Now showing items 164-183 of 1354

    • Ruhl, J. B.; Salzman, James (California Law Review, 2010)
      Mandates that agencies solve massive problems such as sprawl and climate change roll easily out of the halls of legislatures, but as a practical matter what can any one agency do about them? Serious policy challenges such ...
    • Vandenbergh, Michael P. (Southern California Law Review, 2008)
      The central problem confronting climate change scholars and policymakers is how to create incentives for China and the United States to make prompt, large emissions reductions. China recently surpassed the United States ...
    • Ruhl, J.B. (Journal of Energy, Climate, and the Environment, 2010)
      This Article has been in press for several months without opportunity for updating, and thus does not reflect EPA’s Clean Air Act rule promulgations and several other relevant events. Nevertheless, the basic thrust of the ...
    • Hans, G.G. (Clinical Law Review, 2021)
      This Essay explores clinical hiring practices as an expression of community values. In particular, it discusses how lawyers become clinical faculty to reflect on whether and how prior clinical teaching experience should ...
    • McKanders, Karla Mari (Clinical Law Review, 2010)
      Clinical legal education is at a crossroads. With studies like the Macrate Report, Carnegie Foundation Report “Educating Lawyers,” and Best Practices for Legal Education there is greater focus on experiential learning. ...
    • Ruhl, J. B. (Duke Environmental Law & Policy Forum, 1999)
      This article explores sustainable development and environmental justice as potentially conflicting policy goals. Sustainable development includes equity as one of its five dimensions (in addition to environment, economy, ...
    • Meyer, Timothy (University of Pennsylvania Law Review, 2012)
      Codifying decentralized forms of law, such as the common law and customary law, has been a cornerstone of the positivist turn in legal theory since at least the nineteenth century. Commentators laud codification’s purported ...
    • O'Connor, Erin O'Hara, 1965-; Hill, Claire A. (Washington University Law Review, 2006)
      Interpersonal trust is currently receiving widespread attention in the academy. Many legal scholars incorrectly assume that interpersonal trust is an unmitigated good (or bad) and that legal policy should therefore be ...
    • Moran, Beverly; Hersch, Joni (SMU Law Review, 2015)
      Scholars have found that men who physically harm their intimate partners receive less punishment than men who harm strangers. In other words, in the criminal setting, coitus has consequences. In particular, for female ...
    • Hersch, Joni; Moran, Beverly (SMU Law Review, 2015)
      Scholars have found that men who physically harm their intimate partners receive less punishment than men who harm strangers. In other words, in the criminal setting, coitus has consequences. In particular, for female ...
    • Gervais, Daniel J. (Canadian Journal of Law & Technology, 2002)
      In this paper, we will compare the current Canadian framework and activities of Collective Management Organizations with the situation in a number of other major countries and suggest possible improvements to the current ...
    • Allensworth, Rebecca Hall (Vanderbilt Law Review, 2016-01)
      Modern antitrust law pursues a seemingly unitary goal: competition. In fact, competition—whether defined as a process or as a set of outcomes associated with competitive markets—is multifaceted. What are offered in antitrust ...
    • Cheng, Edward (Harvard Law Review, 2000)
      Preemption is probably the most frequently used constitutional doctrine in practice. It is the doctrine by which Congress supersedes state law and establishes uniform federal regulatory schemes to ensure the smooth ...
    • Thomas, Randall S., 1955-; Cox, James D., 1943- (European Company and Financial Law Review, 2009)
      Episodic and even sometimes systematic misbehavior by businessmen and corporate entities is ubiquitous. While Enron and WorldCom were the battle cries for corporate reform in the U.S. so it was with Ahold and Parmalat ...
    • Rossi, Jim, 1965- (Vanderbilt Law Review, 1998)
      This article addresses the implications of retail competition in public utility industries, particularly electricity, for utility service obligations. After tracing the history of the common law duty to serve applicable ...
    • Slobogin, Christopher, 1951- (Fordham Urban Law Journal, 2013)
      Professor Capers's article helps stimulate thinking about the way in which community views and individual rights interact. In my view, where police propose to conduct surveillance of groups, as occurs with camera surveillance ...
    • Slobogin, Christopher, 1951- (North Carolina Journal of International Law & Commercial Regulation, 2011)
      In the search and seizure context, the United States is much more heavily wedded to warrants and exclusion than European countries and in the interrogation setting requires more robust warnings than most nations in Europe. ...
    • Thomas, Randall S., 1955-; Hill, Jennifer G. (Jennifer Gae); Masulis, Ronald W. (Vanderbilt Law Review, 2011)
      The results of our comparison of U.S. and Australian contracts offer some interesting contrasts with several earlier studies that compare U.S. and U.K. CEO compensation. In those prior studies, the authors conclude that ...
    • Hersch, Joni, 1956- (The American Economic Review, 1998)
      Women have largely been excluded from analyses of compensating differentials for job risk since they are predominantly employed in safer, white-collar occupations. New data reveal that their injury experience is considerable. ...
    • Hersch, Joni, 1956- (American Economic Review: Papers & Proceedings, 2011)
      This paper provides evidence of the relation between the risk of sexual harassment and wages. While one approach to detecting the effect on wages of sexual harassment would be to estimate wage equations controlling for ...