Now showing items 624-643 of 1354

    • 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 ...
    • Slobogin, Christopher, 1951- (Alabama Law Review, 2004)
      In "Atkins v. Virginia", the U.S. Supreme Court held that people with mental retardation may not be executed. z Many advocates for people with disability cheered the decision, because it provides a group of disabled people ...
    • Edelman, Paul H. (Michigan Law Review Online, 2018)
      In Evenwel v Abbott the Supreme Court left open the question of whether states could employ population measures other than total population as a basis for drawing representative districts so as to meet the requirement of ...
    • Cheng, Edward K. (Journal of Quantitative Analysis in Sports, 2013-02-22)
      In their respective memoirs, mountaineers David Roberts and Ed Viesturs express a fundamental disagreement over the risks associated with climbing high-altitude (8000m) peaks. (Viesturs and Roberts, 2006, Roberts, 2005). ...
    • Clayton, Ellen W.; Slobogin, Christopher; Hazel, J.W.; Malin, B.A. (Science, 2018)
      There is evidence that existing forensic databases have more than made up for their initial costs by increasing the efficiency, accuracy, and success rate of ongoing criminal investigations and by deterring would-be crimals. ...
    • Skiba, Paige Marta; O'Connor, Erin O'Hara; Levinson, Ariana R. (Florida State University Law Review, 2021)
      Labor arbitration is often viewed as a more peaceful, productive, and private alternative to workplace strikes and violence. On the other hand, statutory laws are intended to protect all workers, and contract law default ...
    • Serkin, Christopher; Tebbe, Nelson (Cornell Law Review, 2016)
      "[W]e must never forget, that it is a constitution we are expounding.” If there was such a danger when Chief Justice John Marshall wrote those words, there is none today. Americans regularly assume that the Constitution ...
    • Ruhl, J. B. (Minnesota Law Review, 2003)
      The Article evaluates the Endangered Species Act using Dan Farber's theory of eco-pragmatism. Eco-pragmatism employs environmental baselines, a moderated precautionary principle, and adaptive management to mediate environmental ...
    • Williams, David, 1948- (Capital University Law Review, 1991)
      A recent Louis Harris poll revealed that seventy-five percent of the American public believes that college athletics are a mess.' Certainly, if you had read such books as College Sports Inc. ,2 Undue Process,3 Major ...
    • Sherry, Suzanna; Farber, Daniel A., 1950- (California Law Review, 1995)
      Conventional concepts of merit are under attack by some Critical Legal Scholars, Critical Race Theorists, and radical feminists. These critics contend that "merit" is only a social construct designed to maintain the power ...
    • Sherry, Suzanna (Vanderbilt Law Review, 2016-05)
      Sanford Levinson calls for a new constitutional convention in Our Undemocratic Constitution: Where the Constitution Goes Wrong (and How We the People Can Correct It). This review explains how Levinson overstates the ...
    • Thomas, Randall S., 1955-; Core, John E., 1961-; Guay, Wayne R. (Michigan Law Review, 2005)
      In this paper, we review Pay Without Performance by Professors Lucian Bebchuk and Jesse Fried. The book develops and summarizes the leading critiques of current executive compensation practices in the U.S., and offers a ...
    • Moran, Beverly I. (University of California at Davis Law Review, 2012)
      This article asks whether Muslims whose religious beliefs prevent investment in their employers’ private pension plans have a right to religious accommodation. This is a real issue for a growing part of the population whose ...
    • Thomas, Randall S., 1955-; Cotter, James; Palmiter, Alan R. (Villanova Law Review, 2010)
      This article analyzes mutual fund voting data from 2003-2008, the first five proxy seasons for which this data is available, and seeks to identify the extent to which mutual funds vote consistently with the voting ...
    • Sherry, Suzanna (Minnesota Law Review, 1986)
      Members of the dominant faction of the current Supreme Court are apparently trying to have their cake and eat it, too. In some contexts, the Court uses constitutionally grounded notions of judicial restraint to deny ...
    • Bressman, Michael; Laguarda, Fernando R. (Creighton Law Review, 1997)
      Part I of this Article reviews the Jaffee decision.' Part II discusses the meaning of the Supreme Court's opinion, focusing on the Court's analysis of the important interests at stake in recognizing the asserted testimonial ...
    • Thomas, Randall S.; Wells, Harwell (Duke Law Journal, 2016)
      This Article explores the historical development of the academic analysis of corporate law over the past forty years through the scholarship of one of its most influential commentators, Professor James D. Cox of the Duke ...
    • Hersch, Joni, 1956-; Reagan, Patricia B. (Applied Economics, 1994)
      Recently, researchers have challenged the validity of the dominant theories of wage growth, claiming that the observed positive relation between wages and tenure is an artefact of omitted job match quality. In sharp contrast ...