Now showing items 56-75 of 1354

    • Thomas, Randall S.; Van Horn, R. Lawrence (Arizona Law Review, 2016)
      College presidents and football coaches are frequently criticized for their high compensation. In this paper, we argue that these criticisms are unmerited, as the markets for both college presidents and football coaches ...
    • Viscusi, W. Kip; Viscusi, W. Kip (American Economic Review, 1985)
      There has been increasing interest in whether normative models of individual choice under uncertainty accord with actual behavior. These concerns have been much greater than in other economic contexts because of the ...
    • Blair, Margaret (Cornell Law Review, 2020)
      Corporate law scholars and economists have expressed concern recently about the fact that the number of publicly traded corporations in the United States has declined significantly since a peak in the late 1990s. In this ...
    • Viscusi, W. Kip; Hamilton, James, 1961- (The American Economic Review, 1999)
      Using original data on the cleanup of 130 hazardous waste sites, we examine the degree Superfund decisions are driven by efficiency concerns, biases in risk perceptions, and political factors. Target risk levels chosen by ...
    • Ruhl, J. B.; Ruhl, Harold J., Jr. (University of California at Davis Law Review, 1997)
      This article is the third in my series of articles exploring the application of complex adaptive systems (CAS) theory to legal systems. Building on the model outlined in the first two installments (in the Duke and Vanderbilt ...
    • Viscusi, W. Kip; Hersch, Joni, 1956- (Law & Contemporary Problems, 2014)
      Calabresi’s theory of tort liability (1961) as a risk distribution mechanism established insurance as an objective of tort liability. Calabresi’s risk-spreading concept of tort has provided the impetus for much of the ...
    • Rossi, Jim, 1965- (Michigan Law Review, 2011)
      State constitutions are terribly important legal documents, but their interpretation is remarkably understudied (and, of course, highly undertheorized) in the academic literature. This review essay discusses Robert Williams’s ...
    • Sharfstein, Daniel J. (Virginia Law Review, 2012)
      For a generation since Margaret Jane Radin’s classic article Property and Personhood, scholars have viewed personhood as a conception of property that affirms autonomy, dignity, and basic civil rights, a progressive ...
    • Seymore, Sean B., 1971- (Notre Dame Law Review, 2011)
      Patent law is constantly evolving to accommodate advances in science and technology. But, for a variety of reasons, some aspects of patent doctrine have not evolved over time leading to a growing disconnect between the ...
    • Thomas, Randall S., 1955-; Hansen, Robert Gordon, 1957- (Northwestern University Law Review, 1993)
      Numerous legal academics and practitioners have criticized the handling by plaintiffs' attorneys of large-scale class action and derivative lawsuits. These critiques point out attorneys' abuse of the legal system, ranging ...
    • Wuerth, Ingrid Brunk (Boston College Law Review, 2005)
      Although international law has figured prominently in many disputes around actions of the U.S. military, the precise relationship between international law and the President's war powers has gone largely unexplored. This ...
    • Gervais, Daniel J. (Columbia Journal of Law & the Arts, 2015)
      The fate of professional creators is a major cultural issue. While specific copyright rules are obviously contingent and should be adapted to the new realities of online distribution and easy reuse, professional authorship ...
    • Viscusi, W. Kip; Hakes, Jahn K. (Southern Economic Journal, 2007)
      This article uses several within-sample tests to assess whether current seatbelt usage decisions are consistent with the stated preferences of survey respondents. The expressed survey values of statistical life are positively ...
    • Newton, Michael A. (Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law, 2015)
      This essay refocuses the debate over autonomous weapons systems to consider the potentially salutary effects of the evolving technology. Law does not exist in a vacuum and cannot evolve in the abstract. Jus in bello norms ...
    • Williams, David, 1948- (Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law, 1988)
      If the sole object of our tax law is certainty, then the quest for a bright-line, mechanical test would appear to be justified. Fairness, however, is an equally important objective. If fairness is sacrificed in our rush ...
    • Newton, Michael A. (Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law, 2015)
      This essay refocuses the debate over autonomous weapons systems to consider the potentially salutary effects of the evolving technology. Law does not exist in a vacuum and cannot evolve in the abstract. Jus in bello norms ...
    • Ruhl, J. B. (Land Use & Environmental Law, 2007)
      In his majority opinion in Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council, Justice Scalia established the relevant background principles of state property law as the reference point for testing whether public regulation or private ...
    • Ruhl, J. B.; Blumm, Michael C. (Ecology Law Quarterly, 2010)
      One of the principal, if unexpected, results of the Supreme Court's 1992 decision in "Lucas v. South Carolina" Coastal Commission is the rise of background principles of property and nuisance law as a categorical defense ...
    • Sharfstein, Daniel J. (William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal, 2011)
      I was a student in Carol Rose's property course twelve years ago, and she was the first law professor whose scholarship I sought out and read. Going into my IL spring semester, if I had to guess how I would spend my ...
    • Rossi, Jim, 1965- (Duke Law Journal, 2001)
      This article addresses problems associated with settlement of appeals of legislative rules adopted by administrative agencies. Settlement is a common and important tool for avoiding litigation, but it also raises potential ...