Tulsa Law Review
Tulsa Law Journal ( - v36(2001))
Volume 45, Number 4, Summer 2010
other issues
BOOK REVIEW
Selection Biases
Mark A. Graber and Sanford Levinson
p.575 +cite
EXECUTIVE POWER
Placing Your Faith in the Constitution
Harold H. Bruff
p.583 +cite
Bad Advice or Bad Laws? Allocating Resp onsibility Between Lawyers and Laws in the Context of National Security Policymaking
Robert M. Chesney
p.591 +cite
Updating the Executive, or, the Character of the Pardoning President
Bernadette Meyler
p.605 +cite
Can Constitutional Democracies and Emergency Powers Coexist?
Gordon Silverstein
p.619 +cite
Constitutional Necessity and Presidential Prerogative: Does Presidential Discretion Undergird or Undermine the Constitution?
Michael P. Van Alstine
p.631 +cite
SUPREME COURT
What We Say and What They Do: Public Perceptions of Supreme Court Nominees and Judicial Activism on the Supreme Court
Valerie Hoekstra
p.649 +cite
Landmarks, Portents, or Just Curves in the Road?
Carol Nackenoff
p.659 +cite
Icons
L.A. Powe, Jr.
p.669 +cite
The Wonder of It All
Gerald N. Rosenberg
p.679 +cite
HISTORY
Hollow Tropes: Fresh Perspectives on Courts, Politics, and Inequality
Tomiko Brown-Nagin
p.691 +cite
The Alchemy of Dissent
Jamal Greene
p.703 +cite
Getting Right without Lincoln
Daniel W. Hamilton
p.715 +cite
Review Essay: Put a Ring on It? Law and Ordering the Boundaries of Race and Sexuality as State Work
Julie Novkov
p.723 +cite
FOREIGN POLICY
The Process of Balancing
Oren Gross
p.733 +cite
Torture and Its Malcontents
Scott Horton
p.745 +cite
A Different Case for Restraint
Michael W. Lewis
p.751 +cite
COMPARATIVE LAW
An Extraordinary Tale
Hugh Corder
p.763 +cite
The Continued Renaissance of Comparative Constitutional Law
Ran Hirschl
p.771 +cite
Book Review
Theunis Roux
p.781 +cite
New Thinking about National High Courts
Miguel Schor
p.789 +cite
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
State Constitutional Politics
John Dinan
p.797 +cite
The Beautiful American Abroad
Scott D. Gerber
p.807 +cite
America's "Other Constitutions": The Importance of State Constitutions for Our Law and Politics
Sanford Levinson
p.813 +cite
FEDERALISM
How Many Critiques Must Historians Write?
Stephen A. Siegel
p.823 +cite
What Does It Take to Make a Federal System? On Constitutional Entrenchment, Separate Spheres, and Identity
Ernest A. Young
p.831 +cite
LAW AND RELIGION
Modernity, Religion, and the Public Sphere
Stephen M. Feldman
p.845 +cite
JUDICIAL IMPLEMENTATION OF SOCIAL POLICY
How Courts Implement Social Policy
Mark Tushnet
p.855 +cite
EQUALITY
Patterns of Inequality—Paradigms for Equality
Rebecca E. Zietlow
p.863 +cite