Publications for Samuel J. Levine slevine@tourolaw.edu | Web link

Jacob D. Fuchsberg Law Center
  • Levine, S. J. (2017). Foreword to the conference: Louis D. Brandeis: An interdisciplinary retrospective. Touro Law Review, 33(1), 1-4. This material can be found here.

  • Levine, S. J. (2017). Introduction. In D. Hollander, Legal scholarship in Jewish law: An annotated bibliography of journal articles (pp. 1-4). Getzville, NY: William S. Hein & Co.

  • Levine, S. J. (2017). Recent applications of the Supreme Court's hands-off approach to religions doctrine: From Hosanna-Tabor and Holt to Hobby Lobby and Zubik. In H. F. Lynch, I. G. Cohen, & E. Sepper (Eds.), Law, religion, and health in the United States (pp. 75-86). New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.

  • Green, B. A., & Levine, S. J. (2016). Disciplinary regulation of prosecutors as a remedy for abuses of prosecutorial discretion: A descriptive and normative analysis. Ohio State Law Journal of Criminal Law, 14, 143-182. This material can be found here.

  • Levine, S. J. (2016). Foreword (Billy Joel & the Law Conference). Touro Law Review, 32(1), 1-10. This material can be found here.

  • Levine, S. J. (2016). The potential utility of disciplinary regulation as a remedy for abuses of prosecutorial discretion. Duke Journal of Constitutional Law & Public Policy, 12(2), 1-12. This material can be found here.

  • Levine, S. J., & Levine, G. N. (2016). Internet ethics, American law, and Jewish law: A comparative overview. Journal of Technology Law & Policy, 21, 37-54. This material can be found here.

  • Levine, S. J. (2015). A critique of Hobby Lobby and the Supreme Court's hands-off approach to religion. Notre Dame Law Review Online, 91(1), 26-49. This material can be found here.

  • Levine, S. J. (2015). Judicial rhetoric and lawyers' roles. Notre Dame Law Review, 90(5), 1989-2000. This material can be found here.

  • Levine, S. J. (2015). The law and the "spirit of the law" in legal ethics. Journal of the Professional Lawyer, 2015(1), 1-31. This material can be found here.

  • Levine, S. J. (2014). Foreword: Conference on religious legal theory: RLT IV: Expanding the conversation. Touro Law Review, 30, 1-7. This material can be found here.

  • Levine, S. J. (2014). Louis Marshall, Julius Henry Cohen, Benjamin Cardozo, and the New York emergency rent laws of 1920: A case study in the role of Jewish lawyers and Jewish law in early twentieth century public interest litigation. In A. Mermelstein, V. S. Woeste, E. Zadoff, & M. Galanter (Eds.), Jews and the law (pp. 37-64). New Orleans, LA: Quid Pro.

  • Levine, S. J. (2012). A look at the establishment clause through the prism of religious perspectives: Religious majorities, religious minorities, and nonbelievers. Chicago - Kent Law Review, 87(3), 775-809. This material can be found here.

  • Levine, S. J. (2011). Hosanna-Tabor and Supreme Court Precedent: An analysis of the ministerial exception in the context of the Supreme Court's hands-off approach to religious doctrine. Northwestern University Law Review Colloquy, 106, 120-137.

  • Levine, S. J. (2011). Rethinking self-incrimination, voluntariness, and coersion, through a perspective of Jewish law and legal theory. The Journal of Law in Society, 12, 72.

  • Levine, S. J. (2011). RLT: A preliminary examination of religious legal theory as a movement. St. John's Law Review, 85(2), 579-593.

  • Levine, S. J. (2011). Second Annual Holocaust Remembrance Lecture at Washington University: Jewish law from out of the depths: Tragic choices in the Holocaust. Washington University Global Studies Law Review, 10(1), 133-142.

  • Levine, S. J. (2011). Taking the ethical duty to self seriously: An essay in memory of Fred Zacharias. San Diego Law Review, 48(1), 285-302. This material can be found here.

  • Levine, S. J. (2011). Untold stories of Goldman v. Weinberger: Religious freedom confronts military uniformity. Air Force Law Review, 66, 205-224. This material can be found here.

  • Levine, S. J. (2010). Applying Jewish legal theory in the context of American law and legal scholarship: A methodological analysis. Seton Hall Law Review, 40(3), 933-954.

  • Levine, S. J. (2006). A look at American legal practice through a perspective of Jewish law, ethics, and tradition: A conceptual overview. Notre Dame Journal of Law, Ethics, & Public Policy, 20, 11-27. This material can be found here.

  • Levine, S. J. (2003). Taking ethical discretion seriously: Ethical deliberation as ethical obligation. Indiana Law Review, 37(1), 21-63. This material can be found here.

  • Levine, S. J. (2003). Taking ethics codes seriously: Broad ethics provisions and unenumerated ethical obligations in a comparative hermeneutic framework. Tulane Law Review, 77(3), 527-574. This material can be found here.

  • Levine, S. J. (1996). The challenges of religious neutrality [Review of the book The rhetoric of church and state: A critical analysis of religion clause jurisprudence, by F. M. Gedicks]. Journal of Law & Religion, 13, 531-547. This material can be found here.