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Featured Items

This is a list of current and past featured items on the Library home page.

Featured Titles

Summer 2008

The Devil in Dover: An Insider's Story of Dogma v. Darwin in Small-Town America
by Lauri Lebo (New Press, 2008)

In 2004, the rural school board in Dover, Pennsylvania voted to teach intelligent design in ninth-grade biology classrooms. Eleven concerned parents sued, sparking a federal constitutional challenge. In this work, a local journalist traces the compelling backstory of this pivotal case, described by some as a perfect storm of religious intolerance, First Amendment violations, and an assault on American science education. In a community divided across unexpected lines, the judge - a George W. Bush-appointed Republican - eventually condemned the school board's decision as one of "breathtaking inanity." The author follows the story through its surprising twists as she probes one of America's most divisive ongoing cultural conflicts.

Inside the Presidential Debates: Their Improbable Past and Promising Future
by Newton N. Minow and Craig L. Lamay (University of Chicago Press, 2008)

This work provides an inside look into the origins of the presidential debates and the many battles - both legal and personal - that have determined who has been allowed to debate and under what circumstances. The authors do not dismiss the recent criticism of the debates but do come down solidly in favor of them, arguing that they are one of the great accomplishments of modern American electoral politics. They remind us that the debates were once unique in the democratic world, are now emulated across the globe, and offer the public the only real chance to see the candidates respond to one another directly in a discussion of major social, economic, and foreign policy issues. Looking to the challenges posed by third-party candidates and the emergence of new media such as YouTube, the authors make recommendations for the future, calling for the debates to become less formal and exploring the ways in which the internet might serve to broaden the debates' appeal and informative power.

The Cigarette Century: The Rise, Fall, and Deadly Persistence of the Product That Defined America
by Allan M. Brandt (Basic Books, 2007)

From agriculture to big business, from medicine to politics, this work provides a definitive account of how smoking came to be so deeply implicated in our culture, science, policy, and law. No product, the author argues, has been so heavily promoted or has become so deeply entrenched in American consciousness. And no product has received such scientific scrutiny, with the development of new medical knowledge demonstrating the dire effects of smoking. Using a massive archive of previously secret documents, the author shows how the industry engineered a campaign of scientific disinformation seeking to delay, disrupt, and suppress these studies, particularly using special interest lobbying and largesse to elude regulation. But even as the cultural dominance of the cigarette has waned and consumption has fallen dramatically in the U.S., Big Tobacco remains securely positioned to expand into new global markets, where the implications for the future are vast: in the next 100 years, we expect 1 billion tobacco-related deaths worldwide. This work illustrates how one ephemeral product came to play such a dominant role in so many aspects of our lives - and our deaths.

Patent Failure: How Judges, Bureaucrats, and Lawyers Put Innovators at Risk
by James Bessen and Michael J. Meurer (Princeton University Press, 2008)

In the last several years, business leaders, policymakers, and inventors have complained to the media and to Congress that today's patent system stifles innovation instead of fostering it. Is the patent system fundamentally broken, or can it be fixed with a few modest reforms? This work examines whether patents work well as property rights, and, if not, what institutional and legal reforms are necessary to make the patent system more effective. It presents a wide range of empirical evidence from history, law, and economics showing that, for most businesses today, patents fail to provide predictable property rights. Instead, the authors argue, they produce costly disputes and excessive litigation that outweigh positive incentives. Only in some sectors, such as the pharmaceutical industry, they say, do patents act as advertised, with their benefits outweighing the related costs. This work serves as a call for change in institutions and laws in this area.

May 2008

Liberty's Blueprint: How Madison and Hamilton Wrote the Federalist Papers, Defined the Constitution, and Made Democracy Safe for the World
by Michael I. Meyerson (Basic Books, 2008)

One of the most important documents in American politics and law is The Federalist - the series of essays that James Madison and Alexander Hamilton wrote to persuade the American people to ratify the Constitution. This work presents an introduction to how the Federalist Papers were written and opens a window into the thoughts of the framers on the most troubling and divisive problems of American government, including the powers of the president, the dividing line between the authority of Congress and that of the states, and the proper role of the Supreme Court. The author further explains how the wisdom of Madison and Hamilton can illuminate our current discussion on a wide variety of controversial issues, ranging from the war on terror to medical marijuana. He also reveals the complexity of the personal relationship between the two, which evolved from a volatile political alliance into an unexpected friendship, only to disintegrate into estrangement and animosity.

The Fall and Rise of the Islamic State
by Noah Feldman (Princeton University Press, 2008)

This book tells the story behind the increasingly popular call for the establishment of the shari`a - the law of the traditional Islamic state - in the modern Muslim world. Western powers call it a threat to democracy. Islamist movements are winning elections on it. Terrorists use it to justify their crimes. What, then is the shari`a, and given the severity of some of its provisions, why is it popular among Muslims? Can the Islamic state succeed, and should it? The author reveals how the classical Islamic constitution governed through and was legitimated by law; how executive power was balanced by the scholars who interpreted and administered the shari`a; and how this balance of power was finally destroyed by the tragically incomplete reforms of the modern era. The result, he explains, has been the unchecked executive dominance that now distorts politics in so many Muslim states. He argues that a modern Islamic state could provide political and legal justice to today's Muslims, but only if new institutions emerge that restore this constitutional balance of power.

Freedom for the Thought We Hate: A Biography of the First Amendment
by Anthony Lewis (Basic Books, 2007)

More than any other people on earth, Americans are free to say and write what they think. This freedom is based on just fourteen words in our Constitution: the free expression clauses of the First Amendment. But the freedom we now take for granted did not take hold when the First Amendment was added to the Constitution in 1791. It was more than a century later, in 1931, when the Supreme Court first enforced the amendment to protect speakers and the press. This work tells the story of legal and political conflict, hard choices, and determined, sometimes eccentric Americans who led the legal system to realize one of America's great founding ideas. The author reminds us that even our most basic freedoms as Americans have been secured through long struggle - by judges, lawyers, activists, and ordinary citizens - and should never be taken for granted.

Copyright's Paradox
by Neil Weinstock Netanel (Oxford University Press, 2008)

This work explores the tensions between copyright law and free speech, revealing how copyright can impose unacceptable burdens on expression. It provides concrete illustrations of how copyright often prevents speakers from effectively conveying their message, tracing this conflict across both traditional and digital media and considering current controversies such as the remix and copyright culture rampant on YouTube and MySpace, hip-hop music and digital sampling. The author juxtaposes the dramatic expansion of copyright holders' proprietary control against the individua's newly found ability to digitally cut, paste, edit, remix, and distribute sound recordings, movies, TV programs, graphics, and texts the world over. He tests whether, in light of these developments and others, copyright still serves as a vital engine of free expression. He argues that copyright should be limited to how it can best promote robust debate and expressive diversity, and he presents a blueprint for how that can be accomplished.

March 2008

Worst-Case Scenarios
by Cass R. Sunstein (Harvard University Press, 2007)

Nuclear bombs in suitcases, anthrax bacilli in ventilators, tsunamis and meteors, avian flu, scorchingly hot temperatures: nightmares that were once the plot of Hollywood movies are now frighteningly real possibilities. How can we steer a path between willful inaction and reckless overreaction? This work explores these and other worst-case scenarios and shows how private individuals and public officials might best respond to low-probability risks of disaster-emphasizing what we will lose from precautions as well as from inaction. It also offers an understanding of the uses and limits of cost-benefit analysis, especially when current generations are imposing risks on future generations. Throughout, the author uses climate change as a defining case, but he also discusses terrorism, depletion of the ozone layer, genetic modification of food, hurricanes, and worst-case scenarios faced in our ordinary lives.

Belva Lockwood: The Woman Who Would Be President
by Jill Norgren (New York University Press, 2007)

This work recounts the life story of one of the 19th century's most accomplished advocates for women's rights. Born on a farm in upstate New York in 1830, she married young, but after her husband's premature death, she earned a college degree, became a teacher, and moved to Washington, DC with plans to become an attorney-an occupation all but closed to women at that time. Not only did she become one of the first female attorneys in the U.S., but in 1879, she became the first woman ever allowed to practice at the bar of the Supreme Court. In 1884, Lockwood continued her trailblazing ways as the first woman to run a full campaign for the U.S. Presidency. She ran for President again in 1888. Although her candidacies were unsuccessful, as she knew they would be, she demonstrated that women could compete with men in the political arena.

The Lawyer Myth: A Defense of the American Legal Profession
by Rennard Strickland and Frank T. Read (Swallow Press/Ohio University Press, 2008)

In this work, the authors look behind current anti-lawyer media images to explore the historical role of lawyers as a balancing force in times of social, economic, and political change. They confront the hypocrisy of critics from both the right and the left, as well as their attempts to exploit popular misperceptions about lawyers and judges, most often to further their own social and political agendas. By revealing the facts and reasoning behind the decisions in such cases as the infamous McDonald's coffee spill, the authors provide a clear explanation of the operation of the law while addressing misconceptions about the number of lawsuits, runaway jury verdicts, and legal "technicalities" that turn criminals out on the street. Acknowledging that no system is perfect, the authors propose a slate of reforms for the bar, the judiciary, and law schools that will enable today's lawyers - and tomorrow's - to live up to the noble potential of their profession.

Torture and Democracy
by Darius Rejali (Princeton University Press, 2007)

This study of modern torture takes the reader from the late 19th century to the aftermath of Abu Ghraib, from slavery and the electric chair to electrotorture in American inner cities, and from French and British colonial prison cells and the Spanish-American War to the fields of Vietnam, the wars of the Middle East, and the new democracies of Latin America and Europe. As the author traces the development and application of one torture technique after another in these settings, he argues that, as the 20th century progressed, democracies not only tortured, but they set the international pace for torture. Dictatorships may have tortured more, and more indiscriminately, but the U.S., Britain, and France pioneered and exported techniques that have become the lingua franca of modern torture: methods that leave no marks. As democracy and human rights spread after WWII, so too did these methods. The author also tackles the controversial question of whether torture really works, answering the new apologists for torture point by point.

Winter 2007

We're All Journalists Now: The Transformation of the Press and Reshaping of the Law in the Internet Age
by Scott Gant (Free Press, 2007)

The rise of the internet and the blogosphere has blurred the once distinct role of the media in our society. Are bloggers journalists, even if they receive no income? Even if they are unedited and sometimes irresponsible? Many traditional news organizations would say no. The author says otherwise and argues that we should afford bloggers and everyone else who disseminates information and opinion in the U. S. the same rights and privileges that traditional journalists enjoy. He puts forth specific ideas about how to change existing laws and makes suggestions for new laws that will properly account for the undeniable reality that "we're all journalists now."

Letters from Nuremberg: My Father's Narrative of a Quest for Justice
by Christopher J. Dodd (Crown, 2007)

In the summer of 1945, Thomas J. Dodd, the father of U. S. Senator Christopher J. Dodd of Connecticut, traveled to the devastated city of Nuremberg to serve as a staff lawyer at the war crimes trials. Thanks to his agile legal mind and skills at interrogating the defendants - including such notorious figures as Hermann Goring, Albert Speer, and Rudolf Hess - he quickly rose to become the number two prosecutor in the U. S. contingent. Over the course of fifteen months, Dodd described his efforts and his impressions of the proceedings in nightly letters to his wife, Grace. The letters remained in the Dodd family archives, unexamined, for decades. They are published here, along with Christopher Dodd's reflections on his fathe's life and career

The Next Justice: Repairing the Supreme Court Appointments Process
by Christopher L. Eisgruber (Princeton University Press, 2007)

Long on partisan rancor and short on serious discussion, today's appointments process reveals little about what kind of judge a nominee might make. This book describes a new and better way of deliberating about who should serve on the Court - an approach that puts the burden on nominees to show that their judicial philosophies and politics are acceptable to senators and citizens alike. The author argues that the solution is to investigate how nominees would answer a basic question about the Court's role: when and why is it beneficial for judges to trump the decisions of elected officials? Through an examination of the politics and history of the Court, the author demonstrates that pursuing this question would reveal far more about nominees than do other tactics, such as investigating their views of specific precedents or the framers' intentions.

The Summer of 1787: The Men Who Invented the Constitution
by David O. Stewart (Simon & Schuster, 2007)

This work traces the struggles within the Constitutional Convention as the delegates hammered out the charter for the world's first constitutional democracy. Relying on the words of the delegates themselves to explore the Convention's sharp conflicts and hard bargaining, the author lays out the passions and contradictions of the often painful process of writing the Constitution. Revolutionary principles required that the people have power, but could the people be trusted? Would a stronger central government leave room for the states? Would the small states accept a Congress in which seats were allotted according to population rather than to each sovereign state? And what of slavery? At different points during that summer, more than half of the delegates threatened to walk out, and some actually did, but Washington's leadership and the delegates' inspired compromises held the Convention together.

September 2007

Ellery's Protest: How One Young Man Defied Tradition and Sparked the Battle Over School Prayer
by Stephen D. Solomon (University of Michigan Press, 2007)

This is the story of how one student's objection to mandatory school prayer and Bible reading led to one of the most controversial court cases of the 20th century. Abington School District v. Schempp began its journey through the nation's courts in 1956, when 16-year old Ellery Schempp protested his school's compulsory prayer and Bible-reading period by reading silently from the Koran. Ejected from class for his actions, he sued the school district. The Supreme Court's decision in his favor was one of the most important rulings on religious freedom in U.S. history. The author brings to life the personal and legal drama of the case: the family's struggle against the ugly reactions of neighbors and the impassioned courtroom clashes as lawyers on both sides argued about the meaning of religious freedom. The political and cultural roots of the controversy are also explored.

Defending the Damned: Inside Chicago's Cook County Public Defender's Office
by Kevin Davis (Atria: New York, 2007)

Chicago was the nation's deadliest city in 2001, recording 666 homicides, and for lawyers in the Cook County Public Defender's Office Murder Task Force, that meant a steady flow of new clients. Eight out of ten people arrested for murder in Chicago are represented by public defenders. They're assigned the most challenging and seemingly hopeless cases, yet they always fight to win. Veteran journalist Kevin Davis reveals the compelling true story of a team of battle-scarred lawyers fighting against all odds - this is both a human story and a courtroom drama, where life and death hang in the balance. He explores the motives that compel these lawyers to come to work in this dark corner of the criminal justice system and exposes their insular and often misunderstood world.

Inventing Human Rights: A History
by Lynn Hunt (W.W. Norton & Co.: New York, 2007)

How were human rights invented, and how does their history influence their perception and our ability to preserve them today? Human rights is a concept that only came to the forefront during the 18th century. When the American Declaration of Independence declared "all men are created equal," and the French proclaimed the Declaration of the Rights of Man, they created a new ethical standard for politics around the world. But why then, and how did such a revelation come to pass? In this work of cultural and intellectual history, the author grounds the creation of human rights in the rejection of torture as a means of finding out truth; the changing idea of human relationships displayed by novelists, playwrights, and artists; and the spread of empathy beyond insular communities. She traces the extraordinary rise of rights, their momentous eclipse in the 19th century, and their culmination as a principle with the U.N.'s proclamation in 1948. She finishes the work with a diagnosis of the state of human rights today.

Are Judges Political? An Empirical Analysis of the Federal Judiciary
by Cass R. Sunstein et al (Brookings Institution Press, 2006)

How do the political leanings of judges affect their activity on the bench? This book produces real answers by looking at what judges actually do, injecting fact and analysis into a discussion that is all too often overwhelmed by sound bites and ideological howling. The authors examine thousands of judicial votes to analyze the influence of ideology on judicial decisions. Focusing primarily on the federal courts of appeals, they scrutinize decisions on some of the most controversial issues in American law and politics - abortion, affirmative action, campaign finance regulation, disability discrimination, environmental protection, and gay rights. They help bring precision to an impassioned debate by quantifying how ideology affects legal judgments.

July 2007

The Supreme Court: The Personalities and Rivalries That Defined America
by Jeffrey Rosen (Times Books, 2007)

This work recounts the history of the Supreme Court through the personal and philosophical rivalries of eight larger-than-life personalities who dominated the Court and set many of the precedents and traditions the Court continues to follow today. The story begins with Chief Justice John Marshall and President Thomas Jefferson, whose differing visions of America set the tone for the Court's first hundred years, and continues with Justices Harlan and Holmes, who clashed over the limits of majority rule. The author then examines the Warren Court era through the lens of Justices Black and Douglas, and rounds out the history with a pairing from our own era, Justices Rehnquist and Scalia, and an assessment of Chief Justice Roberts. Throughout the work, the author seeks to show that the temperament a justice brings to the bench can have as much influence on the Court's rulings as any elaborate legal ideology.

Deportation Nation: Outsiders in American History
by Daniel Kanstroom (Harvard University Press, 2007)

This legal and social history of deportation aims to answer two fundamental questions: how should we understand deportation and what are the antecedents of our current deportation system? The answers, the author argues, involve much more than immigration and citizenship law. From the post-Revolutionary Alien and Sedition laws, the Fugitive Slave laws, and Indian "removals," to the Chinese exclusion and deportation laws, labor "deportations," the Palmer Raids, the internment of the Japanese-Americans during World War II, and the uses of today's immigration system, the author argues that deportation has always involved not just border control but social control as well. He concludes that it has now become a crude and inefficient legal tool in ill-defined "wars" on terror and crime.

Lawyers' Poker: 52 Lessons That Lawyers Can Learn From Card Players
by Steven Lubet (Oxford University Press, 2006)

In a series of engaging and informative lessons, this work examines how the tactics of the poker table can be adapted to litigation, negotiation, and virtually every aspect of law practice, and explains how they can be used by lawyers to win their cases. Lawyers, the author asserts, are constantly faced with decisions that require swift action but that are made based on spotty information. Decisions like which depositions to take, which theories to pursue, which questions to ask, and whether to settle or proceed to trial are each influenced by the opponent's behavior. Poker games are much the same, as each player must continually decide whether to raise, call, or fold without seeing some or all of other players' cards, and one of the key strategies is to show strength when your cards are weak and show weakness when your cards are strong. The author concludes that the best card players, like the best lawyers, have a knack for getting their adversaries to react exactly at they want, and that talent separates the winners from the losers. He draws on the insights of seasoned card players to show that attorneys have a lot to learn from such players.

A Well-Regulated Militia: The Founding Fathers and the Origins of Gun Control in America
by Saul Cornell (Oxford University Press, 2006)

Americans are deeply divided over the Second Amendment, with some asserting that the Amendment protects an individual's right to own guns, and others arguing that it does no more than protect the right of states to maintain militias. This comprehensive history of this bitter controversy seeks to prove that both sides are wrong. The author asserts that the Founders understood the right to bear arms as neither an individual nor a collective right, but as a civic right—an obligation citizens owed to the state to arm themselves so that they could participate in a well-regulated militia. He argues that the modern "collective right" view of the Second Amendment, the one federal courts have accepted for over a hundred years, owes more to the Anti-Federalists than the Founders. Likewise, the modern "individual right" view emerged only in the nineteenth century. This work provides a clear historical road map that charts how we have arrived at our current impasse over guns.


Archive of Featured Titles

      
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June 2007

Sorcerers' Apprentices: 100 Years of Law Clerks at the United States Supreme Court
by Artemus Ward and David L. Weiden (New York University Press, 2006)

Law clerks have been a fixture in the halls of the United States Supreme Court since its founding, but the relationship between the clerks and their justices, and the role of the clerk in the decisions a justice makes, have historically remained behind closed doors. Based on Supreme Court archives, the personal papers of justices, and interviews and surveys of 150 former clerks, this work provides a rare behind-the-scenes look at the life of a law clerk and how it has evolved since its 19th-century beginnings. The authors reveal that clerks make significant decisions about cases that are often unseen by those outside the judges' chambers; they also ask whether clerks should have this power and offer provocative suggestions for reforming the institution of the Supreme Court clerk.

A Well-Paid Slave: Curt Flood's Fight for Free Agency in Professional Sports
by Brad Snyder (Viking, 2006)

After the 1969 baseball season, the St. Louis Cardinals traded their star center fielder Curt Flood to the Philadelphia Phillies, setting off a chain of events that would change professional sports forever. At the time, there was no such thing as free agency; players were bound to their teams for life by a paragraph in the standard player contract known as the reserve clause. When a player was traded he had two choices: report to his new team or retire. Curt Flood chose to sue Major League Baseball for his professional freedom. This work provides the first in-depth look at Flood's lawsuit and its impact on both professional sports and Flood himself. His lawsuit would prove to be a crucial event in the history of professional sports, according him an historic status comparable to that of Jackie Robinson. The author provides insights into the political mechanisms of both Major League Baseball and the federal judicial system and the heart and mind of Curt Flood the man.

Corporate Bodies and Guilty Minds: The Failure of Corporate Criminal Liability
by William S. Laufer (University of Chicago Press, 2006)

The collapse of Enron. The prosecution of Arthur Anderson. The bankruptcy of WorldCom. Allegations against some of the largest companies in the U.S. continue to raise questions about business ethics, good corporate citizenship, and organizational accountability. A host of reforms, high-profile investigations, and symbolic prosecutions have been conducted. But this work argues that even with recent legal reforms - and those about to be enacted - corporate criminal law continues to be ineffective. The author considers the failure of courts and legislatures to fashion liability rules that fairly attribute blame for organizations and demonstrates how the exchange of cooperation for prosecutorial leniency and amnesty belies true law enforcement. He concludes that as long as there is no single constituency or interest group that strongly and consistently advocates the importance and priority of corporate criminal liability, the power of regulators to keep corporate abuses in check will remain insufficient.

James Madison and the Struggle for the Bill of Rights
by Richard E. Labunski (Oxford University Press, 2006)

This work offers a dramatic account of how an unlikely hero - the shy, soft-spoken, and scholarly James Madison - almost single-handedly brought the Bill of Rights to life against daunting odds, forever shaping, and perhaps even saving, the United States. When the new Constitution was drafted in 1787, many feared that the central government would trample individual liberties, while others bitterly contested the states' loss of power. Nowhere was the battle waged more fiercely than in Virginia, the largest and most powerful state, whose vote for ratification would be vital. There Madison and Patrick Henry dueled over whether Virginia should ratify the Constitution. Madison eventually won the day by a handful of votes, mollifying Anti-Federalist fears by promising to add a bill of rights, but this was only the opening round of the struggle. Rich with details of political life in early America, this colorful narrative sheds new light on a key turning point in our nation's history.

February 2007

Framing Contract Law: An Economic Perspective
by Victor P. Goldberg (Harvard University Press, 2006)

This book proposes that an economic framework that incorporates such concepts as information asymmetry, moral hazard, and adaptation to changed circumstances is appropriate for contract interpretation, analyzing contract disputes, and developing contract doctrine. The author demonstrates the value of this approach through the close analysis of major contract cases. The author argues that, in many of these cases, the analysis and the results would have been different had the court, and the litigators, understood the economic context. Topics and some representative cases include consideration (Wood v. Lucy, Lady Duff Gordon), interpretation (Bloor v. Falstaff and Columbia Nitrogen v. Royster), remedies (Campbell v. Wentz, Tongish v. Thomas, and Parker v. Twentieth Century-Fox), and excuse (Alcoa v. Essex).

Family Law and Personal Life
by John Eekelaar (Oxford University Press, 2006)

How should our most intimate personal relationships be governed in a liberal society? Should the state encourage a particular model of family life, or support individuals in their pursuit of personal happiness? To what extent do people have the right to shape the lives of their offspring? This book examines the questions at the heart of family law and explores the ideas that shape our understanding of the family as a social unit, its purpose, and the obligations and rights that below to family members. A variety of controversial issues are examined, including the legal regulation of gay and unmarried heterosexual relationships; freedom of procreation; the role of fault in divorce law; the place of religion in the family; and the rights of separated partners regarding property and of separated parents regarding their children.

The Failure of Corporate Law: Fundamental Flaws and Progressive Possibilities
by Kent Greenfield (University of Chicago Press, 2006)

Large corporations are dominant economic institutions in the world today. Traditionally, corporations were asked to take account of the public interest, but this is no longer the case. Can we make corporations accountable to the greater needs of all? This work argues that corporate law can be utilized as a force for social change and proposes a vision of corporate law that would make corporations responsive and accountable not only to shareholders, but to the general public as well. Challenging the dominant vision of corporate law in the United States, the author proposes that changing certain foundational assumptions about corporations and the law that rules them is critical to reining in corporate power. The author’s plan makes it possible for corporations to realize greater wealth, but with more fairness and democracy as well.

Enforcing Equality: Congress, the Constitution, and the Protection of Individual Rights
by Rebecca E. Zietlow (New York University Press, 2006)

This work assesses Congress's historical role in interpreting the Constitution and protecting the individual rights of citizens and challenges the conventional wisdom that the courts, not the legislatures, are best suited for this role. The author specifically focuses on what she calls "rights of belonging"—a set of positive entitlements that are necessary to ensure inclusion, participation, and equal membership in diverse communities—and examines three historical eras: Reconstruction, the New Deal era, and the Civil Rights era of the 1960's. She argues that individual rights are best enforced by the political process because they express the values of our national community, and, as such, litigation is no substitute for collective political action.

January 2007

Failure to Protect: America's Sexual Predator Laws and the Rise of the Preventive State
by Eric S. Janus (Cornell University Press, 2006)

This book goes beyond sensational headlines to examine the laws designed to prevent sexual crimes. The author contends that aggressive measures such as civil commitment and Megan's laws, which are designed to restrain sex offenders before they can commit another crime, are bad policy and do little to actually reduce sexual violence. He further argues that the approaches these new laws make use of, like preventive detention and actuarial profiling, violate important principles of liberty. Instead, the author argues, policymakers must address the societal problems that allow sexual violence to flourish. He endorses the specific efforts of some advocates, organizations, and social scientists to stop sexual violence by, for example, taking steps to change the attitudes and behaviors of school-age children and adolescents, improving public education, and promoting community treatment and supervision of previous offenders. More than a critique of the status quo, this book discusses serious alternatives and how best to overcome the political obstacles to achieving rational policy.

Foreign Affairs and the Constitution in the Age of Fighting Sail
by William R. Casto (University of South Carolina Press, 2006)

This book recounts the efforts of the French revolutionary republic to obtain support from the United States in its war with Great Britain. This situation forced George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, John Jay, James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and other founding fathers to wrestle for the first time with many of the problems inherent in the Constitution's allocation of powers between states and nation and among the three branches of government. The author argues that the insights of the nation's founders about the Constitution and international affairs are as valuable today as they were in 1793. Concentrating on the legal issues generated by the French maritime campaign, he examines the contest between Hamilton and Jefferson and offers close readings of Hamilton' Pacificus and Madison's Helvidius papers and of the Supreme Court's refusal to advise the president. Bridging legal, political, and diplomatic history, he maps the processes by which the founders moved from abstract theorizing to an implementation of the Constitution in the context of specific and highly controversial international incidents.

The Sense of Justice: Empathy in Law and Punishment
by Markus Dirk Dubber (New York University Press, 2006)

Drawing on recent work in moral philosophy, political theory, and linguistics, this work defines the "sense of justice" in terms of empathy - the emotional capacity that makes law possible by giving us vicarious access to the experience of others. From there, the author explores the way in which it is invoked, considered, and used in the American criminal justice system. He argues that the sense of justice is not simply an irrational emotional impulse but rather a valuable legal tool that should be properly used and understood.

The Myth of Judicial Activism: Making Sense of Supreme Court Decisions
by Kermit Roosevelt III (Yale University Press, 2006)

This book enters the debate over "judicial activism" and offers a way to resolve the heated discord between conservatives who argue that the Constitution is immutable and progressives who insist that it is a living document that must be reinterpreted in new cultural contexts so that its meaning evolves. The author uses plain language and compelling examples to explain how the Constitution can be both a constant and an organic document. He looks at particular Supreme Court decisions that critics charge are reflections of the Justices' political preferences rather than enforcement of the Constitution and clarifies the tasks of the Court in constitutional cases. He then sets out a model to describe how the Court creates doctrine to implement the meaning of the Constitution and uses this model to show which decisions can be justified as legitimate and which cannot.

Winter 2006

Law and Identity in Mandate Palestine
by Assaf Likhovski (University of North Carolina Press, 2006)

This work examines the legal history of Palestine, showing how law and identity interacted in a complex colonial society in which British rulers and Jewish and Arab subjects lived together. Law in Mandate Palestine, argues the author, was not merely an instrument of power or a method of solving individual disputes. It was also a way of answering the question, “Who are we?” British officials, Jewish lawyers, and Arab scholars all turned to the law in their search for their identities and all used it to create and disseminate a hybrid culture in which Western and non-Western norms existed simultaneously. Uncovering a rich arsenal of legal distinctions, notions, and doctrines used by lawyers to mediate between different identities, the author provides a comprehensive account of the relationship between law and identity.

End of the Line: The Rise and Coming Fall of the Global Corporation
by Barry C. Lynn (Doubleday, 2005)

Many claim that free trade creates wealth and fosters global stability. This work, however, argues that exactly the opposite may increasingly be true, as the resulting global system becomes ever more vulnerable to terrorism, war, and the vagaries of nature. It tells the story of how American corporations created a global production system by exploding the traditional factory and casting the pieces to dozens of points throughout the world, and how free trade has made American citizens come to depend on the goodwill of people in very different nations, in very different regions of the world. The author argues that globalization can be a great force for spreading prosperity and promoting peace-but only if we master its complexities and approach it in a way that protects and advances our national interest.

Changing Minds: The Art and Science of Changing Our Own and Other People's Minds
by Howard Gardner (Harvard Business School Press, 2004)

In this work, world-renowned Harvard psychologist Gardner suggests that traditional thinking about mind change as a sudden "epiphany" is entirely wrong. Instead, he argues, we change our minds gradually, in identifiable ways that can be actively and powerfully influenced. Drawing on decades of cognitive research, he identifies seven levers that aid or thwart the process of mind change, including reason, research, real-world events, and resistances. He provides an original framework - illustrated with famous and ordinary examples of "change agents" in politics, business, science, the arts, and everyday life - that shows how individuals can align these levers to bring about significant changes in perspective and behavior. From Margaret Thatcher's reorientation of Great Britain to Sr. John Browne's transformation of BP to Charles Darwin's evolutionary revolution to interactions between spouses or friends to decisions to change one's own mind, the author uncovers surprising similarities and instructive differences among the factors that affect mind change in a variety of settings.

The Frankfurt Auschwitz Trial, 1963-1965: Genocide, History, and the Limits of the Law
by Devin O. Pendas (Cambridge University Press, 2006)

The Frankfurt Auschwitz trial was the largest, most public, and most important trial of Holocaust perpetrators conducted in West German courts. Drawing on a wide range of archival sources, this work provides a comprehensive history of this momentous event. Situating the trial within a thorough analysis of West German criminal law, the author argues that in confronting systematic, state-sponsored genocide, the Frankfurt court ran up against the limits of law, and that the trial was unable to adequately grasp the deep social roots and systematic character of Nazi genocide. Much of the trial's significance came from the vast public attention it captured, and this book provides a compelling account of the divided response to the trial from the West German public.

September 2006

Who Controls the Internet? Illusions of a Borderless World
by Jack Goldsmith and Tim Wu (Oxford University Press, 2006)

Is the Internet erasing national borders? Will the future of the Net be set by Internet engineers, rogue programmers, the United Nations, or powerful countries? Who's really in control of what's happening on the Net? This work tells the story of the Internet's challenge to governmental rules in the 1990's and the battles that ensued with governments around the world. It includes discussions of Google's struggles with the French government and Yahoo's capitulation to the Chinese regime; of how the European Union sets privacy standards on the Net for the entire world; and of eBay's struggles with fraud and how it slowly learned to trust the FBI. The authors argue that the destiny of the Internet over the next decade will reflect the interests of powerful nations and the conflicts within and between them.

The Future of the United Nations: Understanding the Past to Chart a Way Forward
by Joshua Muravchik (AEI Press, 2005)

Rocked by scandal and politically divided, the United Nations faces a critical hour. The secretary general and other leaders have offered their recipes for reform. The author, however, argues that only far more radical reforms can salvage the United Nations as a useful institution. Reviewing the U.N.'s record over the last half century, the author proposes a bold formula for resurrecting the beleaguered body: refocus its efforts on the one thing it does well-international humanitarian missions-while reemphasizing the U.N. as a place where sovereign nations can exchange ideas and form coalitions in the face of common concerns.

Covering: The Hidden Assault on Our Civil Rights
by Kenji Yoshino (Random House, 2006)

To cover, the author of this work maintains, is to downplay a disfavored trait so as to blend into the mainstream. Because all of us possess stigmatized attributes, we all encounter pressure to cover in our daily lives. The author argues that the demand to cover can pose a hidden threat to our civil rights - that we routinely deny equal treatment to people who refuse to downplay these disfavored differences. Racial minorities are pressed to "act white" by changing their names, languages, or cultural practices. Women are told to "play like men" at work. Gays are asked not to engage in public displays of same-sex affection. The devout are instructed to minimize expressions of faith, and individuals with disabilities are urged to conceal the paraphernalia that permit them to function. The author argues that civil rights law has largely ignored the threat posed by these covering demands and that the work of civil rights will not be complete until it attends to the harms of coerced conformity.

Party Lines: Competition, Partisanship, and Congressional Redistricting
by Thomas E. Mann and Bruce E. Cain (Brookings Institution Press, 2005)

Having state legislatures redraw congressional district lines after the decennial census has long been controversial, and recent developments have added new urgency to earlier debates. The spectacle of mid-decade partisan gerrymandering in Texas, for example, reinforced an image of unfair domination by self-serving politicians. This work provides a timely analysis of redistricting in the United States - its evolution, abuse, and impact on democracy. It explains the legal and political history of redistricting since the one-person, one-vote revolution in the 1960's and places it in the larger context of American politics. The authors also analyze options for reform, including the use of independent redistricting commissions as an alternative to the typical state legislative process.

Summer 2006

Sandra Day O'Connor: How the First Woman on the Supreme Court Became Its Most Influential Justice
by Joan Biskupic (Ecco, 2005)

From her isolated upbringing on the Lazy B ranch in Arizona through her time as a state legislator to her rise as America's first woman Supreme Court justice, this work presents a vivid depiction of Sandra Day O'Connor and provides an unprecedented look inside the exclusive, famously secretive High Court. Drawing on information from once-private papers of the justices, hundreds of interviews with legal and political insiders, and the insight gained from nearly two decades of covering the Supreme Court, the author examines O'Connor's career and provides an in-depth account of her transformation from tentative jurist to confident architect of American law. During her tenure, O'Connor wrote the decisions on some of the most controversial social battles of our time, and, the author argues, her tie-breaking opinions on issues such as abortion rights, affirmative action, the death penalty, and religious freedom will have a lasting effect on both the country and the court far into the future.

Law Without Justice: Why Criminal Law Doesn't Give People What They Deserve
by Paul H. Robinson and Michael T. Cahill (Oxford University Press, 2006)

The legal system assures us that it will seek to "do justice" in criminal cases. So why, the authors of this work ask, does the criminal law deliberately and routinely sacrifice justice in some cases? Why would criminal law rules be designed to give people punishment other than what they deserve? In this unflinching look at American criminal law, the authors demonstrate that cases with unjust outcomes are not always irregular or unpredictable. Rather, they argue, the criminal law sometimes chooses not to give defendants what they deserve: that is, unsatisfying results occur even when the system works as it is designed to work. From statutes of limitations and double jeopardy rules that disallow newly found evidence conclusively proving an offender's guilt, to harsh doctrines that ignore legitimate claims of blamelessness, the authors find that while some justice-sacrificing doctrines serve their intended purpose, many other do not, or could be replaced by other, better rules that would serve the purpose without abandoning the just result, and in this work, they challenge us to restore justice to the criminal justice system.

Pregnancy and Power: A Short History of Reproductive Politics in America
by Rickie Solinger (New York University Press, 2005)

This sweeping chronicle of women's battles for reproductive freedom throughout American history explores the many forces - social, racial, economic, and political - that have shaped women's reproductive lives in the United States. It includes accounts of the fights women have waged against anti-miscegenation laws, labor laws, anti-contraception laws, and recent welfare reform laws that many argue punish poor women for having children. The author believes that a complete understanding of reproductive politics must take into account the many players shaping public policy - lawmakers, educators, employers, clergy, physicians - as well as the consequences for women who obey or resist these policies. Tracing the diverse plotlines of women's reproductive lives throughout American history, this work redefines the idea of reproductive freedom, putting race and class at the center of the effort to control sex and pregnancy in America.

High-Profile Crimes: When Legal Cases Become Social Causes
by Lynn S. Chancer (University of Chicago Press, 2005)

O.J. Simpson. The Central Park jogger. Bensonhurst. William Kennedy Smith. Rodney King. This work argues that these are more than crimes and criminals, more than court cases - that they are cultural events that, for better or worse, gave concrete expression to latent social conflicts in American society. It explores how these cases became conflated with larger social causes on a collective level and how this phenomenon has affected the law, the media, and social movements. The merging of legal cases and social causes, the author argues, has wrought ambivalent effects on both social movements and the law: on the one hand, high-profile crimes offer important opportunities for emotional expression and raise awareness of social issues, but on the other hand, underlying social problems cannot be resolved through the either/or determinations that are the goals of the legal system, sometimes creating frustration for those who look to the outcome of these causes for social progress.

February 2006

Judge Sewall's Apology: The Salem Witch Trials and the Forming of an American Conscience
by Richard Francis (Fourth Estate, 2005)

This work tells the story of the Salem witch hunt of 1692 through the eyes of Samuel Sewall, the Salem trial judge who, five years after pronouncing judgment at the trials, walked into his church in Boston and recanted the guilty verdicts, praying for forgiveness. Sewall's life encompassed the tensions that faced the second-generation colonists, caught between the staunch conservatism of the Puritans and the possibilities their new world offered. Drawing on Sewall's copious diaries, the author reveals the nature and scale of the threat the authorities believed they were facing and enables the reader to see the early colonists as flesh and blood idealists, striving for a new society while coming to terms with the desires and imperfections of ordinary life.

Fair Ways: How Six Black Golfers Won Civil Rights in Beaumont, Texas
by Robert J. Robertson (Texas A&M University Press, 2005)

In 1955, six African American golfers in Beaumont, Texas, filed a federal lawsuit for the right to play the municipal golf course. This work chronicles three parallel stories that converged in this important case: that of the plaintiffs, avid golfers who had learned the game while working as caddies and waiters; that of their young lawyers, recent graduates from Harvard Law School; and that of the Republican judge just appointed to the bench by Dwight Eisenhower. Using public case papers, public records, newspapers, and oral histories, the author recreates the scene in Beaumont on the eve of desegregation, describing in detail the parallel white and black communities that characterized the Jim Crow system.

Sprawl: A Compact History
by Robert Bruegmann (University of Chicago Press, 2005)

This history of the expanded city challenges the usual assumptions and conventional wisdom about sprawl. The author argues that sprawl is neither recent nor particularly American but as old as cities themselves, just as characteristic of ancient Rome and eighteenth-century Paris as it is of Atlanta or Los Angeles. He also argues that sprawl is not the disaster claimed by many contemporary detractors; that it is a logical consequence of economic growth and the democratization of society and has provided millions of people with the kinds of mobility, privacy, and choice that were once the exclusive prerogatives of the rich and powerful.

Advice and Consent: The Politics of Judicial Appointments
by Lee Epstein and Jeffrey A. Segal (Oxford University Press, 2005)

This comprehensive and systematic examination of the roles of politics and ideology in the judicial appointment process discusses everything from constitutional background, to the role of the Judiciary Committee in vetting nominees, to crucial differences in the nomination of judges and justices. The authors also shed light on the roles played by the media, the ABA, and special interest groups. The authors argue that the appointment of justices and judges has always been a contentious process, and they describe how presidents and the Senate have tried to remake the bench over the years, ranging from FDR's controversial "court packing" scheme to the Senate's creation in 1978 of 35 new appellate and 117 district court judgeships, allowing the Democrats to shape the judiciary for years. The book concludes with a look at whether presidents succeed in their efforts to appoint judges who will carry their philosophies into the next generation.

Winter, 2005

America's Constitution: A Biography
by Akhil Reed Amar (Random House, 2005)

This "biography" of America's framing document attempts to explain not only what the Constitution says, but also why the Constitution says it. The author shows how the story of this one relatively compact document reflects the story of America more generally, and how the Constitution was as much a product of its environment as it was a product of its individual creators' inspired genius. He places the document in the context of late-eighteenth-century American politics and explains, among other things, the reason America adopted an Electoral College; whether there is anything in the Constitution that is unamendable; why a president must be at least thirty-five years old; and why only those citizens who were born under the American flag can become president.

Courtroom 302: A Year Behind the Scenes in an American Criminal Courthouse
by Steve Bogira (A. Knopf, 2005)

This is the story of one year in one courtroom in Chicago's Cook County Criminal Courthouse, the busiest felony courthouse in the country. The author provides an up-close view of the criminal justice system through the eyes of the men and women who experience it, not only in the courtroom but in the lockup, the jury room, the judge's chambers, and the spectator's gallery. From behind the scenes, the reader witnesses both the high-profile cases and the cases that are the daily grind of the court, as the author shows how, in our criminal court system, justice is dispensed rapidly and mindlessly.

Justice Imperiled: The Anti-Nazi Lawyer Max Hirschberg in Weimar Germany
by Douglas C. Morris (University of Michigan Press, 2005)

This is the story of the lawyer Max Hirschberg, one of Germany's most courageous defenders of justice in the face of Hitler's rise to power. By the time he fled Nazi Germany in 1934, Hirschberg had argued a series of cases in Munich's courtrooms that shed light on the history of political injustice in pre-Nazi Germany and the miscarriage of justice in all Western democracies. Throughout the Weimer period, Hirschberg squared off in court against Munich's conservatives, reactionaries, and Nazis, twice facing Hitler himself. In a blend of biography and courtroom drama, this work captures the excitement of Hirschberg's actual cases and presents legal battles that still rage, in different circumstances, to this day.

National Pastime: How Americans Play Baseball and the Rest of the World Plays Soccer
by Stefan Szymanski and Andrew Zimbalist (Brookings Institution Press, 2005)

This cross-cultural comparison of two sports explores why baseball is America's game, a national obsession that remains largely North American even though it bills its championship as the World Series, and why soccer is the world's game, a sport over which no nation can claim ownership. The authors examine how organizational structures have made Major League Baseball a profitable business, while soccer leagues around the world struggle to break even. They weave a rich variety of stories, anecdotes, and photos into their account of how these games because businesses, and how these businesses have adapted to the demands of their fans.

Fall, 2005

What is Life Worth? The Unprecedented Effort to Compensate the Victims of 9/11
by Kenneth R. Feinberg (Public Affairs, 2005)

Eleven days after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, Congress created the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund, but they provided very few guidelines as to how the funds should be distributed and set no limit on the size of awards, giving a single individual, Kenneth Feinberg, nearly unlimited discretion to manage the program. For three years, Feinberg spent almost all of his time meeting with the 9/11 families, convincing them of the generosity and compassion of the program, and calculating appropriate awards for each and every claim. This is Feinberg's personal account of what proved to be the most harrowing experience of his professional life.

A Place on the Team: The Triumph and Tragedy of Title IX
by Welch Suggs (Princeton University Press, 2005)

This work examines the history, development, and impact of Title IX, the federal law guaranteeing women's rights in education, and tells the story of how it revolutionized American sports. Chronicling both the law's successes and its failures, the author examines how courts and colleges have read, and misread, the law, and provides compelling portraits of the people who have shaped women's sports in this country, detailing thirty years of struggles for equal rights on the playing field.

What Roe v. Wade Should Have Said: The Nation's Top Legal Experts Rewrite America's Most Controversial Decision
Edited by Jack M. Balkin (New York University Press, 2005)

Thirty years after the Supreme Court ruled in Roe v. Wade, the decision remains one of the Court's most controversial rulings and has emerged as a central issue in federal judicial nominations. In this work, eleven distinguished constitutional scholars rewrite the opinions in this controversial case, taking positions both for and against the constitutional right to abortion and making use only of sources available at the time of the original decision. Contributors are Anita L. Allen, Akhil Reed Amar, Jack M. Balkin, Teresa Stanton Collett, Michael Stokes Paulsen, Jeffrey Rosen, Jed Rubenfeld, Reva B. Siegel, Cass Sunstein, Mark Tushnet, and Robin West.

Justice Curtis in the Civil War Era: At the Crossroads of American Constitutionalism
by Stuart Streichler (University of Virginia Press, 2005)

The first book-length treatment of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Benjamin R. Curtis, this work uses Curtis's life and work as a window on the most serious constitutional crisis in American history, the Civil War. Curtis is best remembered for dissenting in the Dred Scott case, in which he disputed Chief Justice Taney's pro-slavery ruling that no black person could ever become a citizen of the United States. Yet he also clashed with Boston's abolitionists over enforcing the Fugitive Slave Act and opposed the Emancipation Proclamation. Curtis was an influential voice in the constitutional struggle between states and the federal government, and the author assesses Curtis's common-law methods in the context of his divisive times.

Summer, 2005

To the Flag: The Unlikely History of the Pledge of Allegiance
by Richard J. Ellis (University Press of Kansas, 2005)

This work traces the story of the Pledge from its composition by Francis Bellamy in 1892 to the 2004 Supreme Court decision regarding atheist Michael Newdow's objection to the words "under God." The author highlights some of the less familiar aspects of the story: the schoolhouse flag movement, the codification of the Pledge at the First National Flag Conference in 1923, changing styles of salute, and the uses of the Pledge to quell concerns over various strains of radicalism. The text of the pledge is also analyzed, showing, for example, that the words "indivisible" and "allegiance" were intended to invoke Civil War sentiments, and how "with liberty and justice for all" forms a capsule expression of the American creed.

Insincere Promises: The Law of Misrepresented Intent
by Ian Ayres and Gregory Klass (Yale University Press, 2005)

This book is devoted to the analysis of promissory fraud and is filled with examples of insincere promising from case law as well as from literature and popular culture. The authors examine what promises say from the perspectives of philosophy and economics, as well as the law. They also identify four core mistakes that courts make in promissory fraud cases and offer a theory for how courts and practitioners should handle such cases.

One Nation, Uninsured: Why the U. S. Has No National Health Insurance
by Jill Quadagno (Oxford University Press, 2005)

Ranging from the Progressive Era to the Clinton years, this work offers a sweeping history of the battles over American health care. The author examines how each attempt to enact national health insurance over the years has been met with fierce attacks by powerful stakeholders, who mobilized their resources to keep the finance of health care out of the government's hands. The author attempts to explain why the United States is the only industrial nation in the world that does not provide universal health insurance.

'Tis Treason, My Good Man!: Four Revolutionary Presidents and a Piccadilly Bookshop
by Eric Stockdale (Oak Knoll Press, 2005)

This historical work examines how some London bookseller-publishers, together with their authors, supported the case for the American revolutionaries by printing the colonist's point of view, in dire risk to their own life and liberty. It highlights the courage and audacity of one pro-American bookseller, John Stockdale, and explores his relationship with four American Presidents. The author also introduces the reader to a cast of historic characters, both heroes and villains, including Prime Ministers, Attorneys-General, and Members of Parliament.

Spring, 2005

Freedom of Expression: Overzealous Copyright Bozos and Other Enemies of Creativity
by Kembrew McLeod (Doubleday, 2005)

In 1998, the author trademarked the phrase "freedom of expression" as a joke - a way to comment on how intellectual property law is increasingly being used to fence off our culture and restrict the way we are allowed to express ideas. In this amusing work, he ties together topics as diverse as hip-hop music and digital sampling, the patenting of seeds and human genes, folk and blues music, visual collage art, electronic voting, the Internet, and computer software, and argues that the push to pin down everything as a piece of private property is seriously eroding creativity and free speech.

Courting Failure: How Competition for Big Cases Is Corrupting the Bankruptcy Courts
by Lynn M. LoPucki (University of Michigan Press, 2005)

In this account of the widespread and systematic decay of America's bankruptcy courts, one of the nation's leading experts on bankruptcy law reveals the corruption in the U.S. bankruptcy system and argues that this breakdown has directly led to the major corporate failures of the last decade, including Enron, MCI, WorldCom, and Global Crossing. The author criticizes the destructive power of "forum shopping," in which attorneys choose courts that offer the most favorable outcome for their clients, and the way in which the courts, lured by power and prestige, streamline their requirements and lower their standards to compete for these lucrative cases.

History on Trial: My Day in Court with David Irving
by Deborah E. Lipstadt (Ecco, 2005)

In 1993, the author published the first comprehensive history of the Holocaust denial movement, calling David Irving one of its most dangerous spokespersons. Irving later sued her and her publisher for libel in the London courts. This is her personal chronicle of the legal battle with Irving - the definitive account of the dramatic trial that tested the standards for historical and judicial truths, a trial that the Daily Telegraph of London proclaimed did "for the new century what the Nuremberg tribunals or the Eichmann trial did for earlier generations."

Alienated: Immigrant Rights, the Constitution, and Equality in America
by Victor C. Romero (New York University Press, 2005)

This work examines the intersection between American immigration and constitutional law, focusing on what the author calls a "constitutional immigration law paradox" that reserves certain rights for U.S. citizens only, while simultaneously purporting to treat all people fairly under constitutional law regardless of citizenship. Looking at constitutional immigration law from the vantage point of people whose citizenship status is murky, including foreign-born adoptees, undocumented immigrants, tourists, foreign students, and same-gender bi-national partners, the author endorses an equality-based reading of the Constitution and advocates a new theoretical and practical approach that protects the individual rights of non-citizens without sacrificing their personhood.

February, 2005

Atonement and Forgiveness: A New Model for Black Reparations
by Roy L. Brooks (University of California Press, 2004)

In this far-reaching reassessment of the growing debate on black reparations, the author shifts the focus of the issue from the backward-looking compensation for victims to a more forward-looking opportunity for racial reconciliation. Offering a comprehensive discussion of the history of the black redress movement, this book puts forward a new plan for repairing the relationship between the federal government and black Americans and makes a passionate case that only with a spirit of heightened morality, egalitarianism, and restorative justice can genuine racial reconciliation take place in America.

A Court Divided: The Rehnquist Court and the Future of Constitutional Law
by Mark Tushnet (W.W. Norton Co., 2005)

This analysis of the eighteen year record of the Rehnquist Court reveals how the decisions of nine deeply divided justices have left the future of the Court - and the nation - hanging in the balance. While many have assumed that the chasm on the Court has been between its liberals and its conservatives, the author demonstrates that the genuine division has been between two types of Republican conservatives: those in tune with the modern post-Reagan Republican Party and those who represent an older Republican tradition. The author argues that the groundwork has been laid for much more radical changes in the laws that shape American life and shows why the next half-century and more depends on the next Court appointments.

Torture: A Collection
Edited by Sanford Levinson (Oxford University Press, 2004)

This work brings together leading lawyers, political theorists, social scientists, and public intellectuals to debate the advisability of maintaining an absolute ban on torture and to reflect on what it says about our societies if we do - or do not - adhere to it in all circumstances. Noted contributors include Ariel Dorfman, Alan Dershowitz, Judge Richard Posner, and other lawyers from both the United States and abroad.

Does God Belong in Public Schools?
By Kent Greenawalt (Princeton University Press, 2005)

In this book, the author asks what role religion ought to play in public schools and explores many of the most divisive issues in educational debate, including teaching about the origins of life, sex education, and when - or whether - students can opt out of school activities for religious reasons. Using these and other case studies, Greenawalt considers how to balance the country's constitutional commitment to personal freedoms and to the separation of church and state with the vital role that religion has always played in American society.

January, 2005

Selling Women Short: The Landmark Battle for Workers' Rights at Wal-Mart
by Liza Featherstone (Basic Books, 2004)

An investigation into the largest civil rights class-action suit in history, this work tells the story of the women plaintiffs who are suing Wal-Mart for sex discrimination in hiring, pay, and promotion. The author examines the labor practices and corporate culture of the world's largest employer and brings to light the voices and opinions of the workers themselves, following the women and their lawyers through every step of this historic lawsuit that could represent over 1.6 million current and former employees.

Legal Ethics: A Comparative Study
by Geoffrey C. Hazard, Jr. and Angelo Dondi (Stanford University Press, 2004)

Examining legal ethics within the framework of modern practice, this work identifies two important ethical issues that all lawyers confront: the difference between the role of lawyers and the role of judges in pursuing justice, and the conflicting responsibilities lawyers have to their clients and to the legal system. The authors focus their analysis on lawyers in modern capitalist constitutional regimes, including the United States, Japan, Europe, and Latin America, as well as on the emerging legal systems in China and the former Soviet bloc.

Rights from Wrongs: A Secular Theory of the Origins of Rights
by Alan Dershowitz (Basic Books, 2004)

This work puts forward a wholly new and compelling answer to one of the most persistent dilemmas in both law and moral philosophy: Where do our rights come from? Rights, the author argues, do not come from God, nature, logic, or law alone; they arise out of particular human experiences with injustice. Thus the author proposes a theory of rights that emerges not from some theory of perfect justice, but from its opposite: from the bottom up, from trial and error, and from our collective experience of injustice.

Innovation and Its Discontents: How Our Broken Patent System Is Endangering Innovation and Progress, and What to Do About It
by Adam B. Jaffe and Josh Lerner

The premise behind this book by two of the nation's leading experts on patents and economic innovation is that the U.S. patent system has become sand rather than lubricant in the wheels of American progress. The authors argue that legal changes initiated in the 1980's converted the patent system from a stimulator of innovation to a creator of litigation and uncertainly that threatens the innovation process itself. After analyzing the economic incentives created by the current policies, they suggest a three-pronged solution for restoring the patent system.

Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online

Illustrated collection of 50,000 biographies of the men and women who shaped the history of the British Isles, from the fourth century B.C. to the present. Based on the new 60-volume print edition, the DNB Online covers people from all walks of life and includes over 10,000 portrait illustrations. It includes not only citizens of the British Isles, but also citizens of commonwealth nations, former colonies, and other nations if their lives have had a significant impact on the British Isles.

August 2004

Changing Channels: The Civil Rights Case that Transformed Television
by Kay Mills (University Press of Mississippi, 2004)

In the years before the civil rights era, American broadcasting reflected the interests of the white mainstream. Today, local television mirrors the diversity of local populations. This change began in 1964, when the United Church of Christ and two black Mississippians challenged the broadcasting license of an NBC affiliate in Jackson, Mississippi. This deeply researched history of the case covers the legal battles of more than fifteen years and reports the ultimate victory for civil rights.

The Anarchist in the Library: How the Clash Between Freedom and Control is Hacking the Real World and Crashing the System
by Siva Vaidhyanathan (Basic Books, 2004)

This book tackles an expansive topic: Internet technology and its effect on our social, political and cultural future. For cultural historian and media scholar Vaidhyanathan, the digital revolution is about far more than downloading music. Weaving an array of historical examples with prescient analysis, Vaidhyanathan takes the Internet battles common to most readers today and crafts a treatise on how technology highlights the eternal cultural struggle between "oligarchy and anarchy."

Real Democracy: the New England Town Meeting and How it Works
by Frank M. Bryan (University of Chicago Press, 2004)

Can ordinary people really gather together and make laws that are binding on themselves and their communities? If so, how well do these direct democracies succeed? Bryan answers these questions through more than three decades of research on one of the purest forms of democracy: the New England town meeting. Although these meetings are natural laboratories for democracy, very few scholars have ever systematically investigated them.

Trade Secrets: Intellectual Piracy and the Origins of American Industrial Power
by Doron S. Ben-Atar (Yale University Press, 2004)

During the first decades of America's existence as a nation, private citizens and government officials encouraged the smuggling of European inventions and artisans to the New World. At the same time, the young republic was developing policies that set new standards for protecting industrial innovations. This book traces the evolution of America's contradictory approach to intellectual property rights from the colonial period to the age of Jackson.

Summer 2004

Beyond Choice: Reproductive Freedom in the 21st Century
by Alexander Sanger (Public Affairs, 2004)

Sanger, grandson of reproductive rights activist Margaret Sanger, is dismayed by the abortion debate's current stalemate, and in this pro-choice manifesto he asserts that pro-choice supporters face a difficult task if they want to persuade pro-life advocates to listen. He suggests discussions that could change how those outside the pro-life camp view the issue, including involving men in the conversation about reproductive rights.

Free Culture: How Big Media Uses Technology and the Law to Lock Down Culture and Control Creativity
by Lawrence Lessig (Penguin Press, 2004)

Free Culture is an expertly argued, alarming and surprisingly entertaining look at the current copyright wars. Copyright law in the digital age has become a hot topic, thanks to millions of music downloaders and the controversial, high-profile legal efforts of the music industry to stop them. Stanford law professor Lessig argues that copyright as designed by the Framers has become dangerously unbalanced, favoring the interests of corporate giants over the interests of citizens and would-be innovators.

The Ultimate Rule of Law
by David M. Beatty (Oxford University Press, 2004)

The Ultimate Rule of Law addresses the age-old tension between law and politics by examining whether the personal beliefs of judges come into play in adjudicating issues of religious freedom, sex discrimination, and social and economic rights. Decisions by the Supreme Courts of India, Japan, Canada, the United States, Ireland, Israel, the Constitutional Courts of Germany, Hungary, South Africa, and the European Court of Human Rights are evaluated and compared.


Voting with Dollars: A New Paradigm for Campaign Finance
by Bruce Ackerman & Ian Ayres (Yale University Press, 2004)

Ackerman and Ayres provide a fresh and provocative way of thinking about the interaction between dollars and votes, and a fascinating out-of-the-box solution for what's wrong. Voting with Dollars is one of the few genuinely original contributions to the debate over campaign finance reform. This breakthrough book initiates the long-overdue effort to examine alternative approaches to campaign finance reform.

Spring 2004

Getting Even: Forgiveness and its Limits
by Jeffrie G. Murphy (Oxford University Press, 2003)

Forgiving wrongdoing is one of the staples of current pop psychology dogma; it is seen as a universal prescription for moral and mental health. At the same time, personal vindictiveness is seen as irrational and immoral. Murphy proposes that vindictive emotions (anger, resentment, and the desire for revenge) actually deserve a more legitimate place in our emotional, social, and legal lives than we currently recognize, while forgiveness deserves to be more selectively granted.


The Trial of "Indian Joe": Race and Justice in the Nineteenth-Century West
by Clare V. McKanna, Jr. (University of Nebraska Press, 2003)

The sensational murder trial of Jose Gabriel highlights the legal injustices committed against Native Americans in the nineteenth century. During this time, California Native Americans could not vote or serve on juries, so from the outset Gabriel was unlikely to receive a fair trial. Drawing on court testimony and newspaper accounts, McKanna sheds light on a dark time in the American legal system.


Unconscious Crime: Mental Absence and Criminal Responsibility in Victorian London
by Joel Peter Eigen (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003)

Based on extensive research in the Old Bailey Sessions Papers (verbatim courtroom narratives taken down in shorthand during the trial and sold on the street the following day), Eigen's book reveals a growing estrangement between law and medicine over the legal concept of the Person as a rational and purposeful actor with a clear understanding of consequences.


Voucher Wars: Waging the Legal Battle Over School Choice
by Clint Bolick (Cato Institute, 2003)

Some have called it the most important lawsuit of its kind since Brown v. Board of Education. In this book, Clint Bolick, one of the premier fighters for school choice in the nation, and counsel in the recent Cleveland school vouchers case, appealed all the way to the Supreme Court -- which on June 27, 2002 upheld the program in an historic decision -- recounts the drama and the tactics of the 12-year battle for choice and, in the process, distills crucial lessons for future educational freedom battles.

December 2003

Governance of the Consuming Passions: A History of Sumptuary Law
by Alan Hunt (Palgrave Macmillan 1996)

Did you know that in 1429 Scottish law required that all men with an income over 20 pounds a year wear a fur hat? That an act passed in England in 1533 stipulated that only members of the Royal Family were allowed to wear purple silk, and that crimson, scarlet or blue velvet could legally be worn only by members of the upper nobility? That in Massachusetts Bay in 1651, anyone making less than 200 pounds a year was forbidden to wear gold or silver lace or gold or silver buttons? Hunt takes us through the fascinating history of dress restrictions. Even today, in our modern capitalistic state, we can see how sumptuary laws still exert influence by observing the vestments worn by the clergy and their assistants.


Colonial Intimacies: Indian Marriage in Early New England
by Ann Marie Plane (Cornell University Press, 2000)

Elite Native American men frequently took more than one wife, and ordinary people could dissolve their marriages and take new partners with relative ease. Native marriage did not necessarily involve cohabitation, the formation of a new household, or mutual dependence for subsistence. Plane's interpretations form an intimate picture, moving and often tragic, of the familial bonds of Native Americans in the first century and a half of European contact.


Wild Bill: The Legend and Life of William O. Douglas, America's Most Controversial Supreme Court Justice
by Bruce Allen Murphy (Random House, 2003)

Douglas himself carefully crafted the myth of the poor boy who arrived in New York with just a few cents in his pocket and ended up conquering the Eastern establishment in the name of the little guy. In reality, Douglas enjoyed tremendous emotional and financial support throughout his life from his family, friends and multiple wives. Murphy does a wonderful job of providing just enough historical context to allow general readers to appreciate the complexity of his brilliant, but flawed, subject without bogging down his narrative in a crush of detail.


Setting Global Standards: Guidelines for Creating Codes of Conduct in Multinational Corporations
by S. Prakash Sethi (Wiley, 2002)

Many other books express "righteous anger" about the activities of multinational corporations in developing countries and typically dwell on egregious examples and give little attention to business considerations and realistic possibilities for improvement. By contrast, Sethi's work is based on long familiarity with the operations of many companies in many countries, and clearly recognizes the role and contribution of industrialization to economic development. Rather than solely criticizing these policies, Sethi explores the opportunities for improvement through voluntary efforts by firms and industries. Global Standards is an invaluable compilation of experience, analysis, and proposals for improvement by a recognized expert who is both critical and optimistic.

Fall 2003

Why Societies Need Dissent
by Cass R. Sunstein (Harvard University Press, 2003)

University of Chicago law professor Sunstein draws on an impressive knowledge of economics, law and psychology, as well as a great deal of common sense, to make an elegant and compelling case that dissent is critical to a successful society. So convincing and lucid is his argument that this work is likely to influence the current debate on the role of dissenting from official or conventional thinking when society faces external threats.


Lincoln's Constitution
by Daniel Farber (University of Chicago Press, 2003)

The Civil War was, at its heart, a constitutional struggle. The overriding constitutional question, of course, was whether a state could lawfully secede from the Union. But this great question was intertwined with other fundamental questions: Did the Constitution create a national government for the benefit of "the people of the United States" or a mere league or compact of independent states? To what extent did the Constitution protect slavery and slave owners against the anti-slavery agitation of northerners? What action, if any, could the United States government (and particularly its chief executive) properly take in response to the military challenge of secession?


iPOLL

Full text of U.S. nationwide public opinion surveys, from 1935 to the present. Includes survey results from academic, commercial, and media survey organizations, including the Gallup Organization, Harris Interactive, and Pew Research.


Who Owns Native Culture?
by Michael F. Brown (Harvard University Press, 2003)

How much we need a book that looks with unjaundiced eyes on the issue of cultural ownership and cultural appropriation. This is that book, but with a caveat: there is something slightly out of balance here, with the overbalance being in the form of a bias toward an intellectual definition of ownership. Brown is a scholar, and a worthy one. As such, his virtue is a healthy skepticism toward all points of view, rather than an unreflective sympathy toward each. In a sense, he is a debunker, not a sequential believer, and this places him in a distinct relationship to his material that seems to militate against a sympathy toward that which cannot be explicated or analyzed by rational means.

Summer 2003

 

Governance of the Consuming Passions: A History of Sumptuary Law
by Alan Hunt (Palgrave Macmillan 1996)

Did you know that in 1429 Scottish law required that all men with an income over 20 pounds a year wear a fur hat? That an act passed in England in 1533 stipulated that only members of the Royal Family were allowed to wear purple silk, and that crimson, scarlet or blue velvet could legally be worn only by members of the upper nobility? That in Massachusetts Bay in 1651, anyone making less than 200 pounds a year was forbidden to wear gold or silver lace or gold or silver buttons? Hunt takes us through the fascinating history of dress restrictions. Even today, in our modern capitalistic state, we can see how sumptuary laws still exert influence by observing the vestments worn by the clergy and their assistants.

 

Colonial Intimacies: Indian Marriage in Early New England
by Ann Marie Plane (Cornell University Press, 2000)

Elite Native American men frequently took more than one wife, and ordinary people could dissolve their marriages and take new partners with relative ease. Native marriage did not necessarily involve cohabitation, the formation of a new household, or mutual dependence for subsistence. Plane's interpretations form an intimate picture, moving and often tragic, of the familial bonds of Native Americans in the first century and a half of European contact.

 

Wild Bill: The Legend and Life of William O. Douglas, America's Most Controversial Supreme Court Justice
by Bruce Allen Murphy (Random House, 2003)

Douglas himself carefully crafted the myth of the poor boy who arrived in New York with just a few cents in his pocket and ended up conquering the Eastern establishment in the name of the little guy. In reality, Douglas enjoyed tremendous emotional and financial support throughout his life from his family, friends and multiple wives. Murphy does a wonderful job of providing just enough historical context to allow general readers to appreciate the complexity of his brilliant, but flawed, subject without bogging down his narrative in a crush of detail.

 

Setting Global Standards: Guidelines for Creating Codes of Conduct in Multinational Corporations
by S. Prakash Sethi (Wiley, 2002)

Many other books express "righteous anger" about the activities of multinational corporations in developing countries and typically dwell on egregious examples and give little attention to business considerations and realistic possibilities for improvement. By contrast, Sethi's work is based on long familiarity with the operations of many companies in many countries, and clearly recognizes the role and contribution of industrialization to economic development. Rather than solely criticizing these policies, Sethi explores the opportunities for improvement through voluntary efforts by firms and industries. Global Standards is an invaluable compilation of experience, analysis, and proposals for improvement by a recognized expert who is both critical and optimistic.

May 2003

 

Double Indemnity (USA 1944, VHS 107 min.).

Smooth talking insurance salesman Walter Neff meets attractive Phyllis Dietrichson when he calls to renew her husband's automobile policy. The couple are immediately drawn to each other and an affair begins. They cook up a scheme to murder Mr. Dietrichson for life insurance money with a double indemnity clause. Unfortunately, all does not go according to plan. Directed by Billy Wilder; featuring Fred MacMurray, Edward G. Robinson, and Barbara Stanwyck.

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The Rainmaker (USA 1997, VHS 135 min.).

Rudy Baylor, a young rookie lawyer in Memphis, takes on a powerful insurance company led by a shark-like lawyer by representing the family of a boy who was denied potentially life-saving treatment for leukemia. Rudy also comes to the rescue of an abused wife and learns the tricks of the legal trade from a seasoned paralegal, who sees Rudy as his ticket out of the sleazeball practice run by a shady lawyer. From the novel by John Grisham; directed by Francis Ford Coppola; featuring Matt Damon, Danny DeVito, Claire Danes, Jon Voight and Mickey Rourke.

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Lloyds of London (USA 1936, VHS 115 min.).

Blake is in love with an aristocratic woman whose husband seriously injures him. Blake's friendship with Lord Nelson provides the basis for Blake's part in the growth of Lloyd's insurance business following the Battle of Trafalgar. Only very slightly based on history. Featuring Tyrone Power, Madeleine Carroll, Freddie Bartholomew, and George Sanders.

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To Catch a Thief (USA 1955, VHS 103 min.).

American expatriate John Robie, a retired cat burglar living in high style on the Riviera, must find out who a copy cat is to keep a new wave of jewel thefts from being pinned on him. High on the list of prime victims is Jessie Stevens, in Europe to help daughter Frances find a suitable husband. Robie sets out to catch the new burglar himself, mainly to prove his innocence. The title of the movie is derived from the proverb "Set a thief to catch a thief" Directed by Alfred Hitchcock; featuring Grace Kelly and Cary Grant.

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April 2003

 

A Civil Action (USA 1998, DVD 115 min.).

Jan Schlichtmann, a tenacious lawyer, is addressed by a group of families. When investigating the seemingly non-profiting case, he finds it to be a major environmental issue that has a lot of impact potential. A leather production company could be responsible for several deadly cases of leukemia, but also is the main employer for the area. Schlichtmann and his three colleagues set out to have the company forced to decontaminate the affected areas, and of course to sue for a major sum of compensation. But the lawyers of the leather company's mother company are not easy to get to, and soon Schlichtmann and his friends find themselves in a battle of mere survival. Directed by John Zaillian; featuring John Travolta

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M (Germany 1931, DVD 110 min.)

A psychotic child murderer stalks a city, and despite an exhaustive investigation fueled by public hysteria and outcry, the police have been unable to find him. But the police crackdown does have one side-affect, it makes it nearly impossible for the organized criminal underground to operate. So they decide that the only way to get the police off their backs is to catch the murderer themselves. Besides, he is giving them a bad name. Directed by Fritz Lang. Featuring Peter Lorre.

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The Bicycle Thief (Italy 1948, DVD 89 min.).

An Italian worker during the great depression finds a chance to work at a job putting up posters. On his first day his bike is stolen and his chance to bring his family out of poverty is in jeopardy. He takes his son and some friends through the city in search of the bicycle that means economic survival to him. Directed by Vittorio De Sica.

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March 2003

 

The Accused (USA 1988, DVD 110 min.).

Sarah Tobias goes to her local bar and is gang-raped by three men. The district attorney on the case is Katheryn Murphy, who wants to prove that although Sarah had taken drugs that night and was acting provocatively while in the bar, this is no reason for her to be so brutally attacked and the men responsible should be brought to justice. Directed by Jonathon Kaplan, featuring Jodie Foster and Kelly McGillis.

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Let Him Have It (UK 1991, VHS 115 min.).

In 1950s England, slow-witted Derek Bentley falls in with a group of petty criminals led by Chris Craig, a teenager with a fondness for American gangster films. Chris and Derek's friendship leads to their involvement in the true case which would forever shake England's belief in capital punishment. Directed by Peter Medak.

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To Kill a Mockingbird (USA 1962, DVD 130 min.).

Based on Harper Lee's Pulitzer Prize winning book of 1960. Atticus Finch is a lawyer in a racially divided Alabama town in the 1930s. He agrees to defend a young black man who is accused of raping a white woman. Many of the townspeople try to get Atticus to pull out of the trial, but he decides to go ahead. How will the trial turn out - and will it change any of the racial tension in the town? Directed by Robert Mulligan; featuring Gregory Peck; introducing Robert Duvall. Three Academy Awards, including Best Actor and Best Screenplay (Horton Foote).

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Town Without Pity (USA 1961, DVD 103 min.).

When four young American soldiers are accused of raping a girl from a German village near their camp, Major Steve Garrett is assigned the distasteful task of defending them. It soon becomes clear that the Army, the villagers, and even the girl's family are more interested in revenge than in the welfare of the distraught victim. Garrett is faced with the dilemma of destroying the girl on the witness stand in order to save the lives of his clients. Directed by Gottfried Reinhardt; featuring Kirk Douglas, E.G. Marshall, and Robert Blake.

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Breaker Morant (Australia 1980, DVD 107 min.).

During the Boer War, three Australian lieutenants are on trial for shooting Boer prisoners. Though they acted under orders, they are being used as scapegoats by the General Staff, which hopes to distance itself from the irregular practices of the war. The trial does not progress as smoothly as expected by the General Staff, as the defense puts up a strong fight in the courtroom. Directed by Bruce Beresford; featuring Edward Woodward. Won ten Australian Film Institute Awards.

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Compulsion (USA 1959, VHS 105 min.).

Based very closely on the Loeb-Leopold murder case, the second half of the movie is primarily taken from defense attorney Clarence Darrow's actual courtroom presentation. In 1924 Chicago Jonathan Wilk (Darrow) is asked to defend two wealthy young men who have murdered a boy. Directed by Richard Fleischer; featuring Orson Welles and Dean Stockwell.

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Cry in the Dark (Australia 1988, DVD 121 min.).

Based on the true story of Lindy Chamberlain: during a camping trip to Ayer's Rock in outback Australia, she claims she witnessed a dingo stealing her baby daughter Azaria from the family tent. Azaria's body is never found. Police note some apparent inconsistencies in her story, and she is charged with murder. The case attracts a lot of attention, turning a simple investigation into a media circus, with the public divided in their opinion. Directed by Fred Schepisi; featuring Meryl Streep and Sam Neill.

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My Cousin Vinny (USA 1992, DVD 120 min.).

Two teenage boys from New York are traveling down south when a series of coincidences lands them in jail charged with first degree murder. They can't afford the $50K for an attorney so they call the lawyer cousin of one of the boys. Vinny is a stereotypical New Yorker who is initially a complete disaster, but can he get them off the hook? Directed by Jonathan Lynn. Featuring Joe Pesci; Best Supporting Actress for Marisa Tomei.

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Feburary 2003

 

Amistad (USA 1997, DVD155 min.)