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.
Vol. 32, No. 4, Summer 2006: Lessons, Litigants, Logic
Opening Statement: The Rule of Law – Still the Cornerstone | ![]()
Kim J. Askew
The rule of law is the focus of two of the key initiatives that the Section of Litigation will undertake during the 2006-2007 year. To some, these are mere words that have little, if any, significance. For lawyers, however, the rule of law is a sacrosanct principle that anchors our democracy and guides our work.…
The following articles from the Summer 2006 issue are available to Section members and are in PDF format (
):
- » From the Bench: A Judge on the Jury
Larry M. Boyle - » Representing Lawyers
Lawrence J. Vilardo and Vincent E. Doyle III - » Here Comes the Pro Se Plaintiff
Len Niehoff - » Getting the Truth from Adverse Witnesses
William Alsup - » Exposing Litigants Who Fabricate Evidence
Frank J. Mastro - » Spoliation, or Please Don’t Leave the Cake Out in the Rain
Sheldon M. Finkelstein, Evelyn R. Storch, and James Simpson - » A Primer on Framing a Divorce Case
Frederick L. Kobb - » The Post-September 11 Asylum System
Eleanor Acer and Anwen Hughes - » How to Tell a Judge He Screwed Up
Robert W. Gettleman - » Legal Lore: Theodore Roosevelt, Louis Tiffany, and Shattered Glass
Sheldon M. Finkelstein - » Advance Sheet
Robert E. Shapiro - » Litigator’s Bookshelf: Beyond Peleliu
Jacob Stein - » Literary Trials: The History of England from the Accession of James the Second
Lord Macaulay
