Tulsa Law Review
(2016) Volume 52, Number 3 (2017) Book Review
This book review issue is made possible by the hard work of our academic co-editors Profs. Stuart Chinn (University of Oregon School of Law) and Julie Novkov (University at Albany, State University of New York). Professors Novkov and Chinn select recently published books that transect the fields of law, political science, and history. To review these works, they invite highly respected academics from the same trinity of scholarship to provide their opinions. Our team of student editors works in conjunction with our academic co-editors and the individual authors to prepare each review for publication.
It is an honor for the Tulsa Law Review to present you with this book review. It is our hope that it provides insight and enlightenment regarding the books reviewed and the study of law, political science, and history as a whole.
Aaron TifftEditor-in-Chief
Tulsa Law Review
Front Matter
Book Review
Review Essay on Seema Sohi’s Echoes of Mutiny and Suzan Shown Harjo’s Nation to Nation
Kevin Bruyneel
Successes and Failures of Federal Environmental Policy: Reviewing Federal Ecosystem Management and Federal Approaches to Environmental Justice
Brian W. Jewett and Heather E. Campbell
Transgender Rights without a Theory of Gender?
Paisley Currah
Executive Power: The Springs of Authority and Mandate Rhetoric
Kimberley L. Fletcher
Living Up to and Under Norms
Stephen R. Galoob
Down the Slippery Slope? Does the Fundamental Right to Marry Protect Polygamous Marriage?
Evan Gerstmann
Legal Histories of America’s Second Revolutionary War (1860-1876)
Leslie Friedman Goldstein
Cacophony, Conversation, and Common Sense
William Haltom
A Post-Capitalist Earth, and Beyond?
Chase Hobbs-Morgan
Immigration in Between
Robin Jacobson
Three Policy Paths after Citizens United: A Critical Review Essay
Michael J. Malbin
Fear and Firearms
Darrell A.H. Miller
(Re)Evaluating the Burger Court
L.A. Powe, Jr.
Our Criminal Laws, Our Constitution
Sarah A. Seo
Taming Leviathan
Marek D. Steedman
When the Religious Other Seems Abhorrent: Thoughts on the Power of Scholars to Represent the “Repugnant Cultural Other”
Nancy D. Wadsworth
Criminalization as Governance in the American Racial State
Charlton C. Copeland