Now showing items 398-417 of 1354

    • Mikos, Robert A. (Widener Law Review, 2020)
      The states have launched a revolution in marijuana policy, creating a wide gap between state and federal marijuana law. While nearly every state has legalized marijuana in at least some circumstances, federal law continues ...
    • Thomas, Randall S., 1955- (Vanderbilt Law Review, 2008)
      Each of the articles in this Symposium sheds new light on the ever-changing role of institutional investors in U.S. corporate governance and corporate litigation. They cover a broad range of topics, including institutional ...
    • Newton, Michael A., 1962- (Texas International Law Journal, 2009)
      This article challenges the prevailing view that U.S. "exceptionalism" provides the strongest narrative for the U.S. rejection of Additional Protocol I to the 1949 Geneva Conventions. The United States chose not to adopt ...
    • Slobogin, Christopher, 1951- (Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law, 2013)
      This symposium, comprising six articles in addition to this one, was triggered by a spate of Supreme Court opinions occurring over the last seven years, all of which raise the two questions in the title to this article ...
    • Rogal, Lauren (Seton Hall Law Review, 2019)
      The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (“TCJA”) reformed charity executive compensation for the first time in decades, introducing an across-the-board excise tax on compensation over $1 million.1 Its enactment represents a ...
    • Thomas, Randall S., 1955-; Wells, Harwell (Minnesota Law Review, 2011)
      This Article proposes a new approach to monitoring executive compensation. While the public seems convinced that executives at public corporations are paid too much, so far attempts to rein in executive compensation have ...
    • Serkin, Christopher (New York University Law Review, 2009)
      This Article identifies property law's special protection for existing uses, explores possible justifications for this protection, and argues that none can support the strong protection that existing uses currently enjoy. ...
    • Slobogin, Christopher (Seton Hall Law Review, 2008)
      This article, written for a symposium on "Guilt v. Guiltiness: Are the Right Rules for Trying Factual Innocence Inevitably the Wrong Rules for Trying Culpability?," argues that the definition of expertise in the criminal ...
    • Thomas, Randall S., 1955- (Vanderbilt Law Review, 2004)
      If we look at convergence through the lens of the Risk Adjustment Theory, then international pay convergence will only occur if U.S. and foreign CEOs' firm-specific risk levels converge. Empirically, this is a difficult ...
    • Clarke, Jessica A. (Northwestern University Law Review, 2018)
      In recent decades, legal scholars have advanced sophisticated models for understanding prejudice and discrimination, drawing on disciplines such as psychology, sociology, and economics. These models explain how inequality ...
    • Gervais, Daniel J. (Journal of Intellectual Property, Information Technology and Electronic Commerce Law, 2019)
      This article reviews the application of several IP rights (copyright, patent, sui generis database right, data exclusivity and trade secret) to Big Data. Beyond the protection of software used to collect and process Big ...
    • Moran, Beverly I. (North Carolina Law Review, 1998)
      The politics behind tax legislation are explored in order to demonstrate that, rather than being surprising or unexpected, it is easily predictable that federal tax laws would favor whites over blacks.
    • Rubin, Edward (The University of Pacific Law Review, 2021)
      This article proposes a different rationale for corporate democracy, one that extends more broadly to all forms of employment. It is based on an equivalence, not an analogy. The equivalence is that subordination feels ...
    • Miller, Spring (Clinical Legal Education Association, 2019)
      As a relatively new externship instructor, I spend a lot of time thinking about externships – what they mean for our students, what they add to the clinical curriculum and law school curriculum more broadly, and how best ...
    • Yadav, Yesha (Columbia Law Review, 2021)
      This Article shows that Treasury market structure is fragile, weakened by a regulatory model poorly suited to match its design. First, public oversight of Treasuries is fragmented, divided between five or more agencies. ...
    • Anderson-Watts, Rachael (Michigan Journal of Gender & Law, 2008)
      Informed consent is a common law concept rooted in the idea that "[e]very human being of adult years and sound mind has a right to determine what shall be done with his own body."' Its aim is to ensure that each patient ...
    • Maroney, Terry A. (Notre Dame Law Review, 2009)
      Recent scientific findings about the developing teen brain have both captured public attention and begun to percolate through legal theory and practice. Indeed, many believe that developmental neuroscience contributed to ...
    • Rossi, Jim, 1965-; Seidenfeld, Mark (Notre Dame Law Review, 2000)
      This essay responds to claims that the "new" nondelegation doctrine, applied by D.C. Circuit Judge Stephen Williams in "American Trucking Association, Inc. v. EPA", 175 F.3d 1027 (D.C. Cir. 1999), advances the rule of law. ...
    • Brandon, Mark E. (Texas Law Review, 1999)
      In recent years, a number of observers of American politics, law, and society have decried what seem to be fundamental shifts in the structure and function of the family. According to some, these shifts, perhaps reinforced ...
    • Ruhl, J.B. (Washington University Journal of Law & Policy, 2002)
      Second in my series of articles on farming and environmental policy, this article examines farmland stewardship rhetoric in light of the reality of extensive agricultural exemptions from environmental regulation.