Steven Lubet
Northwestern University
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Featured researches published by Steven Lubet.
Indiana law review | 2002
Steven Lubet
excellent survey, even knowledgeable observers of judicial elections would have been unaware of the extent and scope of judicial campaign conduct committees, as well as the variations among them. For that reason alone, Reed and Schotland’s Paper performs great service for all who are concerned about judicial ethics. More important, Reed and Schotland have initiated a discussion regarding an extremely significant aspect of judicial elections. As of this writing, the United States Supreme Court has just granted certiorari in Republican Party of Minnesota v. Kelly, which will be the first case on judicial election conduct to 2
Journal of Health Psychology | 2017
Steven Lubet
The PACE investigators reject Geraghty’s suggestion that the cognitive behavior therapy/graded exercise therapy trial could have been better left to researchers with no stake in the theories under study. The potential sources and standards for determining researcher bias are considered, concluding that the PACE investigators “impartiality might reasonably be questioned.”
Journal of Health Psychology | 2017
Steven Lubet
In defense of the PACE trial, Petrie and Weinman employ a series of misleading or fallacious argumentation techniques, including circularity, blaming the victim, bait and switch, non-sequitur, setting up a straw person, guilt by association, red herring, and the parade of horribles. These are described and explained.
Archive | 2015
Steven Lubet
JOHN ANTHONY COPELAND “was in the habit of going up to Canada” even before the rescue in Wellington. He was among the many Oberliners who traveled back and forth between the colonies of freedmen and escaped slaves who had settled in what is now Ontario. Some such visits were social and some were commercial, but others were for the purpose of escorting or settling fugitives. In 1836, Reverend Finney had dispatched Hiram Wilson, a recent graduate of the theology department, as an emissary to Canada West for the purpose of reporting on the circumstances of runaway slaves. Five years later, Wilson helped establish the British-American Institute on the outskirts of Chatham, where fugitives could be taught productive trades. Oberlin contributed Bibles and teachers for the institute, as well as assisting with the arrival of a steady stream of newly escaped slaves. As Wilson himself wrote to a colleague at the college, “Those six fugitives who were in Oberlin when we left all got over safe into Canada by the next Monday.” They were far from the only ones. John Anthonys earlier involvement in the northward traffic made him a logical candidate to shepherd John Price across the border. Conducting fugitives was no longer a lighthearted matter, as Oberliners had regarded it for so many years. It was one thing to deflect the attentions of amateur slave hunters but quite another to flout a valid federal warrant, not to mention abusing a deputy U.S. marshal in the process. Only one week earlier, Professor James Monroe had been nonchalant about receiving five slaves who were en route from Medina to the Sandusky harbor, but now the ground had clearly shifted. John Anthony had shown aggressiveness in confronting Marshal Dayton, and courage in breaking through the door at Wadsworths Hotel, but he was also known for his Christian faith, which was no small matter to the Oberlin theologians who had taken charge of John Prices deliverance.
Archive | 2010
Steven Lubet
Michigan Law Review | 1999
Steven Lubet
Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics | 1999
Steven Lubet
University of Pennsylvania Law Review | 1997
Steven Lubet; Cathryn Stewart
Law and contemporary problems | 1998
Steven Lubet
Archive | 2013
Charles Gardner Geyh; James J. Alfini; Steven Lubet; Jeffrey Shaman