Apr 5, 2012 | Case Comments, Number 2, Print Edition, Volume 45
The Supreme Court of the United States has established that general personal jurisdiction allows a forum to exercise authority over a defendant to adjudicate claims that do not arise from the defendant’s contacts within the forum state. Since the advent of the modern...
Apr 5, 2012 | Notes, Number 2, Print Edition, Volume 45
This Note will analyze whether the law should do more for the institution of friendship. Throughout Part II of this Note, I will provide an overview of different works of classical philosophy to help familiarize the reader and to understand their relevance to a...
Apr 4, 2012 | Notes, Number 2, Print Edition, Volume 45
This Note will examine constitutional challenges to the Adam Walsh Act, analyze the history of relevant jurisprudence, discuss the flaws in the Supreme Court’s opinion, and offer recommendations for legislative modification. Parts II.A and II.B will discuss the...
Apr 4, 2012 | Notes, Number 2, Print Edition, Volume 45
This Note focuses on how courts in New England determine when an individual is mentally incapacitated due to mental illness. Part II.A presents a description of the evolution of guardianship laws from solely common-law to statutorily based. Part II.B follows this...
Apr 3, 2012 | Lead Articles, Number 2, Print Edition, Volume 45
In the modern era, Congress has enacted many federal “tort reform” statutes that supersede contrary state laws, and judicial precedents leave little doubt as to their constitutionality. Even President Ronald Reagan, known for his deference to the states, established...
Apr 3, 2012 | Lead Articles, Number 2, Print Edition, Volume 45
There is good reason to think that law and war have nothing to do with one another, and this has certainly been so for most of the lifetime of mankind. Cicero’s famous observation—silent enim leges inter arma—from which I take my title, was not a novel insight when...