Now showing items 340-359 of 1354

    • Maroney, Terry A. (Vanderbilt Law Review, 2009)
      In Gonzales v. Carhart the Supreme Court invoked post-abortion regret to justify a ban on a particular abortion procedure. The Court was proudly folk-psychological, representing its observations about women's emotional ...
    • Maroney, Terry A. (American Criminal Law Review, 2006)
      Adjudicative competence, more commonly referred to as competence to stand trial, is a highly under-theorized area of law. Though it is well established that, to be competent, a criminal defendant must have a "rational" as ...
    • Maroney, Terry A. (California Law Review, 2011)
      Judges are human and experience emotion when hearing cases, though the standard account of judging long has denied that fact. In the post-realist era it is possible to acknowledge that judges have emotional reactions to ...
    • Maroney, Terry A. (Court Review, 2013)
      Judges, like all of us, have been acculturated to an ideal of dispassion. But judges experience emotion on a regular basis. Judicial emotion must be managed competently. The psychology of emotion regulation can help judges ...
    • Thomas, Randall S.; Schwab, Stewart J. (Washington & Lee Law Review, 2006)
      In this paper, we examine the key legal characteristics of 375 employment contracts between some of the largest 1500 public corporations and their Chief Executive Officers. We look at the actual language of these contracts, ...
    • Thomas, Randall S., 1955-; Schwab, Stewart J. (Washington & Lee Law Review, 2006)
      In this paper, we examine the key legal characteristics of 375 employment contracts between some of the largest 1500 public corporations and their Chief Executive Officers. We look at the actual language of these contracts, ...
    • Thomas, Randall S., 1955- (Vanderbilt Law Review, 2015)
      Employment contracts for most employees are not publicly available, leaving researchers to speculate on whether they contain post-employment restrictions on employee mobility, and if so, what those provisions look like. ...
    • Ruhl, J. B.; Markell, David L. (Florida Law Review, 2012)
      While legal scholarship seeking to assess the impact of litigation on the direction of climate change policy is abundant and growing in leaps and bounds, to date it has relied on and examined only small, isolated pieces ...
    • Hersch, Joni, 1956-; Viscusi, W. Kip; O'Connell, Jeffrey (Journal of Legal Studies, 2007)
      The early offer reform proposal for medical malpractice provides an option for claimants to receive prompt payment of all their net economic losses and reasonable attorney fees. Using a large sample of closed individual ...
    • Viscusi, W. Kip; Hersch, Joni, 1956-; O'Connell, Jeffrey (Journal of Legal Studies, 2007)
      The early offer reform proposal for medical malpractice provides an option for claimants to receive prompt payment of all their net economic Losses and reasonable attorney fees. Using a Large sample of closed individual ...
    • Slobogin, Christopher, 1951- (New Criminal Law Review, 2014)
      This essay is a response to an article by Paul Robinson, Joshua Barton, and Matthew Lister in this issue of New Criminal Law Review that criticizes an article I authored with Lauren Brinkley-Rubinstein entitled Putting ...
    • Guthrie, Chris; George, Tracey E., 1967- (Florida State University Law Review, 1999)
      The sudden, rapid, and widespread increase in the number of specialized law reviews has attracted relatively little scholarly attention even though it is the most significant development in legal academic publishing in ...
    • Rossi, Jim, 1965-; Weighner, Mollie (Iowa Law Review, 1991)
      Since the Supreme Court held the prohibition of lawyer advertising unconstitutional in Bates v. State Bar of Arizonal American lawyers have engaged in heated debate over the appropriateness of advertising for their profession. ...
    • Rossi, Jim, 1965-; Gey, Steven G. (Steven Gene), 1956- (Florida State University Law Review, 2005)
      Inspired by the burgeoning empirical literature on the judiciary, the editors of the Florida State University Law Review have solicited some papers from leading scholars and federal courts of appeals judges, asking them ...
    • George, Tracey E., 1967- (Indiana Law Journal, 2006)
      Empirical legal scholarship is arguably the most significant emerging intellectual movement. Empirical legal scholarship (ELS), as the term is generally used in law schools, refers to a specific type of empirical research: ...
    • Slobogin, Christopher, 1951- (Michigan Journal of International Law, 2001)
      This article takes a comparative and empirical look at two of the most significant methods of police investigation: searches for and seizures of tangible evidence and interrogation of suspects. It first compares American ...
    • Maroney, Terry (Onati Socio-Legal Series, 2019)
      The empirical study of judicial emotion has enormous but largely untapped potential to illuminate a previously underexplored aspect of judging, its processes, outputs, and impacts. After defining judicial emotion, this ...
    • Sherry, Suzanna (Law & Inequality, 1990)
      Many of you have seen or heard in the media much discussion about last term's employment discrimination cases. Indeed, last term there was an extraordinary amount of activity in the Supreme Court on employment discrimination. ...
    • Meyers, Erin E.; Hersch, Joni (Cornell Law Review, 2021)
      Many businesses purchase Employment Practices Liability Insurance (EPLI), a form of insurance that protects them from claims of discrimination, harassment, retaliation, and wrongful termination. But critics of EPLI argue ...
    • Seymore, Sean B., 1971- (Northwestern Journal of Technology and Intellectual Property, 2008)
      Possibly in response to criticisms that the U.S. patent system affords too much legal protection to patent owners, the courts have begun to chip away at patent rights. Curiously enough, the Supreme Court has heard a ...