Skip to main content
The University of Iowa
University of Iowa

Iowa Law Review

Site Main Navigation

  • About
    • About the Iowa Law Review
    • Masthead
    • Membership
    • Ordering
    • Alumni
  • Print Edition
  • Online Edition
  • Symposia
  • Submit
  • Contact
  • Give
  • Iowa Law Library

Breadcrumb

  1. Home

Volume 104, Issue 3

March 2019

Articles

Paths or Fences: Patents, Copyrights, and the Constitution
Derek E. Bambauer

Do Ban-the-Box Laws Really Work?
Dallan F. Flake

The More Things Change: Improvement Patents, Drug Modifications, and the FDA
Dmitry Karshtedt

The Privacy Hierarchy: Trade Secret and Fourth Amendment Expectations
Matthew B. Kugler & Thomas H. Rousse

Constituencies and Control in Statutory Drafting: Interviews with Government Tax Counsels
Shu-Yi Oei & Leigh Z. Osofsky

A Timely Right to Privacy
Stacey A. Tovino

Data-Driven Constitutional Avoidance
Gregory P. Magarian, Lee Epstein, James L. Gibson

Essays

The N.R.A.'s Strict-Scrutiny Amendments
Todd E. Pettys

Student Notes

The Inky Ambiguity of Tattoo Copyrights: Addressing the Silence of U.S. Copyright Law on Tattooed Works
Arianna D. Chronis

Superfund, Pesticide Regulation, and Spray Drift: Rethinking the Federal Pesticide Regulatory Framework to Provide Alternative Remedies for Pesticide Damage
Daniel L. Moeller

Trust the Process: How the NBA Can Combat Its “Tanking” Problem in Court
Allen T. Paxton

Chipping in at Work: Privacy Concerns Related to the Use of Body Microchip (“RFID”) Implants in the Employer–Employee Context
Dario A. Rodriguez

Martinis, Manhattans, and Maltreatment Investigations: When Safety Plans Are a False Choice and What Procedural Protections Parents Are Due
Ryan C. F. Shellady

The University of Iowa
University of Iowa

Iowa Law Review

Iowa Law Review
190 Boyd Law Building
Iowa City, IA 52242-1113

ilr@uiowa.edu
319-335-9054

Social Media

  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Admin Login

  • © 2025 The University of Iowa
  • Privacy Notice
  • UI Nondiscrimination Statement
  • Accessibility