Home > Law > DePaul Law Review > Vol. 65 > Iss. 2
Volume 65, Issue 2 Winter 2016 Twenty-First Annual Clifford Symposium on Tort Law and Social Policy
Front Matter
Introduction
Stephan Landsman
Articles
Corporations and Expressive Rights: How the Lines Should Be Drawn
Margaret M. Blair
The Subterranean Counterrevolution: The Supreme Court, the Media, and Litigation Retrenchment
Stephen B. Burbank and Sean Farhang
Calibrating Participation: Reflections on Procedure Versus Procedural Justice
Elizabeth Chamblee Burch
The Constitutionalization of Torts?
Thomas B. Colby
The Contractually Based Economic Loss Rule in Tort Law: Endangered Consumers and the Error of East River Steamship
Mark A. Geistfeld
The Supreme Court's Stealth Return to the Common Law of Torts
John C.P. Goldberg and Benjamin C. Zipursky
Employment Arbitration After the Revolution
David Horton and Andrea Cann Chandrasekher
Hobby Lobby and the Corporate Personhood: Taking the U.S. Supreme Court's Reasoning at Face Value
Gregory A. Mark
Line Drawing in Corporate Rights Determinations
Elizabeth Pollman
Does Emperical Evidence on the Civil Justice System Produce or Resolve Conflict?
Jeffrey J. Rachlinksi
The Cost of Suing Business
Joanna C. Schwartz
The Unwritten Federal Arbitration Act
Anthony J. Sebok
Discrimination Law: The New Franken-Tort
Sandra F. Sperino
Cognitive Bias, the "Band of Experts," and the Anti-Litigation Narrative
Elizabeth Thornburg
Comments
Editors
- Editor-in-Chief
- Amanda Roenius
- Executive Editor
- Angela C. Oldham
- Managing Editor of Lead Articles
- Elizabeth Attard
- Managing Editor of Notes and Comments
- Riebana Sachs
- Symposium Editor
- Sean Hennessy
- Business Manager
- Antonia M. Kopec
- Editor of Articles, Notes, and Comments
- Joseph Gregorio
- Jennifer James
- Caroline K. Kane
- Wei Chen Lin
- Meagan M. Pagels
- Anastasia Sotiropoulos
- Taylor Van Hove