Now showing items 607-626 of 1354

    • Wuerth, Ingrid Brunk (Texas Law Review, 2017)
      International law is in a period of transition. After World War II, but especially since the 1980s, human rights expanded to almost every corner of international law. In doing so, they changed core features of international ...
    • Gervais, Daniel J. (Fordham Intellectual Property, Media & Entertainment Journal, 2002)
      Intellectual property concepts embodied in international treaties and national laws date back to the eighteenth century. Many fundamental concepts (originality in copyright law; confusion in trademark law; novelty or ...
    • Stack, Kevin M. (Michigan Law Review, 2012)
      The age of statutes has given way to an era of regulations, but our jurisprudence has fallen behind. Despite the centrality of regulations to law, courts have no intelligible approach to regulatory interpretation. The ...
    • Stack, Kevin M. (George Mason Law Review, 2015)
      A lively debate has emerged over the deferential standard of review courts apply when reviewing an agency’s interpretation of its own regulations. That standard, traditionally associated with Bowles v. Seminole Rock & Sand ...
    • Shinall, Jennifer B. (Marquette Benefits & Social Welfare Review, 2017)
      For Americans in the labor market with health conditions that fall outside the scope of the ADA, the rehabilitation Act, and GINA, antihealthism legislation, like the kind proposed by Roberts and Leonard, 9would unquestionably ...
    • Mikos, Robert A. (Boston University Law Review, 2021)
      A growing number of states have authorized firms to produce and sell cannabis within their borders, but not across state lines. Moreover, many of these legalization states have barred nonresidents from owning local cannabis ...
    • Ruhl, J.B. (Natural Resources Journal, 1988)
      Arbitrary political boundaries are no barrier at all to the physical effects of pollution and resource development. Yet, despite the optimism that ushered in the heightened environmental consciousness of the past several ...
    • Rose, Amanda M.; Squire, Richard (Northwestern University Law Review, 2011)
      The modern trend is for investors to diversify. Shareholders who own one S&P 500 firm tend to own many of the others as well. This trend casts doubt on the traditional compensation and deterrence rationales for legal rules ...
    • Maroney, Terry; Blix, Stina Bergman; Mack, Kathy; Anleu, Sharyn Roach (Onati Socio-Legal Series, 2019)
      This special issue of Oñati Socio-Legal Series, titled Judging, Emotion and Emotion Work, is the result of presentations and discussions during an interdisciplinary workshop at the International Institute for the Sociology ...
    • Sherry, Suzanna (Journal of Law, 2014)
      Students rarely have the time to repackage last semester's research for submission to law reviews. Even if they do, law reviews are loathe to publish work submitted by students. Publication in a peer-reviewed journal is ...
    • Slobogin, Christopher, 1951- (Florida Law Review, 2009)
      Begun in the 1950s, the drafting of the Model Penal Code (the Code) differed from the typical American Law Institute (AL) "restatement" of the law project because it was an explicit attempt to provide a model statute that ...
    • Ruhl, J.B.; Salzman, James (Vanderbilt Law Review, 2020)
      "Wicked problems." It just says it all. Persistent social problems--poverty, food insecurity, climate change, drug addiction, pollution, and the list goes on--seem aptly condemned as wicked. But what makes them wicked, and ...
    • Sherry, Suzanna (Vanderbilt Law Review, 2016)
      It is a pleasure and a privilege to write an introduction to this Symposium celebrating Dean Erwin Chemerinsky's important new book, The Case Against the Supreme Court. Chemerinsky is one of the leading constitutional ...
    • Jones, Owen D.; Kurzban, Robert (University of Chicago Law Review, 2010)
      Recent work reveals, contrary to wide-spread assumptions, remarkably high levels of agreement about how to rank order, by blameworthiness, wrongs that involve physical harms, takings of property, or deception in exchanges. ...
    • Viscusi, W. Kip; Magat, Wesley A.; Huber, Joel (The RAND Journal of Economics, 2012)
      After developing a conceptual analysis of consumer valuation of multiple risks, we explore both economic and cognitive hypotheses regarding individual risk-taking. Using a sample of over 1,500 consumers, our study ...
    • Gervais, Daniel J. (U.C. Irvine Law Review, 2018)
      The triangular interface between trade, intellectual property (IP) and human rights has yet to be fully formed, both doctrinally and normatively. Adding investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) to the mix increases the ...
    • King, Nancy J.; Wright, Ronald F. (Texas Law Review, 2016)
      This article, the most comprehensive study of judicial participation in plea negotiations since the 1970s, reveals a stunning array of new procedures that involve judges routinely in the settlement of criminal cases. ...
    • Newton, Michael A. (Cornell International Law Journal, 2005)
      The creation of the Iraqi Special Tribunal in December 2003 by Iraqi authorities who were at the time under the legal occupation of the Coalition Provisional Authority marked the emergence of a new form of internationalized ...
    • Rossi, Jim, 1965- (Texas Law Review, 1998)
      This is a critical review essay, exploring the thesis advanced by Gregory Sidak and Daniel Spulber in their book Deregulatory Takings and the Regulatory Contract (Cambridge University Press 1997). Sidak and Spulber argue ...
    • Sherry, Suzanna (Green Bag 2D, 2002)
      Everyone is picking on the Supreme Court these days. To be sure, some of the criticism is warranted: the Court has butchered history - to say nothing of constitutional text - in its attempt to interpret the Eleventh ...