Volume 64 (2014)
29 articles across 5 issues, published in the Buffalo Law Review during the 2014–2015 academic year.
Issue 1
- Causation, Legal History, and Legal DoctrineCharles Barzun
- Humbug: Toward a Legal HistorySusanna Blumenthal
- Textiles: Popular Culture and the LawLaura F. Edwards
- Mr. Peabody’s Improbable Legal Intellectual HistoryMark Fenster
- Some Final Observations on Legal Intellectual HistoryRobert W. Gordon
- A Bridge Between: Law and the New Intellectual Histories of CapitalismAjay K. Mehrotra
- Writing the Social History of Legal DoctrineCynthia Nicoletti
- Jr., Capitalism and Risk: Concepts, Consequences, and IdeologiesEdward A. Purcell
- Introduction Opportunities for Law’s Intellectual History, 64 Buff. L. Rev. i (2016)Mark Fenster & John Henry Schlegel
- On Absences as Material for Intellectual Historical StudyJohn Henry Schlegel
- Organic Poise? Capitalism as LawChristopher Tomlins
Issue 2
- James Wilson and the Moral Foundations of Popular SovereigntyIan Bartrum
- Valuing our Discordant Constitutional Discourse: Autonomous-Text Constitutionalism and the Jewish Legal TraditionShlomo C. Pill
- The Validity of Restraints on Alienation in an Oil and Gas LeaseLuke Meier & Rory Ryan
- Comment, Using Learned Helplessness to Understand the Effects of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Major Depressive Disorder on Refugees and Explain Why These Disorders Should Qualify as Extraordinary Circumstances Excusing Untimely Asylum ApplicationsBrandon R. White
Issue 3
- Parental Parity: Intentional Parenthood’s PromiseMelanie B. Jacobs
- Protecting the Compromised Worker: A Challenge for Employment Discrimination LawPeter Siegelman
- Aspiring StatesShana Tabak
- Comment, Empowering Voices: Working Toward a Children’s Right to Participatory Agency in Their Courtroom ExperienceKelsey Marie Ellen Till
Issue 4
- Uber for Lawyers: The Transformative Potential of a Sharing Economy Approach to the Delivery of Legal ServicesRaymond H. Brescia
- A New Power?: Civil Offenses and Presidential ClemencyNoah A. Messing
- Ending the Internal Affairs FarceRachel Moran
- Strengthening Protections for Survivors of Domestic Violence: The Case of Washington, D.C.M. Alexandra Verdi
Issue 5
- AT&T Mobility LLC v. Concepcion
- Special Economic Zones in the United States: From Colonial Charters, to Foreign-Trade Zones, Toward USSEZsTom W. Bell
- 2011 Alumni Newsletter
- A Sisterhood of Arms: Envisioning Conscription and Selective Service Post-Gender Integration of Combat ArmsErin R. Goldberg
- Informed Consent for the Use and Storage of Residual Dried Blood Samples from State-Mandated Newborn Genetic Screening ProgramsTufik Y. Shayeb
- The Birth of a Legal Economy: Lawyers and the Development of American CommerceJustin Simard