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Harvard Law Review: Volume 126, Number 4 - February 2013

Email link to this page. Set up email alerts. Public link to this page. Email link to this page Please enter the email address you want to send to for multiple emails, separate with a semicolon: Include a from name as well optional: Set up email alerts When new material for this author is added to HeinOnline When new articles in HeinOnline cite this author's articles When articles are accessed on HeinOnline each month When similar articles are published on this author's works Enter email here use a semicolon to separate multiple email addresses: Set up email alerts to be notified when this author's articles are cited by new articles added to HeinOnline here use a semicolon to separate multiple email addresses: This metric counts the cumulative number of times this author has been cited by other articles in HeinOnline.

This metric counts the cumulative number of times an author's articles have been accessed by HeinOnline users within a rolling 12 month period. In order to count as accessed, the article must be clicked from either search results or by browsing to the article, or retrieved using the citation navigator. This metric counts the cumulative number of times an author's articles have been cited by other articles in HeinOnline written in the past 10 years only. This is also called the "currency factor". This metric counts the cumulative number of times an author's articles have been cited by other articles in HeinOnline written in the past 12 - 24 months only.

This is an overall ranking based on the five ScholarCheck metrics. Authors are ranked in each category, and the rankings are then averaged to produce the overall ScholarCheck Rank, or ScholarRank, for each author. This metric counts the cumulative number of times this author has been cited by other articles, then divides this number by this author's total number of articles written, to calculate the average number of citations per article. This metric counts the cumulative number of an author's self-citations.

This metric is not currently factored into the overall ScholarCheck ranking analysis. An Essay for Rober Cover [misc]. Cited by Articles Accessed 47 Times. Public and Private Partnerships: Accounting for the New Religion [article]. Forming Underneath Everything That Grows: Toward a History of Family Law [article]. Cited by Articles Accessed 62 Times. Cited by Articles Accessed 27 Times. Getting It and Losing It [article]. Cited by Articles Accessed 55 Times. Words and the Door to the Land of Change: Law, Language, and Family Violence [article]. Rights for the Next Generation: A Feminist Approach to Children's Rights [comments].

Cited by Articles Accessed Times. Who's In and Who's Out [article]. Cited by 97 Articles Accessed 23 Times. Surviving Victim Talk [article]. Cited by 87 Articles Accessed 56 Times. Cited by 84 Articles Accessed 53 Times. When Difference Has Its Home: Cited by 83 Articles Accessed 19 Times. What Ever Happened to Children's Rights [article]. Cited by 70 Articles Accessed 67 Times.

Judge for the Situation: Cited by 69 Articles Accessed 2 Times.

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Cited by 63 Articles Accessed 17 Times. Bias and Impartiality of Judges and Jurors [article]. Cited by 63 Articles Accessed 59 Times. Reforming School Reform [comments]. Cited by 58 Articles Accessed 32 Times. A Case for Another Case Method [article].

Cited by 56 Articles Accessed 58 Times. Membership, Loving, and Owing [article]. Cited by 54 Articles Accessed 13 Times. Not Only for Myself: Identity, Politics, and Law [article]. Cited by 53 Articles Accessed 8 Times. Cited by 47 Articles Accessed Times. Beyond State Intervention in the Family: For Baby Jane Doe [article]. Learning to Live with the Dilemma of Difference: Bilingual and Special Education [article]. Cited by 38 Articles Accessed 11 Times.

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Cited by 35 Articles Accessed 22 Times. Between Vengeance and Forgiveness: Feminist Responses to Violent Injustice [comments]. Cited by 35 Articles Accessed 39 Times. Cited by 34 Articles. Lawyers and Clients in Struggles for Social Change [article]. Cited by 33 Articles Accessed 43 Times.

Confronting the Seduction of Choice: Law, Education, and American Pluralism [notes]. Cited by 32 Articles Accessed 32 Times.

Cited by 31 Articles Accessed 4 Times. On Being a Religious Professional: The Religious Turn in Professional Ethics [comments]. Cited by 29 Articles Accessed 3 Times. Does Money Matter [article]. Legal Histories from Below [comments]. Cited by 26 Articles Accessed 41 Times. The Free Exercise of Families [comments]. Reasonable Interpretation and the Affordable Care Act [comments]. Cited by 21 Articles Accessed 37 Times.

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Cited by 21 Articles Accessed 11 Times. For Justice Thurgood Marshall [comments]. Cited by 20 Articles Accessed 5 Times. The Constitution and the Subgroup Question [article]. Cited by 20 Articles Accessed 6 Times. Rights of One's Own [reviews]. Cited by 19 Articles Accessed 7 Times. Cited by 19 Articles Accessed 3 Times.

Harvard Law Review: Volume , Number 4 - February by Harvard Law Review on Apple Books

Cited by 18 Articles Accessed 2 Times. Cited by 18 Articles Accessed 13 Times. In Favor of Foxes: Pluralism as Fact and Aid to the Pursuit of Justice [article]. Cited by 18 Articles Accessed 17 Times. What Is the Greatest Evil [reviews]. Cited by 17 Articles Accessed 5 Times.

Major Statutory Cases in the Supreme Court". Furthermore, student commentary analyzes Recent Cases on: Two Recent Adjudications are examined, one in which the NLRB ruled that student assistants at private colleges and universities are statutory employees covered by the NLRA, the other under Dodd-Frank, in which the FSOC determined that a General Electric subsidiary is no longer a "systemically important financial institution.

The Harvard Law Review is offered in a quality digital edition, featuring active Contents, linked footnotes, active URLs, legible tables, and proper ebook and Bluebook formatting. The Review is a student-run organization whose primary purpose is to publish a journal of legal scholarship. It comes out monthly from November through June and has roughly pages per volume. Student editors make all editorial and organizational decisions. This is the fourth issue of academic year The Oxford Introductions to U. The Classical Liberal Constitution.

Volume 63, Issue 1 - December The Behavior of Federal Judges.


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