanctions and the Split Among the Circuits
James F. Holderman - » Receiverships and Other Shark Tales
Dana J. Lesemann and Peter B. Zlotnick - » Legal Lore: Pride and Prejudice—The Dark Side of Henry Ford
Robert and Marilyn Aitken - » Sidebar: The Game Is Lawyer’s Poker
Steven Lubet - » Advance Sheet
Robert E. Shapiro - » Literary Trials: The Case Against the Little White Slaver
Henry Ford
