Volume 78, Issue 1 (2003) Symposium: Private Law, Punishment, and Disgorgement
Symposium EditorAnthony J. Sebok
Front Matter
Table of Contents - Issue 1
Chicago-Kent Law Review
What Does It Mean to Say That a Remedy Punishes: Introduction
Anthony J. Sebok
Articles
Restitution's Outlaws
Andrew Kull
Optimal Penalties in Contracts
Aaron S. Edlin and Alan Schwartz
Punishment and Disgorgement as Contract Remedies
Ernest J. Weinrib
What Did Punitive Damages Do? Why Misunderstanding the History of Punitive Damages Matters Today
Anthony J. Sebok
The Incoherence of Punishment in Antitrust
Spencer Weber Waller
Informing Workers of the Right to Workplace Representation: Reasonably Moving from the Middle of the Highway to the Information Superhighway
G. Micah Wissinger
Recognition of Labor Unions in a Comparative Context: Has the United Kingdom Entered a New Era?
Jared S. Gross
Levitz Furniture Co.: The End of Celanese and the Good-Faith Doubt Standard for Withdrawing Recognition of Incumbent Unions
Sarah Pawlicki
Book Review
Can Tort Juries Punish Competently?
Neal R. Feigenson
Notes
United States v. Dusenbery: Supreme Court Silence and the Lingering Echo of Due Process Violations in Civil Forfeiture Actions
David F. Benson
Editors
- Editor-in-Chief
- Michael S. Shapiro
- Managing Editor
- Jennifer L. Warta
- Executive Articles Editors
- Jason R. Braswell
- Ryan A. Horning
- Allison Kirk
- John P. McCorry
- Kelly M. Neff
- Daniel R. Paulsen
- Suzanne L. Sias
- Linnea C. Stack
- Executive Notes & Comments Editor
- Patricia L. Boye-Williams
- Notes & Comments Editors
- William A. Beckman
- David F. Benson
- Lauren A. Cohen
- Alison Dietrichs
- John J. Marhoefer
- Nicholas R. Mitchell
- Thomas J. Posey
- Seth M. Rosenberg
- Edward Staudacher
- Cindy S. Stuyvesant
- Michael P. Tomlinson
- Sofia M. Zneimer
- Website Editor
- Sofia M. Zneimer