And better yet, it is all publicly available here. The articles are below:
POVERTY LAW
Ann Juergens
ForewordLawrence R. McDonough
Wait a Minute! Residential Eviction Defense in 2009 Still Is Much More Than “Did You Pay the Rent?”Katherine Barrett Wiik
Justice for America’s Homeless Children: Cultivating a Child’s Right to Shelter in the United StatesMargaret C. Hobday, Geneva Finn, and Myron Orfield
A Missed Opportunity: Minnesota’s Failed Experiment with Choice-Based IntegrationProfessor Deborah A. Schmedemann
Pro Bono Publico as a Conscience GoodNina W. Tarr
Ethics, Internal Law School Clinics, and Training the Next Generation of Poverty LawyersRobert Hornstein
Teaching Law Students to Comfort the Troubled and Trouble the Comfortable: An Essay on the Place of Poverty Law in the Law School CurriculumStella L. Smetanka
The Disabled in Debt to Social Security: Can Fairness Be Guaranteed?Sam Glover
Has the Flood of Debt Collection Lawsuits Swept Away Minnesotans’ Due Process Rights?Patrick L. Hayes
A Noose Around the Neck: Preventing Abusive Payday Lending Practices and Promoting Lower Cost AlternativesNOTES AND COMMENTS
Emily A. Polachek
Juvenile Transfer: From “Get Better” to “Get Tough” and Where We Go From HereBethany C. Suhreptz
Key Employee Retention Plans, Executive Compensation, and BAPCPA: No Rest for Congress, No More for Execs