McGeorge Law Review
The McGeorge Law Review is a student-run, scholarly journal published on a quarterly basis. Two or more issues each year contain professionally written articles and student-authored comments or casenotes. One issue every year contains the Review of Selected California Legislation, known as "Greensheets." Finally, one issue each year contains a symposium, focusing on a particular topic of legal significance.
Current Issue: Volume 39 - Issue 1
Masthead
Table of Contents
ARTICLES
From the Gutenberg Bible to Net Neutrality-How Technology Makes Law and Why English Majors Need to Understand It
Peter Linzer
The Good and Bad News About Consent Searches in the Supreme Court
Tracey Maclin
Sales Gone Wild: Will the FTC's Business Opportunity Rule Put an End to Pyramid Marketing Schemes?
Sergio Pareja
Policy Oscillation in California's Law of Premises Liability
Ronald Steiner
Legal Consciousness and Contractual Obligations
Kojo Yelpaala
COMMENTS
Regulating the Marrying Kind: The Constitutionality of Federal Regulation of Polygamy Under the Mann Act
Laura Elizabeth Brown
Regulatory Daubert: A Panacea for the Endangered Species Act's "Best Available Science" Mandate?
J. Tavener Holland
Beyond Reasonable: A Constitutional and Policy Analysis of Why it is Necessary and Prudent to Allow Nonprofits or Health Care Agencies to Distribute Sexual Barrier Protection Devices to Inmates
Leslie R. Ramos
CASENOTE
Estate of Saueressig and Post-Death Subscription: The Protective Function Reborn
Matthew D. Owdom
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Previous Issue: Volume 38 - Issue 4
Masthead
Table of Contents
SYMPOSIUM
FACILITATING VOTING AS PEOPLE AGE: IMPLICATIONS OF COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT
Introduction
Charles P. Sabatino and Edward D. Spurgeon
Recommendations of the Symposium
ARTICLES
Voting and Cognitive Impairments: An Election Administrator's Perspective
Deborah Markowitz, Vermont Secretary of State
Voting by Elderly Persons with Cognitive Impairment: Lessons from Other Democratic Nations
Jason H. Karlawish and Richard J. Bonnie
Framing the Voting Rights Claims of Cognitively Impaired Individuals
Pamela S. Karlan
Defining and Assessing Capacity to Vote: The Effect of Mental Impairment on the Rights of Voters
Sally Balch Hurme and Paul S. Appelbaum
Absentee Voting by People with Disabilities: Promoting Access and Integrity
Daniel P. Tokaji and Ruth Colker
Preserving Voting Rights in Long-Term Care Institutions: Facilitating Resident Voting While Maintaining Election Integrity
Nina A. Kohn
The Technology of Access: Allowing People of Age to Vote for Themselves
Ted Selker
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