Law Review Current Journal

VOLUME 55, BOOK 1
KATHLEEN M. DARCY & HANNAH BRENNER JOHNSON, Prison Rape: An Endless Epidemic?
KIRBY TYRRELL, Addressing Junk Science in Abortion Litigation
AMANDA L. STEPHENS, Is the Women’s Treaty a Paper Tiger? Indian Courts’ Application of the United Nations
Treaty
REMY A. CARREIRO, Full Faith, Credit, and Collision: Examining the Jurisdictional Reach of Extraterritorial
Abortion Laws
VOLUME 55, BOOK 2
DUANE RUDOLPH, Sexual Orientation, Rank, and Status
MO ZHANG, Exclusivity of Choice of Court Agreements: Party Autonomy in Forum Selection
ASSATA SMITH, Beyond Compliance: Unmasking the Gaps in ABA Standard 303(C) for Cultural Competency
COOPER HARRISON, The Public Duty Doctrine & State Governmental Tort Liability: A Brief History and
a Solution for the Current Paradigm
PETER BOUCK, Two Rules of Completeness
MERRY ASHLYN GATEWOOD, Economic Loss Rule—Commercial Painting Co. V. Weitz Co.: Tennessee's Abrogation of
the Economic Loss Doctrine as Applied to Service Contracts
VOLUME 55, BOOK 3
Merle H. Weiner, The Restatement of Torts and Recovery for Loss of the Human-Pet Bond After an Intentional
Tort
Kevin H. Smith, Claude, and ChatGPT, Artificial Minds, Alien Experiences: Navigating the Uncharted Territory of AI Phenomenology
Bridgette McInroe, Clearing the Legal Fog: Navigating Conflicting Interpretations of the Speedy Trial
Act and the Insanity Defense Reform Act for Mentally Incompetent Defendants
Shannon M. Crow, City of Knoxville v. Netflix, Inc.: The Doctrine of Comity in Certified Questions
VOLUME 55, BOOK 4
James Bernstein, The Rule of Law's Lack of Rules
Erin M. Carr, Judicial Sanewashing: The Roberts Court's New Canon of Construction
Laura A. Cisneros, Constitutional Time: The Temporal Dimension of Precedent in Constitutional Jurisprudence
Elodie O. Currier Stoffel, The Roberts Court and the District Court
Michael M. Gallagher, Snap Removal and the Absurdity Doctrine
Clark L. Hildabrand, Judging Values: Public Confidence in the Federal Courts' Approach
to Religion & Morality
Daniel Kiel, Good for This Day and This Day Only: A Study on Changes in Court Personnel, Precedent,
and Judicial Legitimacy