New Issue of Marquette Law Review

Congratulations to the editors of the Marquette Law Review for the publication of Vol. 94, No. 4.  Here are the contents:

MELMS V. PABST BREWING CO. AND THE DOCTRINE OF WASTE IN AMERICAN PROPERTY LAW

Thomas W. Merrill ………………………………………………………………………… 1055

COMMENT ON MERRILL ON THE LAW OF WASTE

Richard A. Posner …………………………………………………………………………. 1095

CONTRACT AND PROCEDURE

Christopher Drahozal & Peter Rutledge ………………………………….. 1103

WISCONSIN’S ANTITRUST LAW: OUTSOURCING THE LEGAL STANDARD

Michael P. Waxman ………………………………………………………………………. 1173

BROKEN SYSTEMS, BROKEN DUTIES: A NEW THEORY FOR SCHOOL FINANCE LITIGATION

Aaron Y. Tang ………………………………………………………………………………. 1195

BARROCK LECTURE: HOW SHOULD WE PUNISH MURDER?

Jonathan Simon …………………………………………………………………………….. 1241

SEC V. DOROZHKO’S AFFIRMATIVE MISREPRESENTATION THEORY OF INSIDER TRADING: AN IMPROPER MEANS TO A PROPER END

Elizabeth A. Odian ……………………………………………………………………….. 1313

THE AMERICAN DREAM DEFERRED: FAMILY SEPARATION AND IMMIGRANT VISA ADJUDICATIONS AT U.S. CONSULATES ABROAD

Cain W. Oulahan …………………………………………………………………………… 1351

GENDER AND JUDGING

Diane S. Sykes ………………………………………………………………………………. 1381

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R.I.P. Derrick Bell, Pioneer of Critical Race Theory

 

On Wednesday of this week, the world lost several visionaries. Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth, a prominent civil rights activist, and Steve Jobs, co-founder of Apple, Inc. both died.  But there was a third visionary whose light went out on Wednesday:  Derrick Bell.

Bell was a visiting professor of law at New York University School of Law when he died. He is considered a pioneer of critical race theory, which theory examines issues of race, racism, and power in law and legal institutions.  But while he had spent most of his life as an academic, his roots – and his defining experiences – were in civil rights.

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Marquette Students Win IP Writing Competition

Congratulations to Mitchell Stock and Francisco Quiroz, winners of the State Bar’s 2011 IP Writing Competition.  Stock won first place for his paper entitled “Hypothetical, Actual, or Footstar: How the Courts Should Handle Patent and Copyright Licenses in Chapter 11 Bankruptcy.”  Quiroz took second for “The Decline of Fair Use: How the DMCA Marginalized Fair Use and What To Do About It.”  This adds to a recent tradition of strong showings by Marquette law students in the competition.

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