Now showing items 1178-1197 of 1354

    • Edelman, Paul H.; George, Tracey E. (Green Bag, 2008)
      In Six Degrees of Cass Sunstein: Collaboration Networks in Legal Scholarship, we began the study of the legal academy's collaboration network. When mathematicians discuss the nature of collaboration in their field they ...
    • Viscusi, W. Kip; Hamilton, James, 1961- (The American Enterprisehttp://search.proquest.com/docview/225402070?accountid=14816, 1994)
      An analysis of the Superfund program represents the first systematic effort to document the character of the risks addressed by this legislation, which will in turn determine the total cleanup cost and the degree to which ...
    • Vandenbergh, Michael P.; Ruhl, J.B.; Rossi, Jim (Vanderbilt Law Review, 2012)
      Like many fields, energy law has had its ups and downs. A period of remarkable activity in the 1970s and early 1980s focused on the efficiencies arising from deregulation of energy markets, but the field attracted much ...
    • Vandenbergh, Michael P.; Rossi, Jim, 1965-; Ruhl, J. B. (Vanderbilt Law Review, 2012)
      Like many fields, energy law has had its ups and downs. A period of remarkable activity in the 1970s and early 1980s focused on the efficiencies arising from deregulation of energy markets, but the field attracted much ...
    • McKanders, Karla (Conversation, 2019)
      I sat in a small room in Tijuana, Mexico with a 13-year-old indigenous Mayan Guatemalan girl. She left Guatemala after a cartel murdered her friend and threatened to rape her. Her mother wanted her to live and believed ...
    • George, Tracey E., 1967-; Solimine, Michael E, 1956- (Supreme Court Economic Review, 2001)
      This article considers systematically whether the Supreme Court is more likely to review an en banc court of appeals decision than a panel decision. First, we consider Supreme Court review of en banc cases during the ...
    • Sitaraman, Ganesh; Epps, Daniel (Yale Law Journal Forum, 2021)
      In "How to Save the Supreme Court," we identified the legitimacy challenge facing the Court, traced it to a set of structural flaws, and proposed novel reforms. Little more than a year later, the conversation around Supreme ...
    • Swain, Carol M. (Carol Miller) (The Chronicle of Higher Education, 1996)
      With the Supreme Court's latest rulings, redistricters can no longer pack minority voters into super-minority districts. The effect of those decisions thus may ulti­ mately be far more beneficial for minority­ group voters ...
    • Cheng, Edward K.; Ginther, Matthew (Seton Hall Law Review, 2018)
      In this Symposium issue celebrating his career, Professor Michael Risinger in Leveraging Surprise proposes using "the fundamental emotion of surprise" as a way of measuring belief for purposes of legal proof. More specifically, ...
    • Slobogin, Christopher, 1951- (Wayne Law Review, 2009)
      My focus will be on the extent to which the Constitution limits government surveillance activities. The details of regulation should be statutory, but the basis for that statutory regulation must be founded on constitutional ...
    • Viscusi, W. Kip; Bell, Jason; Huber, Joel (International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 2011)
      This article evaluates the effect of the choice of survey recruitment mode on the value of water quality in lakes, rivers, and streams. Four different modes are compared:bringing respondents to one central location after ...
    • Ruhl, J. B. (Stanford Environmental Law Journal, 1999)
      This article describes sustainable development as involving five dimensions: environment, economy, equity, time, and space (or scale). I suggest that the complexity inherent in balancing these five dimensions demand ...
    • McKanders, Karla Mari (Harvard Journal on Racial & Ethnic Justice, 2010)
      Latino immigrants are moving to areas of the country that have not seen a major influx of immigrants. As a result of this influx, citizens of these formerly homogenous communities have become increasingly critical of federal ...
    • Wuerth, Ingrid Brunk (Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law, 2011)
      If the international law of immunity once purported to make foreign states, their rulers, their officials, and their boats all identical in some sense--the sovereign equality of states--today immunity distinguishes and ...
    • Brandon, Mark E.; Ely, James W., 1938- (Vanderbilt Law Review, 2009)
      Given the legal academy's penchant for ranking, it is hardly a surprise that legal scholars have turned their attention to crafting lists of the greatest Justices of the Supreme Court. As with ratings of decisions, however, ...
    • Schoenblum, Jeffrey A. (Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law, 2005)
      The market for art and cultural property is international. Demand is intense and not particularly local in terms of consumer preference. 2 Supply responds to this intense international demand. Like most anything else, art ...
    • Seymore, Sean B. (Vanderbilt Law Review, 2016)
      Achieving a robust disclosure from patent applicants is no easy task because it brings to the fore competing goals of the patent system. For example, the law must strike a balance between its interest in early disclosure ...
    • Schoenblum, Jeffrey A. (Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law, 1999)
      The international trust, the subject of the Symposium, is experiencing an extraordinary reception worldwide. It is being utilized by individuals from countries with legal cultures that traditionally have not known this ...
    • Schoenblum, Jeffrey (Vanderbilt Law Review, 2014)
      Increasingly, federal law impacts court decisions involving private wealth transfer. Increasingly, federal law is the central consideration in premortem and postmortem planning for private wealth transfer. Despite this, ...
    • Clayton, Ellen W.; Halverson, Colin M.; Sathe, Nila A.; Malin, Bradley A.; et al. (PLOS One, 2018)
      Concerns about genetic privacy affect individuals' willingness to accept genetic testing in clinical care and to participate in genomics research. To learn what is already known about these views, we conducted a systematic ...