Now showing items 670-689 of 1362

    • Ruhl, J. B. (Duke Environmental Law & Policy Forum, 2009)
      The Endangered Species Act (ESA) has long been the workhorse of species protection in contexts for which a species-specific approach can effectively be employed to address discrete human-induced threats that have straightforward ...
    • Vandenbergh, Michael P. (Arkansas Law Review, 2018)
      In response to the shrinking federal role in environmental protection, many policy advocates have focused on the role of states and cities, but this symposium focuses on another important source of sustainability initiatives: ...
    • King, Nancy J., 1958- (Yale Law Journal Online, 2012)
      The Supreme Court in Missouri v. Frye1 and Lafler v. Cooper2 broke new ground by holding for the first time that a defendant’s right to the effective assistance of counsel under the Sixth Amendment can be violated by the ...
    • Gervais, Daniel J. (Columbia Journal of Law & the Arts, 2011)
      I see a bright future for collective management as a model. Each country and each CMO will be different and United States CMOs will likely have fewer collectivized elements than their foreign counterparts. But beyond those ...
    • Jones, Owen D.; Goldsmith, Timothy H. (Columbia Law Review, 2005)
      Society uses law to encourage people to behave differently than they would behave in the absence of law. This fundamental purpose makes law highly dependent on sound understandings of the multiple causes of human behavior. ...
    • Jones, Owen D. (Journal of Contemporary Legal Issues, 1997)
      This Article explores ways in which social science perspectives on behavior can be combined with life science perspectives on behavior to the advantage of law. It emphasizes both values of and techniques for integration, ...
    • Viscusi, W. Kip; Hersch, Joni, 1956- (Review of Law and Economics, 2012)
      This paper reports the distribution of doctoral degrees in economics and in other fields among faculty at the 26 highest ranked law schools. Almost one-third of professors at the top 13 law schools have a Ph.D. degree, ...
    • Edelman, Paul H. (Constitutional Commentary, 2002)
      Can mathematics be used to inform legal analysis? This is not a ridiculous question. Law has certain superficial resemblances to mathematics. One might view the Constitution and various statutes as providing "axioms" for ...
    • Jones, Owen D.; Schall, Jeffrey D.; Shen, Francis X. (Law and Neuroscience, 2014)
      This provides the Summary Table of Contents and Chapter 1 of our coursebook “Law and Neuroscience” (forthcoming April 2014, from Aspen Publishing). Designed for use in both law schools and beyond, the book provides ...
    • Ruhl, J. B.; Salzman, James (Journal of Land Use & Environmental Law, 2007)
      Over the past decade, there has been an explosion of interest in ecosystem services from scientists, economists, government officials, entrepreneurs, and the media. This article traces the development of the ecosystem ...
    • Meyer, Timothy (University of Illinois Law Review, 2019)
      American ambivalence toward international institutions is nothing new. In his farewell address, George Washington famously warned against foreign entanglements. After World War I, the U.S. Senate rejected the Treaty of ...
    • Meyer, Timothy (University of Illinois Law Review Online, 2019)
      American ambivalence toward international institutions is nothing new. In his farewell address, George Washington famously warned against foreign entanglements. After World War I, the U.S. Senate rejected the Treaty of ...
    • Huang, Robin Hui; Thomas, Randall S. (Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law, 2020)
      Shareholder inspection rights allow a shareholder to access the relevant documents of the company in which they hold an interest, so as to address the problem of information asymmetry and reduce the agency costs inherent ...
    • Allensworth, Rebecca Haw (Georgetown Law Journal, 2015)
      In 2013, the Supreme Court made the offhand comment that empirical models and their estimations or predictions are not 'findings offact" deserving of deference on appeal. The four Justices writing in dissent disagreed, ...
    • Jones, Owen D. (Hastings Women's Law Journal, 2000)
      This Article serves as a sequel to a previous Article: Sex, Culture, and the Biology of Rape: Toward Explanation and Prevention, 87 Cal. L. Rev. 827 (1999). Part I briefly considers the threshold question: why consider the ...
    • Clayton, Ellen W. (Journal of Law and the Biosciences, 2019)
      Recent advances in technology have significantly improved the accuracy of genetic testing and analysis, and substantially reduced its cost, resulting in a dramatic increase in the amount of genetic information generated, ...
    • Newton, Michael, 1962- (Loyola University Chicago International Law Review, 2011)
      The struggle to define the contours of the legal regime and to correctly communicate those expectations to the broader audience of civilians is a recurring problem that is integrally related to the current evolution of ...
    • Sherry, Suzanna (Green Bag 2D, 2000)
      Neal Devins says that we don't put political science into our casebooks and Gerald Rosenberg levels the same charge at our scholarship. And so it has fallen to me to defend the ranks of law professors from these scurrilous ...
    • Ruhl, J. B. (Georgia State University Law Review, 2008)
      The legal system. It rolls easily off the tongues of lawyers like a single word - the legal system - as if we all know what it means. But what is the legal system? How does it behave? What are its boundaries? What is its ...
    • Jones, Owen D.; Brosnan, Sarah F. (William & Mary Law Review, 2008)
      Recent work at the intersection of law and behavioral biology has suggested numerous contexts in which legal thinking could benefit by integrating knowledge from behavioral biology. In one of those contexts, behavioral ...