Lewis & ClarkLaw School

Doug Beloof

Professor of Law

Bibliography

Separately Published Works

VICTIMS IN CRIMINAL PROCEDURE, Carolina Academic Press (lst Edition 1999, 2nd Edition 2006, 3rd Edition 2010) (co-authored with P. Cassell and S. Twist).

Works Published As Part of a Collection

Making Constitutional the Permissive Inference in Giles v. California: Changing the Intent to Silence from “Purposely” to “Knowingly”, 13 Lewis & Clark Law Review 697 (2009).

Dignity, Equality, and Public Interest for Defendants and Crime Victims in Plea Bargains: A Response to Professor Michael O’Hear, 91 Marquette Law Review 349 (2007).

Weighing Crime Victims’ Interests in Judicially Crafted Criminal Procedure, 56 Catholic Law Review 1135 (2007).

Judicial Leadership at Sentencing Under the Crime Victims’ Rights Act: Judge Kozinski in Kenna and Judge Cassell in Degenhardt, 19 Federal Sentencing Reporter 36 (2006).

The Crime Victim’s Right to Attend the Trial: The Reascendant National Consensus, 9 Lewis & Clark Law Review 481 (2005) (co-authored with P. Cassell).

The Third Wave of Crime Victims’ Rights: Standing, Remedy, and Review, 2005 Brigham Young University Law Review 255 (2005).

Essay: Enabling Rape Shield Procedure under Crime Victims’ Constitutional Privacy Rights, 38 Suffolk Law Review 291 (2005).

Constitutional Implications of Crime Victims as Participants, 88 Cornell Law Review 282 (2003).

Let the Truth Be Told: Proposed Hearsay Exceptions to Admit Domestic Violence Victims’ Out of Court Statements as Substantive Evidence, 11 Columbia Journal of Law and Gender 1 (2001) (co-authored with J. Shapiro).

Essay: Crime Victim Rights: Critical Concepts for Animal Rights, 7 Animal Law Journal 19 (2001).

The Third Model of Criminal Process: The Victim Participation Model, 1999 Utah Law Review 289 (1999).

Contact

Doug Beloof’s office is in room 118 of Legal Research Center.

email beloof@lclark.edu

voice 503-768-6749

Doug Beloof
10015 S.W. Terwilliger Boulevard
Portland, Oregon 97219