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Contenu fourni par New England Law Review. Tout le contenu du podcast, y compris les épisodes, les graphiques et les descriptions de podcast, est téléchargé et fourni directement par New England Law Review ou son partenaire de plateforme de podcast. Si vous pensez que quelqu'un utilise votre œuvre protégée sans votre autorisation, vous pouvez suivre le processus décrit ici https://fr.player.fm/legal.
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New England Law Review On Remand's Podcast
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Contenu fourni par New England Law Review. Tout le contenu du podcast, y compris les épisodes, les graphiques et les descriptions de podcast, est téléchargé et fourni directement par New England Law Review ou son partenaire de plateforme de podcast. Si vous pensez que quelqu'un utilise votre œuvre protégée sans votre autorisation, vous pouvez suivre le processus décrit ici https://fr.player.fm/legal.
Welcome to the New England Law Review Podcast. The New England Law Review is a student-run organization that produces the flagship publication of New England Law | Boston in Massachusetts.
…
continue reading
28 episodes
Tout marquer comme (non) lu
Manage series 30912
Contenu fourni par New England Law Review. Tout le contenu du podcast, y compris les épisodes, les graphiques et les descriptions de podcast, est téléchargé et fourni directement par New England Law Review ou son partenaire de plateforme de podcast. Si vous pensez que quelqu'un utilise votre œuvre protégée sans votre autorisation, vous pouvez suivre le processus décrit ici https://fr.player.fm/legal.
Welcome to the New England Law Review Podcast. The New England Law Review is a student-run organization that produces the flagship publication of New England Law | Boston in Massachusetts.
…
continue reading
28 episodes
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1 Podcast with Attorney Joel Berger 52:40
52:40
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Attorney Joel Berger (joelbergerlaw.com) is the latest guest on the New England Law Review Podcast where he discusses his latest article, published on The Forum, entitled "Reforming the NYPD and its Enablers Who Thwart Reform." This article, and many others, can be found at https://newenglrev.com.

1 Podcast with Professor Osler on the First Step Act 29:25
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Podcast for the New England Law Review Podcast. This article, and many others, can be found at https://newenglrev.com. "Good and great work is being done in the field of criminal law. The First Step Act has improved thousands of lives, promises to save taxpayer money, and offers a bipartisan template for success. But if that is all we hope for, we are leaving far too much on the table when the stakes are measured in lives and freedom. This is not a time for brutal timidity, and it never was."…

1 Podcast with Kent Schenkel for the New England Law Review Podcast 38:08
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Hear from Professor Kent Schenkel in a NEW episode of the New England Law Review Podcast where he discusses both the challenges that face the law of trusts and also proposes potential solutions to those problems.

1 Podcast with Professor Jordan Singer 34:01
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Can social media use cause problems for the courts? Professor Jordan Singer answers this question and more in this NEW episode of the New England Law Review Podcast. Find his blog at https://interdependentcourts.com/.

1 Professor Mohamed Arafa Podcast 55:09
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Professor Mohamed Arafa is an Assistant Professor of Criminal Law at Alexandria University Faculty of Law in Egypt; Adjunct Professor of Law at Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law at Indianapolis; Visiting Professor of Law at the University of Brasília School of Law (Brazil); and recently a Visiting Scholar and Adjunct Professor of Law at Cornell University School of Law via the Clark Initiative for Law and Development in the Middle East in Ithaca, New York. He has authored several law articles and book chapters in U.S., European, Brazilian, and Arab peer-reviews journals on numerous topics. This podcast discusses his forthcoming article, Dreams without Illusions: The Bureaucratic Cholesterol, Administrative Corruption and the Future of a Real Democratic Middle East.…
The New England Law Review hosted a symposium regarding Boston College Professor Kent Greenfield’s book Corporations Are People Too (And They Should Act Like It). The panelists discussed the role of corporations in American society and their claims to constitutional rights. In his book, Professor Greenfield suggests that ending corporate personhood is not the solution since it is consistent with the purpose of corporations and the Consitution itself that corporations can claim rights at least some of the time. Professor Greenfield’s book is the centerpiece of the forthcoming Volume 54, Issue 1 of the New England Law Review print edition. This issue will contain response articles on Professor Greenfield’s book from Professor Adam Winkler, Professor of Law at UCLA Law; Aisha Saad, Research Fellow at Yale Law; Daniel Greenwood, Professor of Law at Hofstra Law; and Natasha Varyani, Professor of Law at New England Law | Boston. Professor Greenfield will also provide comments on the responses.…

1 College Admissions Case Interview 35:24
35:24
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Interview with Attorney Elizabeth Vulaj on the College Admissions Scandal. Elizabeth Vulaj is an associate with the New York office of Segal McCambridge Singer & Mahoney. She has written on the College Admissions Scandal extensively, including article for the New England Law Review and the New York bar Association Journal.…

1 Professor Manus Podcast Interview 28:35
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Interview with Professor Manus of New England Law | Boston. This interview explores the Supreme Court's decision in Kisor v. Wilkie.
Podcast with Professor Nicole Noel of New England Law | Boston. This podcast was record by Nicholas Babaian for the New England Law Review. The subject discusses the death penalty in America.

1 Attorney Genevieve Torres on the Constitutionality of Holistic Admissions 25:09
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Fall 2019 New England Law Review Podcast- Attorney Genevieve Torres Counsel for the Educational Opportunities Project of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law answers questions regarding the Constitutionality of Holistic Admissions

1 Professor Blount Podcast- Space Law 11:24
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Professor P.J. Blount joined the New England Law Review Podcast to discuss if forthcoming article entitled: Outer Space and International Geography: Article II and the Shape of Global Order. Professor Blount is currently a Postdoctoral Researcher at the University of Luxembourg. He is also an adjunct professor in the L.L.M in Air and Space Law at the University of Mississippi School of Law. Professor Blount holds a Juris Doctorate from the University of Mississippi School of Law, an L.L.M. from King’s College London, and a Masters degree and Ph.D. in Global Affairs from Rutgers University.…

1 Professors Hansen and Friedman Discuss the AUMF 18:29
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This podcast was recorded in place of our Winter 2017 Symposium, which was cancelled because of harsh weather conditions. Our panelists included New York Times bestseller Alafair Burke, Honorable Michael Ponsor, and New England Law | Boston Professor Peter Manus, and they discussed our symposium topic, "The Novelization of the Criminal Justice System & Its Effect on Pop Culture."…
We were joined by Professor Paul Teich, a Professor at New England Law | Boston, to discuss his recent Article published in On Remand: The Near-Term Employment Prospects of American Law School Graduates. Professor Teich has studied this topic in depth, and has compiled various data available including graduation rates, retention rates, and employment rates of new graduates. An analysis of this data, according to Professor Teich, will actually lead to a shortage of law school graduates who can fill the average jobs available each year. This conclusion is in stark contradiction of the mainstream media’s reporting of the unavailability of jobs in the legal market. Additionally, Professor Teich breaks down how he analyzed the data to make this conclusion. If you are a law student or newly graduated law student, or interested in the job market for legal employment, this Podcast will shed light on the empirical data available to explain that job prospects are looking better.…

1 Online Symposium: The Market Basket Saga 50:34
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On our latest podcast, we were joined by contributors to the On Remand inaugural Online Symposium, which focuses on the Market Basket saga. Dean Eric Gouvin, who is Dean of Western New England University School of Law, discusses his contribution to the symposium, titled, “What's Law Go to Do with It? An Essay About the Balance of Power in Corporate Governance Between Officers, Directors, and Shareholders.” We were also joined by New England Law | Boston Professor Eric Lustig, who is the director of the law school’s Center for Business Law, and whose contributions to the symposium include both a Foreword and a detailed background of the saga, and a piece co-authored by New England Law | Boston Professor Emeritus Susan Finneran: “The ‘Close Corporation’ Legacy of the Demoulas / Market Basket Saga: A Case Against Type?” Our third guest is New England Law | Boston Professor Gary Bishop, who contributed to our online symposium with a review of the book, “We Are Market Basket: The Story of the Unlikely Grassroots Movement That Saved a Beloved Business,” by Daniel Korschun and Grant Welker.…
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New England Law Review On Remand's Podcast

1 Professor Hansen and Sexual Violence in the US Military 15:05
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We were joined by Professor Victor Hansen, a Professor at New England Law | Boston, to discuss our recent Fall Symposium: Sexual Violence in the U.S. Military: Discipline, Justice, and Command. Professor Hansen has studied this problem in depth, and has served as a JAG officer in the US Military. In addition, Professor Hansen discusses Professor Vanlandingham's thesis that more oversight in the prosecutorial chain in the US military would help alleviate this issue. If you missed our Fall Symposium, this podcast will help you to understand what was discussed, and what is being done to help protect our armed forces from sexual violence while in service to their country.…
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New England Law Review On Remand's Podcast

1 Professor Tigran Eldred and Behavioral Legal Ethics 18:37
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We were joined by Professor Tigran Eldred, a Professor at New England Law | Boston, to discuss his work in behavioral legal ethics. Professor Eldred's scholarship in this area was cited in a landmark legal ethics decision, United States v. Kentucky Bar Association. In addition, he blends this area into his Ethics class at New England Law. Professor Eldred explains the topic, the effect behavioral legal ethics has on lawyers, the United States v. Kentucky Bar Association decision, and his work integrating this field into the classroom. You can learn more at the behaviorallegalethics.wordpress.com blog which Professor Eldred coauthors.…
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New England Law Review On Remand's Podcast

Today, we are discussing a recent Mass. Crim. Digest blog post on Commonwealth v. Vacher, decided August 14, 2014. The Mass. Crim. Digest, formerly known as the Massachusetts Criminal Digest, was the New England Law Review’s online case-summary database that provided citable, straightforward summaries of recent criminal law cases decided by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, or SJC. In 2014 the Mass. Crim. Digest was retired, though summaries of cases decided by the SJC under Articles 12 and 14 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights are still provided through our editor blog. We are joined by a Volume 49 Comment and Note Editor, Catherine Flaherty, to discuss her Mass. Crim. Digest blog post about Commonwealth v. Vacher, citation of which is 469 Mass. 425, again decided August 14, 2014. Catherine, thank you for joining me today.…
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New England Law Review On Remand's Podcast

1 Interview with Bruce Sunstein on Patent Eligibility and Alice Corp v. CLS Bank 28:37
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Today, we are joined by Bruce Sunstein, founder and partner at Sunstein Kahn Murphy & Timbers, LLP, to discuss his forthcoming article “How Prometheus Has Upended Patent Eligibility: An Anatomy of Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank.” His Article discusses the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank, in which the Court ruled on the patent-eligibility of computer-related inventions, clarifying confusion of the application of the Court’s 2012 Mayo v. Prometheus decision to these inventions. Attorney Sunstein asserts, among other things, that the Alice Court disregards deeply ingrained principles of patent law in its approach to patent eligibility doctrine by considering patent claims generally, rather than addressing claim limitations rigorously. He further criticizes the Alice decision for misconstruing precedent and working against the goals of the patent system.…
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New England Law Review On Remand's Podcast

1 Interview with Louisa Gibbs on EEOC v. Boh Bros 14:45
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Today, we are joined by Louisa Gibbs, the New England Law Review’s former Executive Online Editor and a recent graduate of New England Law | Boston, to discuss her Comment entitled “EEOC v. Boh Brothers Construction Co.: Expanding Same-Sex Sexual Harassment Jurisprudence Beyond Sexual Desire,” which will be published in Volume 48, Book 4. Her Comment discusses the Fifth Circuit’s EEOC v. Boh Brothers Construction Co. decision, in which the court found the evidence sufficient to establish Title VII same-sex sexual harassment based on sex stereotyping. She argues that although the Fifth Circuit was ultimately correct, the Court was incorrect in failing to utilize its sister circuits’ views in the decision and, instead, simply focusing on the evidence. She argues that the Fifth Circuit’s analysis would have been much stronger had it addressed or even acknowledged that the Sixth and Ninth Circuits have strong arguments supporting and opposing same-sex sexual harassment. In its shortcomings, the Fifth Circuit therefore failed to provide adequate judicial protections for men subject to same-sex sexual harassment.…
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New England Law Review On Remand's Podcast

1 Interview with Professor Morrison on the Right to Assembly 16:04
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Today, we are joined by Professor Steven Morrison, a Visiting Professor of Law at New England Law | Boston, to discuss his two latest pieces of scholarship. The first entitled “Brandenburg for Groups,” which seeks to recover the right to assembly as a core First Amendment right and proposes a test that would protect group activity. The second is entitled “The Membership Crime Origin of the Frist Amendment” and provides a historical overview of the World War 1 era during which time the First Amendment protected the right to assembly the same as it protected speech.…
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New England Law Review On Remand's Podcast

1 Interview with Prof. Varyani on "Taxation and eCommerce" 14:16
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We are joined today by Professor Natasha Varyani, faculty fellow of New England Law | Boston, to discuss her latest piece of scholarship entitled “Taxing Electronic Commerce: The Efforts of Sales and Use Tax to Evolve with Technology,” which explores the imposition of sales tax to online retailers and how those online retails, particularly Amazon.com, appear to support this move.…
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New England Law Review On Remand's Podcast

1 Interview with Professor Karol on "Trademark Propertization" 12:10
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We are here today with Professor Peter Karol of New England Law | Boston to discuss his latest piece of scholarship entitled “The Constitutional Limitation on Trademark Propertization,” which explores whether the federal government has the constitutional authority to propertize trademark law.
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New England Law Review On Remand's Podcast

The defendant, Daniel Horne, was convicted by a Superior Court jury of second-degree murder, possession of ammunition without proper firearm identification (“FID”), and two separate counts of unlicensed carrying of a rifle in an unpermitted area. The defendant appealed, arguing for reversal of his convictions due to the numerous errors that occurred at trial. The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts (“SJC”) vacated and set aside the conviction of second-degree murder, but affirmed the other convictions.…
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New England Law Review On Remand's Podcast

1 Symposium Interview with Professor Jordan Singer 14:11
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Learn more about the New England Law Review's Fall symposium "Benchmarks: Evaluating Measurements of Judicial Productivity" to be held at New England Law | Boston all day on November 8, 2013. Discussing the symposium, we have Professor Jordan Singer of New England Law | Boston. He co-authored with the Honorable Judge Young of the U.S. District Court the two articles that inspired the symposium. We also have Volume 48 Symposium Editor Kristen Muller.…
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New England Law Review On Remand's Podcast

The defendants, Cory A. Moody and Devin Newman, were indicted in Superior Court for various violations of the Controlled Substances Act found under General Laws, Chapter 94C. Prior to trial, the defendants filed motions to suppress the evidence obtained as a result of several search warrants issued under the Massachusetts wiretap statute, General Laws, Chapter 272, Section 99. The warrants authorized the interception of calls and text messages sent over the defendants’ cell phones. The motion judge denied the defendants’ motions regarding cell phone calls, but granted their motions as to their text messages. The motion judge then reported the following question to the Appeals Court: “Does G.L. c. 272, § 99 authorize a Superior Court Judge to issue a warrant permitting state law enforcement officers to intercept cellular telephone calls and text messages?” The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts (“SJC”) then took the case on its own motion.…
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New England Law Review On Remand's Podcast

A Superior Court jury convicted the defendant, Lewis Franklin, of first-degree murder based on deliberate premeditation for killing the victim, John Falcone; the defendant appealed. The Supreme Judicial Court (“SJC”) affirmed and declined to order a new trial or reduce the murder conviction. On August 23, 2004, three people, including the victim, wanted to buy a “twenty rock” of crack cocaine. The three people pooled together fourteen dollars, called the defendant (known as “G”), and asked to purchase crack cocaine despite being short the full price, which was usually twenty dollars. The defendant met them in a pizza restaurant’s parking lot, conducted the transaction, and left. The three purchasers went to a nearby park to smoke it, but soon learned that it was not real crack cocaine. The purchasers became upset and called the defendant until he answered; the victim took the phone, cursed at the defendant, and the defendant agreed to meet them at the pizza restaurant parking lot to “make it right” but he never showed up. This case addresses issues of evidence.…
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New England Law Review On Remand's Podcast

1 Preventive Med. Assocs., Inc. v. Commonwealth 13:18
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The Mass. Crim. Digest is the New England Law Review’s online case-summary database that provides citable, straightforward summaries of recent criminal law cases decided by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ("SJC") that most impact Massachusetts criminal law and procedure. Editors of the New England Law Review compile the summaries. This episode will review the recently decided SJC case Preventive Medicine Associates v. Commonwealth decided on July 15, 2013. The citation is 465 Mass. 810 (2013).…
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