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Societies > Chapman Law Review > Past Issues > Vol. 10, Issue 3 Chapman University School of Law
 
 
   

Volume Ten - Spring 2007 - Number 3


Introduction

  • Miranda at 40: Applications in a Post-Enron, Post-9/11 World
    -- Donald J. Kochan
Articles

  • Does Miranda Protect the Innocent or the Guilty?
    -- Steven B. Duke

  • Against Orthodoxy: Miranda is Not Prophylactic and the
    Constitution is Not Perfect
    -- Lawrence Rosenthal

  • Reliability Lost, False Confessions Discovered
    -- Mark A. Godsey

  • Miranda Warnings, Torture, the Right to Counsel and the War on Terror
    -- M. Katherine B. Darmer
  • Miranda Warnings, Torture, the Right to Counsel and the
    War on Terror
    -- M. Katherine B. Darmer
  • An Essay on Miranda's Fortieth Birthday
    -- Paul Shechtman
  • The Right to Remain Silent in Light of the War on Terror
    -- MRonald J. Rychlak
  • How the War on Terror May Affect Domestic Interrogations: The 24 Effect
    -- Sam Kamin
  • Law and Disorder: The High Court's Hasty Decision in
    Miranda Leaves a Tangled Mess
    -- Jeremy M. Miller
  • The McNulty Memo -- Continuing the Disappointment
    -- Keith Paul Bishop
  • Alternative to Miranda: Preventing Coerced Confessions via
    the Convention Against Torture
    -- Linda M. Keller
  • Miranda and the Media: Tracing the Cultural Evolution of a
    Constitution Revolution
    -- Russell Dean Covey
Comment

  • Be Careful What You Wish For: Copyright's Campaign for Property Rights
    and an Eminent Consequence of Intellectual Monopoly
    -- Ian McClure
 
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