San Diego Law Review
Volume 41, Issue 1 (2004) Symposium: Teaching Law & Socioeconomics
Editorial Board
Symposium Articles
Introduction: Teaching Socioeconomics
June Carbone
What is Socioeconomics?
Robert Ashford
Teaching Law and Socioeconomics
Lynne L. Dallas
A Crowded House: Socioeconomics (and Other) Additions to the Law School and Economics Curricula
Thomas S. Ulen
Teaching in a Larger Social Context: Using Simulations to Demonstrate Socioeconomic Principles and Their Relevance to Law
Jeffrey Evans Stake and Kenneth Glenn Dau-Schmidt
Labor and Finance as Inevitably Transnational: Globalization Demands a Sophisticated and Transnational Lens
Timothy A. Canova, Claire Morre Dickerson, and Katherine V.W. Stone
Socioeconomics and Professional Responsibilities in Teaching Law-Related Economic Issues
Robert Ashford
The Role of Socioeconomics in Teaching Family Law
Margaret F. Brinig
Teaching Federal Income Taxation Using Socioeconomics
I. Richard Gershon
Applying Heterodox Economic Theory to the Teaching of Business Law: The Road Not Taken
Charles R.P. Pouncy
Socioeconomics: Choice and Challenges
Jeffrey L. Harrison
Articles
Spectrum Rights in the Telecosm to Come
Ellen P. Goodman
Casenote
Enforcing the Public Forum Doctrine on Private Property: First Unitarian Church of Salt Lake City v. Salt Lake City Corporation
Randall R. Sjoblom