The Law Faculty Scholarship series is a section of the University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository. A service of the Law Library, it is designed to preserve, promote and disseminate the scholarship and activities of law school faculty in accordance with UNH’s commitment to open access.
Submissions from 2006
Social Psychology, Calamities, and Sports Law, Michael McCann
The Reckless Pursuit of Dominion: A Situational Analysis of the NBA and Diminishing Player Autonomy, Michael McCann
Trademark Searching Tools and Strategies: Questions for the New Millennium, Jon R. Cavicchi
Submissions from 2005
Comment on Orphan Works, Thomas G. Field Jr
Cross Purposes: Remedying the Endorsement of Symbolic Religious Speech, Jordan C. Budd
Ethics in Large Law Firms: The Principle of Pragmatism, Kimberly Kirkland
Fixing Legal Writing Problems Can Be Easier (and Quicker) Than You Think, Margaret Sova McCabe and Amy Vorenberg
Navigating Troubled Waters: Dealing with Personal Values When Representing Others, Mitchell M. Simon
Preemption of State Spam Laws by the Federal Can-Spam Act, Roger Allen Ford
Secondary Sources: Top Ten, Susan Drisko Zago
Some Dumb Girl Syndrome: Challenging and Subverting Destructive Stereotypes of Female Attorneys, Ann Bartow
Women In The Web of Secondary Copyright Liability and Internet Filtering, Ann Bartow
Submissions from 2004
A National Tax Bar: An End to the Attorney-Accountant Tax Turf War, Katherine D. Black and Stephen T. Black
Copyright Protection for Perfumes, Thomas G. Field Jr
Copyrights and Creative Copying, Ann Bartow
Describing the Ball: Improve Teaching by Using Rubrics - Explicit Grading Criteria, Sophie M. Sparrow
Economic Efficiency and Consumer Choice Theory in Nutritional Labeling, Michael McCann
Illegal Defense: The Irrational Economics of Banning High School Players from the NBA Draft, Michael McCann
Intellectual Property and Indigenous Peoples: Adapting Copyright Law to the Needs of a Global Community, Megan M. Carpenter
Judicial Review of Copyright Examination, Thomas G. Field Jr
Likelihood of Confusion, Ann Bartow
Professor Bryan Harris Remembered: "Volez" to a Pierce Law Friend, Jon R. Cavicchi
Technology Worth Patenting, Thomas G. Field Jr