Jeb Barnes & Thomas F. Burke, “Untangling the Concept of Adversarial Legalism,” Annual Review of Law and Social Science 16 (2020), 473-487.
Thomas F. Burke & Jeb Barnes, “Layering, Kludgeocracy and Disability Rights,” Social Policy & Society 17 (2018), 101-116.
Thomas F. Burke & Jeb Barnes, “The Civil Rights Template and the Americans with Disabilities Act: A Socio-Legal Perspective on the Promise and Limits of Individual Rights,” in Lynda Dodd, ed., The Rights Revolution Revisited: Institutional Perspectives on the Role of Private Enforcement of Civil Rights in the U.S. (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2018).
Thomas F. Burke & Lief H. Carter, “The Hand in the Brew: Judges and Their Communities” (review essay on Making the Case by Paul W. Kahn and Common Law Judging by Douglas E. Edlin) Tulsa Law Review 53 (2018) 213-218.
“From the Courthouse to the Chalkboard,” (review essay on From the Closet to the Altar by Michael J. Klarman) Tulsa Law Review 49 (2013): 305-314.
Jeb Barnes & Thomas F. Burke, “Making Way: Legal Mobilization, Organizational Response and Wheelchair Access,” Law and Society Review 46 (2012), 167-198.
Thomas Burke & Nancy Scherer, “The Bush Administration and the Uses of Judicial Politics,” in eds. Martin Levin, Daniel DiSalvo & Martin Shapiro, Building Coalitions, Making Policy: The Politics of the Clinton, Bush and Obama Presidencies (Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2012), 215-246.
Thomas F. Burke & Jeb Barnes, “Is There an Empirical Literature on Rights?” Studies in Law, Politics and Society 48 (2009), 69-91.
“Political Regimes and the Future of the First Amendment,” Studies in Law, Politics and Society 44 (2008), 107-139.
Jeb Barnes & Thomas F. Burke, “The Diffusion of Rights: From Rights on the Books to Organizational Rights Practices,” Law and Society Review 40 (2006), 493-524.
“The European Union and the Diffusion of Disability Rights,” in eds. Martin Levin and Martin Shapiro, Transatlantic Policymaking in an Age of Austerity (Washington D.C: Georgetown University Press, 2004).
“Judicial Implementation of Statutes: Three Stories About Courts and the Americans with Disabilities Act,” in eds. Mark Miller and Jeb Rosenberg, Making Policy, Making Law: An Interbranch Perspective (Washington D.C.: Georgetown University Press, 2004), 123-138.
“Corruption Concepts and Federal Campaign Finance Law,” (Revised and updated version of “Concept of Corruption” article) in eds. Arnold Heidenheimer and Michael Johnston, Political Corruption: A Handbook, 3rd ed. (New Brunswick: Transaction Press, 2002), 645-664.
"The Rights Revolution Continues: Why New Rights are Born (and Old Rights Rarely Die)," University of Connecticut Law Review 33, no.4 (Summer 2001): 1259-1274.
"On the Resilience of Rights," in eds. Martin Levin, Marc Landy and Martin Shapiro, Seeking the Center: Politics and Policymaking at the New Century (Washington DC: Georgetown University Press, 2001), 172-190.
"The Concept of Corruption in Campaign Finance Law," Constitutional Commentary 14, no. 1 (Spring 1997): 127-149.
"The Americans With Disabilities Act: On the Rights Track," in ed. Pietro Nivola, Comparative Disadvantage? Domestic Social Regulations and the Global Economy (Washington DC: The Brookings Institution, 1997), 242-318.