William Mitchell Law Review
Volume 32, Issue 3 (2006)
Prefatory Matter
Foreword: Celebrating 100 Years of Juvenile Court in Minnesota
Paul H. Anderson
Articles
Ethics and the Standards of Practice for the Representation of Children in Abuse and Neglect Proceedings
Gail Chang Bohr
Problem-solving Judges—Meddlers or Innovators?
John B. Van de North Jr.
What Does a "Juvenile Adjudication" Mean in Minnesota? Some New Answers after a Century of Change in Juvenile Court
John M. Stuart and Amy K. R. Zaske
The Role of the Prosecutor in Juvenile Justice: Advocacy in the Courtroom and Leadership in the Community
James C. Backstrom and Gary L. Walker
Cognitive and Moral Development, Brain Development, and Mental Illness: Important Considerations for the Juvenile Justice System
Joel V. Oberstar, Elise M. Anderson, and Jonathan B. Jensen
Developmental Pathways: From Victim to Victimizer?
Mindy F. Mitnick
Out-of-home Placements for Abused, Neglected, and Dependent Children in Minnesota: A Historical Perspective
Marian E. Saksena
100 Years of Juvenile Court in Minnesota—A Historical Overview and Perspective
Wright S. Walling and Stacia Walling Driver
Notes
The Supreme Court's Attack on Domestic Violence Legislation—Discretion, Entitlement, and Due Process in Town of Castle Rock v. Gonzales
Kathleen K. Curtis
A Fifty-state Survey of Medical Monitoring and the Approach the Minnesota Supreme Court Should Take When Confronted with the Issue
D. Scott Aberson
Of Wine and War: The Fall of State Twenty-first Amendment Power at the Hands of the Dormant Commerce Clause—Granholm v. Heald
Tania K. M. Lex