Now showing items 1198-1217 of 1354

    • Ruhl, J. B. (Kansas Law Review, 2004)
      If one compares the way in which the ESA was implemented in 1982 to the way it is today, the list of differences would far outweigh the similarities. Indeed, the ESA has been transformed so much through administrative ...
    • Sitaraman, Ganesh (Great Democracy Initiativehttps://greatdemocracyinitiative.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/Taking-Antitrust-Away-from-the-Courts-Report-092018-3.pdf, 2018)
      A small number of firms hold significant market power in a wide variety of sectors of the economy, leading commentators across the political spectrum to call for a reinvigoration of antitrust enforcement. But the antitrust ...
    • Ruhl, J. B. (Vanderbilt Law Review, 2015)
      Under the fee tail arrangement at work in Downton Abbey, known as a fee tail male, possession of the property passes from the first grantee of the entailed estate, who (of course) is a male, to his lineal male heirs. ...
    • Newton, Michael A.; Singer, Peter; Sterio, Milena; French, Shannon (Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law, 2015)
      A panel discussion on the topic of cyberwar. Broadcast on January 30, 2014. Speakers include: Peter Singer (Director of the Center for 21st Century Security and Intelligence, Brookings Institution); Michael Newton (Professor ...
    • Viscusi, W. Kip; McMichael, Benjamin J. (University of Illinois Law Review, 2019)
      Blockbuster punitive damages awards, i.e., those awards exceeding $100 million, attract attention based on their sheer size. While there have been fewer such awards in the last decade, they remain an important presence in ...
    • Viscusi, W. Kip; McMichael, Benjamin J. (University of Illinois Law Review, 2019)
      Blockbuster punitive damages awards, i.e., those awards exceeding $100 million, attract attention based on their sheer size. While there have been fewer such awards in the last decade, they remain an important presence in ...
    • Ruhl, J. B. (Widener Law Symposium Journal, 1998)
      Urban central cities present a host of environmental problems including, but not limited to, industrial pollution, brownfields, smog, and environmental injustice. Rural and agricultural areas also experience environmental ...
    • Gervais, Daniel J. (Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment and Technology Law, 2009)
      Even as a mere conceptual cloud, the term "user-generated content" is useful to discuss the societal shifts in content creation brought about by the participative web and perhaps best epitomized by the remix phenomenon. ...
    • Slobogin, Christopher, 1951- (University of Cincinnati Law Review, 2006)
      In most jurisdictions, the Tarasoff duty is defined as a duty on the part of mental health professionals to act on patient threats of serious harm to identified individuals. Although breach of this duty has, to date, only ...
    • Slobogin, Christopher, 1951- (Brandeis Law Journal, 2004)
      The organizers of this symposium gave us the choice of writing about effective assistance of counsel or about teaching criminal procedure. I've decided to do both. This article discusses teaching the criminal procedure course ...
    • Seymore, Sean B., 1971- (Notre Dame Law Review, 2010)
      In theory, a patent serves the public good because the disclosure of the invention brings new ideas and technologies to the public and induces inventive activity. But while these roles inherently depend on the ability of ...
    • Blair, Margaret M., 1950-; Stout, Lynne A., 1957- (Journal of Corporation Law, 1999)
      For the past two decades, legal and economic scholarship has tended to assume that the central economic problem addressed by corporation law is getting managers and directors to act as faithful agents for shareholders. ...
    • Blair, Margaret M., 1950-; Stout, Lynn A., 1957- (Virginia Law Review, 1999)
      Contemporary corporate scholarship generally assumes that the central economic problem addressed by corporation law is getting managers and directors to act as loyal agents for shareholders. We take issue with this approach ...
    • Slobogin, Christopher, 1951- (Harvard Journal of Law & Technology, 1997)
      As the name implies, the American Bar Association's Tentative Draft Standards Concerning Technologically-Assisted Physical Surveillance is a work in progress...Final approval by the ABA hierarchy is still some time away, ...
    • Hersch, Joni, 1956- (Duke Law Journal, 1998)
      Professor Hersch argues that most state regulations aimed at fighting teen smoking have had little or no effect. She provides evidence that despite widespread age restrictions on purchasing tobacco, most teens do not ...
    • Sherry, Suzanna; Farber, Daniel A., 1950- (Stanford Law Review, 1993)
      Once upon a time, the law and literature movement taught us that stories have much to say to lawyers, and Robert Cover taught us that law is itself a story. Instead of living happily ever after with that knowledge, some ...
    • Sherry, Suzanna (Texas Law Review, 2019)
      A fixed eighteen-year term for Supreme Court Justices has become a popular proposal with both academics and the general public as a possible solution to the countermajoritarian difficulty and as a means for depoliticizing ...
    • Slobogin, Christopher, 1951-; Collier, Charles W., 1950- (Florida Law Review, 1999)
      It is a long-established principle that presidential impeachment is an appropriate remedy only for "high Crimes and Misdemeanors" of a public nature (with the possible exception of private crimes so heinous that the President ...
    • Slobogin, Christopher, 1951- (University of Colorado Law Review, 1996)
      Police, like people generally, lie in all sorts of contexts for all sorts of reasons. This article has focused on police lying designed to convict individuals the police think are guilty. Strong measures are needed to ...
    • Serkin, Christopher (Tulane Law Review, 2014)
      In their article (Guarding the Subjective Premium), Sebastien Gay and Nadia Nasser-Ghodsi add some empirical evidence to the ongoing debate over compensation for eminent domain.' Their model raises a number of interesting ...