Browsing Oregon Law Review by Subject "Practice of law"

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  • Caldwell, Harry Mitchell (University of Oregon School of Law, 2020-07-01)
    The least examined aspect of trial is voir dire. Although numerous law review articles and textbooks have studied and analyzed opening statements, direct examinations, cross-examinations, and closing arguments, voir dire ...
  • Brown, Darryl K. (University of Oregon School of Law, 2022-05-12)
    Batson v. Kentucky prohibits prosecutors’ racially motivated decisions to eliminate a potential juror during jury selection. United States v. Armstrong prohibits prosecutors’ racially motivated decisions to charge a defendant ...
  • Griffin, Amy J. (University of Oregon School of Law, 2019-02-14)
    Authority is the foundation of legal analysis. Our legal system is based on the rule of law ideal, and law is well understood to be “an authority-soaked practice.” In contrast to many other fields, or everyday decision-making ...
  • Eckart, Adam M. (University of Oregon School of Law, 2023-01-18)
    This Article argues that there is pervasive litigation bias in law schools, and that such bias negatively affects the work of lawyers, including how lawyers are regulated, how lawyers practice law, and how lawyers serve ...
  • 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 ...

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