Citation: Jm. Balkin et S. Levinson, Legal historicism and legal academics: The roles of law professors in the wake of Bush v. Gore, GEORGET LAW, 90(1), 2001, pp. 173-197
Citation: Ma. Graber, Thick and thin: Interdisciplinary conversations on populism, law, political science, and constitutional change, GEORGET LAW, 90(1), 2001, pp. 233-251
Citation: Mj. Albano, Nothing to "cheer" about: A call for reform of the right of publicity in audiovisual characters, GEORGET LAW, 90(1), 2001, pp. 253-297
Citation: J. Campanaro, Women, war, and international law: The historical treatment of gender-based war crimes, GEORGET LAW, 89(8), 2001, pp. 2557-2592
Citation: Em. Johnston, Once a criminal, always a criminal? Unconstitutional presumptions for mandatory detention of criminal aliens, GEORGET LAW, 89(8), 2001, pp. 2593-2635
Citation: R. Delgado, Two ways to think about race: Reflections on the id, the ego, and other reformist theories of equal protection, GEORGET LAW, 89(7), 2001, pp. 2279-2296
Citation: P. Salvatoriello, The practical necessity of federal intervention versus the ideal of federalism: An expansive view of Section 666 in the prosecution of state and local corruption, GEORGET LAW, 89(7), 2001, pp. 2393-2417