Faculty & Staff
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Christopher
Slobogin Stephen C. O'Connell Chair, Professor of Law Affiliate Professor of Psychiatry Associate Director, Center on Children and the Law Box 117625 / Gainesville, FL 32611-7625 e-mail: slobogin@law.ufl.edu 352.273.0942 / Fax: 352.392.3005 |
Representative Publications
Note: Complete detailed list in
vita
- PRIVACY AT RISK: THE NEW GOVERNMENT SURVEILLANCE AND THE FOURTH AMENDMENT (U. Chicago Press, 2007).
- PROVING THE UNPROVABLE: THE ROLE OF LAW, SCIENCE AND SPECULATION IN ADJUDICATING CULPABILITY AND DANGEROUSNESS (Oxford U. Press, 2006)
- MINDING JUSTICE: LAWS THAT DEPRIVE PEOPLE WITH MENTAL DISABILITY OF LIFE AND LIBERTY (Harvard U. Press, 2006)
- LAW AND THE MENTAL HEALTH SYSTEM: CIVIL AND CRIMINAL ASPECTS (Westgroup, 4th. ed., 2004 & biennial supps.)(w/ Ralph Reisner & Arti Rai).
- CRIMINAL PROCEDURE: AN ANALYSIS OF CASES AND CONCEPTS (Foundation Press, 4th ed., 2000 & ann. supps.) (w/ Charles Whitebread).
- Government Data Mining and the Fourth Amendment, University of Chicago Law Review (2007).
- Reconceptualizing Due Process in Juvenile Justice: Contributions from Law and Social Science, 57 Hastings Law Journal 955-989 (2006) (with Mark Fondacaro & Tricia Cross).
- The Civilization of the Criminal Law, 58 Vanderbilt Law Review 121-168 (2005).
- A Jurisprudence of Dangerousness, 98 Northwestern University Law Review 1-62 (2003).
- Peeping Techno-Toms and the Fourth Amendment: Seeing Through Kyllo's Rules Governing Technological Surveillance, 86 Minnesota Law Review 1393-1437 (2002).
- Doubts About Daubert: Psychiatric Anecdata as a Case Study, 57 Washington & Lee Law Review 919-948 (2000).
- An End to Insanity: Recasting the Role of Mental Illness in Criminal Cases, 86 Virginia Law Review 1199-1247 (2000).
- A Prevention Model of Juvenile Justice: The Promise of Kansas v. Hendricks for Children, 1999 Wisconsin Law Review 185-226 (1999)(w/ Mark Fondacaro and Jennifer Woolard).
- Why Liberals Should Chuck the Exclusionary Rule,1999 University of Illinois Law Review 363-446 (1999).
- Psychiatric Evidence in Criminal Trials: To Junk or Not to Junk?, 40 William & Mary Law Review 1-56 (1998).
- Reasonable Expectations of Privacy and Autonomy in Fourth Amendment Cases: An Empirical Look at "Understandings Recognized and Permitted by Society", 42 Duke Law Journal 727-775 (1993)(w/ Joseph Schumacher).
- The World Without a Fourth Amendment, 39 U.C.L.A. Law Review 1-107 (1991).
- The Guilty But Mentally Ill Verdict: An Idea Whose Time Should Not Have Come, 53 George Washington Law Review 494-527 (1985).
- Dangerousness and Expertise, 133 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 97-174 (1984).
