Law Review
Northwestern Law

On the Colloquy...

Posted by Alex B. Long
on Monday, Nov. 17, 2008

Professor Long discusses the ADA Amendments Act of 2008.

News

Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2008

We have now completed reviewing submissions for our 103rd volume.  Article selection for volume 104 will begin in January 2009.  We look forward to reviewing any submissions at that point.  Please contact Steven Art, Executive Articles Editor, for more information.  

We are always accepting submissions of pieces for the Colloquy. Please contact Kristin Feeley, Colloquy Editor, for more information.

Current Issue: Fall 2008: Vol. 102, Issue 4

  ARTICLES
  "To Encourage Settlement": Rule 68, Offers of Judgment, and the History of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure [citation]   Robert G. Bone
  Labor, Luck, and Love: Reconsidering the Sanctity of Separate Property [citation]   Shari Motro
  Reputation Nation: Law in an Era of Ubiquitous Personal Information [citation]   Lior Jacob Strahilevitz
  The Original Meaning of "Unusual": The Eighth Amendment as a Bar to Cruel Innovation [citation]   John F. Stinneford
       
  ESSAY    
  The Impact of Computers on the Legal Profession: Evolution or Revolution? [citation]   Richard L. Marcus
       
  REVIEW ESSAY    
  Navigating the New Politics of Judicial Appointments [citation]   David R. Stras & Ryan W. Scott
       
  COMMENTS    
  In Search of "Refinement Without Exclusiveness": Inclusionary Zoning in Highland Park, Illinois [citation]   Laura Nirider
  An Unredeemed Promise: How Courts Can Prevent Offensive Collateral Estoppel from Undercutting the Policy Goals of Amended Federal Rule of Evidence 408 [citation]   Elias C. Selinger
       
  COLLOQUY ESSAYS    
  Antitrust Issues Raised by the Emerging Global Internet Economy [citation]   David S. Evans
  "Too Plain for Argument?" The Uncertain Congressional Power to Require Parties to Choose Presidential Nominees Through Direct and Equal Primaries [citation]   Richard L. Hasen
  Human Rights and Globalization: Putting the Race to the Top in Perspective [citation]   Holning Lau
  Heller's Future in the Lower Courts [citation]   Glenn H. Reynolds & Brannon P. Denning