Browsing Oregon Law Review : Vol. 97, No. 3 (2019) by Title

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  • Coon, Nora (University of Oregon School of Law, 2019-06-19)
    Generally, clerks don’t go behind the bench. But there’s one day of the year when the Oregon Supreme Court clerks take their turn—each in their justice’s chair, doing the best judicial impression they can muster for the ...
  • Balmer, Thomas A. (University of Oregon School of Law, 2019-06-19)
    Holmes asked himself––and all of us––how one could “live greatly in the law...”? Well, one answer would be the varied career of Jack Landau, who, since he enrolled at Lewis & Clark Law School in 1977, has lived a rich and ...
  • Brewer, Dave (University of Oregon School of Law, 2019-06-19)
    When I first worked with Jack Landau as a colleague at the Oregon Court of Appeals, I immediately realized that he was one of the smartest people I had ever known. Much more importantly, though, nineteen years later, when ...
  • Landau, Jack L. (University of Oregon School of Law, 2019-06-19)
    Nearly everything a lawyer, judge, businessperson, or public official does is controlled, or at the very least significantly affected, by a statute. Our legal system, as Judge Guido Calabresi colorfully put it, has become ...
  • Oregon Law Review Editorial Board (University of Oregon School of Law, 2019-06-19)
    Oregon Supreme Court Justice Jack L. Landau, a distinguished jurist and scholar, is described by his colleagues as a “brilliant judge,” a “mensch,” and as someone who lives a “rich and full ‘life in the law.’”

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