Volume 32, Number 4 (1999) Symposia—Bankruptcy Reform and Election Law as Its Own Field of Study
Symposium
Introduction—Symposium on Bankruptcy Reform
Dan Schechter
Can Shame, Guilt, or Stigma Be Taught: Why Credit-Focused Debtor Education May Not Work
A. Mechele Dickerson
Should Debtors Be Forced into Chapter 13
Eric A. Posner
Comments on the Pending Bankruptcy Reform
Dan Schechter
What Do You Mean, I Filed Bankruptcy—Or How the Law Allows a Perfect Stranger to Purchase an Automatic Stay in Your Name
Maureen A. Tighe and Emily Rosenblum
Generosity in Bankruptcy: The New Place of Charitable Contributions in Fraudulent Conveyance Law
Steven Walt
The Malpractice of Health Care Bankruptcy Reform
Pamela Kohlman Webster
The Hazards of Legal Fine Tuning: Confronting the Free Will Problem in Election Law Scholarship
Michael A. Fitts
Stop Me before I Quantify again: The Role of Political Science in the Study of Election Law
James A. Gardner
Not by Election Law Alone
Samuel Issacharoff and Richard H. Pildes
Election Law as a Subject—A Subjective Account
Daniel H. Lowenstein
From Rights to Arrangements
Daniel R. Ortiz
The Corporation in Election Law
Adam Winkler
Notes and Comments
Teaching the Federal Circuit New Tricks: Updating the Law of Joint Inventorship in Patents
Tigran Guledjian
Clinton's Little White Lies: The Materiality Requirement for Perjury in Civil Discovery
Alan Heinrich