On the Colloquy: Military Commissions, International Antitrust, Presidential Transitions, and More
posted by Northwestern University Law Review

In the past few months, the Northwestern University Law Review Colloquy has published essays contributing to several existing and new colloquies. Amos N. Guiora wrote an essay about military commissions and national security courts, which added to the colloquy on the Military Commissions Act. Click here to view all of the essays in the colloquy on a single page. Salil Mehra wrote an essay regarding building antitrust agency capacity that responded to an earlier essay on the subject by D. Daniel Sokol. Both essays can be viewed by clicking here.
Additionally, the Colloquy recently published an essay by Paul Horwitz that began a discussion on presidential transitions. In conjunction with this colloquy, we republished a series of essays by Seth Barrett Tillman and Brian C. Kalt that were originally published in volume 101 of the Colloquy. To view all of the essays on one page click here. We will be publishing several more essays regarding presidential transitions in the coming weeks.
We have continued to focus on recent Supreme Court cases with an essay on City of Pleasant Grove v. Summun by Paul E. McGreal. We have also published stand-alone essays on various topics, such as an essay by Alex B. Long on recent amendments to the Americans with Disabilities Act, an essay by Jennifer S. Hendricks that proposes revisions to the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, an essay by Adam N. Steinman that addresses proposed amendments to Rule 56 of the Federal Rule of Civil Procedure, and an essay by David T. Hardy that discusses the lecture notes of St. George Tucker. This week, we published an essay by Mitchell H. Rubinstein concerning an interesting case where an attorney and his nurse clients were criminally charged after the nurses resigned en mass.
For more, go to the Colloquy archives page, and remember to check back each week for new content.
January 21, 2009 at 11:56 pm
Posted in: Law Rev (Northwestern), Law Rev Forum
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