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Now showing items 21-30 of 110
What Happens When the Green New Deal Meets the Old Green Laws?
(Vermont Law Review, 2020)
The multi-faceted infrastructure goals of the Green New Deal will be impossible to achieve in the desired time frames if the existing federal, state, and local siting and environmental protection statutory regimes are ...
Changing Counterspeech
(Cleveland State Law Review, 2021)
A cornerstone of First Amendment doctrine is that counterspeech - speech that responds to speech, including disfavored, unpopular, or offensive speech - is preferable to government censorship or speech regulation. The ...
Ecosystem Services and Federal Public Lands: A Quiet Revolution in Natural Resources Management
(University of Colorado Law Review, 2020)
The major federal public land management agencies (the Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, Park Service,
Fish & Wildlife Service, and Department of Defense) have increasingly adopted a language that did not exist ...
Development of Brief Child Nutrition and Physical Activity Screening Questions for Electronic Health Record Use
(Childhood Obesity, 2020)
To develop and test brief nutrition and physical activity screening questions for children ages 2–11 years that could be used as a pragmatic screening tool to tailor counseling, track behavior change, and improve population ...
A Regulatory Policy Strategy for Protecting Immigrant Workers
(Seton Hall Law Review, 2021)
Immigration has become a focal point of many political campaigns, most notably that of President Trump in 2016 and again in 2020. Populist rhetoric also decries immigrant workers for taking Americans' jobs and depressing ...
The Machine as Author
(Iowa Law Review, 2020)
The use of Artificial Intelligence ("AI") machines using deep learning neural networks to create material that facially looks like it should be protected by copyright is growing exponentially. From articles in national ...
Introduction: Governing Wicked Problems
(Vanderbilt Law Review, 2020)
"Wicked problems." It just says it all. Persistent social problems--poverty, food insecurity, climate change, drug addiction, pollution, and the list goes on--seem aptly condemned as wicked. But what makes them wicked, and ...
Direct-to-Consumer Genetic Testing: Prospective Users' Attitudes Toward Information About Ancestry and Biological Relationships
(PLoS One, 2021)
Direct-to-consumer genetic testing is marketed as a tool to uncover ancestry and kin. Recent studies of actual and potential users have demonstrated that individuals’ responses to the use of these tests for these purposes ...
Direct-to-Consumer Genetic Testing: Prospective Users' Attitudes Toward Information About Ancestry and Biological Relationships
(PLoS One, 2021)
Direct-to-consumer genetic testing is marketed as a tool to uncover ancestry and kin. Recent studies of actual and potential users have demonstrated that individuals’ responses to the use of these tests for these purposes ...
The Wicked Problem of Zoning
(Vanderbilt Law Review, 2020)
Zoning is the quintessential wicked problem. Professors Rittel and Webber, writing in the 1970s, identified as "wicked" those problems that technocratic expertise cannot necessarily solve.' Wicked problems arise when the ...