Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
-
- Brigham Young University Law School (777)
- University of Chicago Law School (183)
- Duke Law (171)
- Columbia Law School (157)
- University of Michigan Law School (150)
-
- Georgetown University Law Center (149)
- Duquesne University (146)
- American University Washington College of Law (130)
- University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law (126)
- University of Minnesota Law School (124)
- Cornell University Law School (111)
- Bowdoin College (106)
- University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School (102)
- University of Nevada, Las Vegas -- William S. Boyd School of Law (95)
- Boston University School of Law (92)
- George Washington University Law School (91)
- William & Mary Law School (91)
- Maurer School of Law: Indiana University (85)
- University of Colorado Law School (80)
- Golden Gate University School of Law (77)
- University of Georgia School of Law (71)
- Singapore Management University (70)
- Louisiana State University (68)
- Pace University (68)
- University of Wollongong (68)
- Vanderbilt University Law School (64)
- Northwestern Pritzker School of Law (60)
- Brooklyn Law School (59)
- Texas A&M University School of Law (59)
- Notre Dame Law School (58)
- Keyword
-
- Philosophy (149)
- Theology (147)
- American Religious Democracy (141)
- Hallowed Secularism (141)
- Law (98)
-
- Politics (79)
- Human rights (69)
- Supreme Court (63)
- Climate change (56)
- Bankruptcy (52)
- International law (52)
- Constitutional law (50)
- Copyright (50)
- LSU Student Government (46)
- Antitrust (43)
- International Law (41)
- Jurisprudence (41)
- Intellectual property (40)
- Majority Leader (40)
- United States Supreme Court (39)
- Seperation of church and state (38)
- Legal education (37)
- Constitution (36)
- Criminal law (36)
- Race (36)
- Regulation (36)
- Civil rights (34)
- Constitutional Law (34)
- Corporate governance (33)
- Evidence (33)
- Publication
-
- Faculty Scholarship (734)
- Utah Court of Appeals Briefs (2007– ) (618)
- Articles (327)
- Faculty Publications (257)
- All Faculty Scholarship (230)
-
- Hallowed Secularism (141)
- Scholarly Works (140)
- Utah Supreme Court Briefs (2000– ) (121)
- Journal Articles (115)
- George J. Mitchell Oral History Project (106)
- Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works (92)
- GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works (91)
- Cornell Law Faculty Publications (85)
- Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals (84)
- Publications (81)
- Law Faculty Publications (68)
- Student Senate Enrolled Legislation (68)
- Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications (64)
- Coase-Sandor Working Paper Series in Law and Economics (60)
- Faculty Articles (58)
- Scholarly Articles (58)
- Elisabeth Haub School of Law Faculty Publications (55)
- Articles by Maurer Faculty (52)
- Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law (52)
- Nevada Supreme Court Summaries (51)
- Articles & Chapters (48)
- Minnesota Law Review (48)
- UF Law Faculty Publications (46)
- Articles, Book Chapters, & Popular Press (41)
- Scholarly Publications (37)
- File Type
Articles 5701 - 5723 of 5723
Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
The German Constitutional Court Says 'Ja Zu Deutschland!', Daniel H. Halberstam, Christoph Möllers
The German Constitutional Court Says 'Ja Zu Deutschland!', Daniel H. Halberstam, Christoph Möllers
Articles
In announcing the decision of the Bundesverfassungsgericht (BVerfG - Federal Constitutional Court) on the constitutionality of the Lisbon Treaty, the Presiding Justice of the Second Senate summed up the judgment by proclaiming: “Das Grundgesetz sagt ‘Ja' zum Vertrag von Lissabon.”
The United Nations, The European Union, And The King Of Sweden: Economic Sanctions And Individual Rights In A Plural World Order, Daniel Halberstam, Eric Stein
The United Nations, The European Union, And The King Of Sweden: Economic Sanctions And Individual Rights In A Plural World Order, Daniel Halberstam, Eric Stein
Articles
In the last decade, economic sanctions have become a major instrumentality of the UN Security Council in the struggle against terrorism and lawless violence endangering peace. It is not surprising that innocents would be ensnarled, along with culprits, in the nets of the so-called "smart" or "targeted" sanctions, which are directed against named individuals and groups (as opposed to delinquent States). In such rare cases, as the individual concerned searches for a legal remedy, significant issues of fundamental human rights may arise at the levels of the international, regional, and national legal orders. This essay explores these issues. After examining …
On Law And The Transition To Market: The Case Of Egypt, Lama Abu-Odeh
On Law And The Transition To Market: The Case Of Egypt, Lama Abu-Odeh
Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works
On the eve of independence from European colonialism, Egypt, like most other developing countries, undertook the project of de-linking itself from colonial economy by initiating domestic industrialization. The economic project known as Import Substitution Industrialization (“ISI”) was designed to liberate Egypt from raw commodity production--specifically, agricultural and mineral--servicing its previous colonial master, Great Britain. The engine of development would be an expanding public sector with nationalization and socialism as leitmotifs. In re-orienting the economy towards industrial production, Egypt hoped that the terms of trade with the international economy would significantly improve, thereby leading to an improvement in the living standards …
Reactions: Natsu Taylor Saito's 'Colonial Presumptions: The War On Terror And The Roots Of American Exceptionalism', Lama Abu-Odeh
Reactions: Natsu Taylor Saito's 'Colonial Presumptions: The War On Terror And The Roots Of American Exceptionalism', Lama Abu-Odeh
Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works
Is the word "civilization," evoked by Bush in contemporary times, the direct genealogical descendant of the mission civilatrice evoked by his Anglo Saxon predecessors to justify their onslaught on the native inhabitants of the land they have chosen to settle and appropriate? Is the contemporary project by the current political elites of the US to "spread democracy in the Middle East" the same as and co-equal with the mission to civilize the "beast" in the lands where "beasts" wandered two centuries ago? If the ethno/race of the old mission was Anglo Saxon, what is its contemporary ethnic/race today? Does the …
Microfinance Managers Consider Online Funding: Is It Finance, Marketing, Or Something Else?, Deborah Burand
Microfinance Managers Consider Online Funding: Is It Finance, Marketing, Or Something Else?, Deborah Burand
Articles
Online platforms are changing the way we engage with the world. Facebook links, eBay auctions, ePal chats, even Second Life avatars—these are all online platforms that connect people, ideas, products, and markets. These platforms shape who we connect with as well as how we connect. This concept extends to philanthropy: Online philanthropy is changing the nature of how and where people give.1 An outgrowth of online philanthropy is online social investing. Kiva.org is one of the best known online lending and investment platforms. Since its launch in 2005, Kiva has grabbed the attention (and wallets) of over 350,000 online lenders, …
Marvin Frankel: A Reformer Reassessed, Gerard E. Lynch
Marvin Frankel: A Reformer Reassessed, Gerard E. Lynch
Faculty Scholarship
Legal scholars and critics contribute to the development of law in many ways: the comprehensive treatise, the heavily footnoted law review article, the closely reasoned philosophical essay, the econometric model, the theoretical discourse, the bar association or American Law Institute law reform project, among many others. Law professors dedicate whole careers to perfecting one or more of these forms. But few can claim to have had the impact on the law, the system of criminal justice, and the lives of hundreds of thousands of criminal defendants that Marvin Frankel had with one thin volume addressed to "literate citizens – not …
The Constitutional Legitimacy Of Freestanding Federalism, Gillian E. Metzger
The Constitutional Legitimacy Of Freestanding Federalism, Gillian E. Metzger
Faculty Scholarship
Responding to John F. Manning, Federalism and the Generality Problem in Constitutional Interpretation, 122 Harv.. L. Rev. 2003 (2009).
Assessing Chinese Legal Reforms, Benjamin L. Liebman
Assessing Chinese Legal Reforms, Benjamin L. Liebman
Faculty Scholarship
Over the past thirty years China has engaged in what is perhaps the most rapid development of any legal system in the history of the world. The Chinese legal system has been fundamentally transformed since 1978. At the beginning of the reform era there were few laws or trained personnel. Today, China has sophisticated legal institutions, thousands of laws and regulations, and the third largest number of lawyers in the world. Law has begun to regulate both state and individual behavior in ways that were inconceivable in 1978. Commitment to the rule of law has become an important part of …
A Convenient Constitution? Extraterritoriality After Boumediene, Christina Duffy Ponsa-Kraus
A Convenient Constitution? Extraterritoriality After Boumediene, Christina Duffy Ponsa-Kraus
Faculty Scholarship
Questions concerning the extraterritorial applicability of the Constitution have come to the fore during the "war on terror." In Boumediene v. Bush, the Supreme Court held that noncitizens detained in Guantánamo have the right to challenge their detention in federal court. To reach this conclusion, the Court used the "impracticable and anomalous" test, also known as the 'functional" approach because of its reliance on pragmatic or consequentialist considerations. The test first appeared in a concurring opinion over fifty years ago; in Boumediene, it garnered the votes of a majority.
This Article argues that the Boumediene Court was right …
Secret Evidence And The Due Process Of Terrorist Detentions, Daphne Barak-Erez, Matthew C. Waxman
Secret Evidence And The Due Process Of Terrorist Detentions, Daphne Barak-Erez, Matthew C. Waxman
Faculty Scholarship
Courts across many common law democracies have been wrestling with a shared predicament: proving cases against suspected terrorists in detention hearings requires governments to protect sensitive classified information about intelligence sources and methods, but withholding evidence from suspects threatens fairness and contradicts a basic tenet of adversarial process. This Article examines several models for resolving this problem, including the "special advocate" model employed by Britain and Canada, and the 'Judicial management" model employed in Israel. This analysis shows how the very different approaches adopted even among democracies sharing common legal foundations reflect varying understandings of 'fundamental fairness" or "due process," …
The World Trade Organization: A Legal And Institutional Analysis, Anu Bradford
The World Trade Organization: A Legal And Institutional Analysis, Anu Bradford
Faculty Scholarship
The law of the WTO can be complex and the intricacies of the WTO hard to grasp even by someone who has spent years studying this area of law. In providing a clear, well-structured and highly accessible introduction to the legal and institutional aspects of the WTO, Jan Wouters and Bart De Meester offer a refreshingly uncomplicated book that walks the reader through the basic legal doctrine underlying international trade.
Banking Reform In The Chinese Mirror, Katharina Pistor
Banking Reform In The Chinese Mirror, Katharina Pistor
Faculty Scholarship
This paper analyzes the transactions that led to the partial privatization of China’s three largest banks in 2005-06. It suggests that these transactions were structured to allow for inter-organizational learning under conditions of uncertainty. For the involved foreign investors, participation in large financial intermediaries of central importance to the Chinese economy gave them the opportunity to learn about financial governance in China. For the Chinese banks partnering with more than one foreign investor, their participation allowed them to benefit from the input by different players in the global financial market place and to learn from the range of technical and …
Political Control Of Federal Prosecutions: Looking Back And Looking Forward, Daniel C. Richman
Political Control Of Federal Prosecutions: Looking Back And Looking Forward, Daniel C. Richman
Faculty Scholarship
This Essay explores the mechanisms of control over federal criminal enforcement that the administration and Congress used or failed to use during George W. Bush's presidency. It gives particular attention to Congress, not because legislators played a dominant role, but because they generally chose to play such a subordinate role. My fear is that the media focus on management inadequacies or abuses within the Justice Department during the Bush administration might lead policymakers and observers to overlook the hard questions that remain about how the federal criminal bureaucracy should be structured and guided during a period of rapidly shifting priorities …
Beyond The Wto? An Anatomy Of Eu And Us Preferential Trade Agreements, Henrik Horn, Petros C. Mavroidis, André Sapir
Beyond The Wto? An Anatomy Of Eu And Us Preferential Trade Agreements, Henrik Horn, Petros C. Mavroidis, André Sapir
Faculty Scholarship
It is often alleged that PTAs involving the EC and the US include a significant number of obligations in areas not currently covered by the WTO Agreement, such as investment protection, competition policy, labour standards and environmental protection. The primary purpose of this study is to highlight the extent to which these claims are true. The study divides the contents of all PTAs involving the EC and the US currently notified to the WTO, into 14 'WTO' and 38 'WTO-X' areas, where WTO provisions come under the current mandate of the WTO, and WTO-X provisions deal with issues lying outside …
Chrysler, Gm And The Future Of Chapter 11, Edward R. Morrison
Chrysler, Gm And The Future Of Chapter 11, Edward R. Morrison
Faculty Scholarship
Although they caused great controversy, the Chrysler and GM bankruptcies broke no new ground. They invoked procedures that are commonly observed in modern Chapter 11 reorganization cases. Government involvement did not distort the bankruptcy process; it instead exposed the reality that Chapter 11 offers secured creditors – especially those that supply financing during the bankruptcy case – control over the fate of distressed firms. Because the federal government supplied financing in the Chrysler and GM cases, it possessed the creditor control normally exercised by private lenders. The Treasury Department found itself with virtually the same, unchecked power that the FDIC …
Self-Defense And The Psychotic Aggressor, George P. Fletcher, Luis E. Chiesa
Self-Defense And The Psychotic Aggressor, George P. Fletcher, Luis E. Chiesa
Faculty Scholarship
This chapter presents an authoritative overview of self-defense against the psychotic aggressor. More specifically, it examines whether one can justifiably kill a faultless, insane assailant to save himself or another from imminent and serious harm. It considers the disagreement among scholars as to whether the defensive response should be considered justified or merely excused, or whether the specific ground of acquittal should be self-defense or necessity. The chapter includes comments by some of the nation's top legal scholars from the field of criminal law, tackling topics such as proportionality, self-defense against wrongful attack, justification of homicide against innocent aggressors without …
Debunking Blackstonian Copyright, Shyamkrishna Balganesh
Debunking Blackstonian Copyright, Shyamkrishna Balganesh
Faculty Scholarship
More than two decades ago, in attempting to make sense of the structural dissonance between copyright and free expression, the U.S. Supreme Court famously declared that copyright was intended to be “the engine of free expression.” Ironically, this characterization was at the time intended as little more than a rhetorical device. In that very case, the Court proceeded immediately thereafter to analyze copyright as a “marketable” property right and conclude that absent a showing of market failure, neither fair use nor the First Amendment would preclude a finding of infringement. Instead of injecting a new set of values into copyright …
Abolishing The Time Tax On Voting, Elora Mukherjee
Abolishing The Time Tax On Voting, Elora Mukherjee
Faculty Scholarship
A “time tax” is a government policy or practice that forces one citizen to pay more in time to vote compared with her fellow citizens. While few have noticed the scope of the problem, data indicate that, due primarily to long lines, hundreds of thousands if not millions of voters are routinely unable to vote in national elections as a result of the time tax, and that the problem disproportionately affects minority voters and voters in the South. This Article documents the problem and offers a roadmap for legal and political strategies for solving it. The Article uses as a …
Comment On Developing A Comprehensive Approach To Climate Change Mitigation Policy In The United States: Integrating Levels Of Government And Economic Sectors, Michael B. Gerrard
Comment On Developing A Comprehensive Approach To Climate Change Mitigation Policy In The United States: Integrating Levels Of Government And Economic Sectors, Michael B. Gerrard
Faculty Scholarship
The article by Thomas D. Peterson, Robert B. McKinstry Jr., and John C. Dernbach (PM&D) has two central insights: (1) Any serious national effort to control emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs) must continue to leave important roles to the states; and (2) It would be a mistake to put too many eggs in the cap-and-trade basket. A portfolio approach that utilizes many different regulatory techniques is important.
I certainly agree with PM&D about these insights, and they are correct that much of the current Congressional debate has given too little attention to these considerations. However, I have serious reservations about …
The Pto And The Market For Influence In Patent Law, Clarisa Long
The Pto And The Market For Influence In Patent Law, Clarisa Long
Faculty Scholarship
As statutory schemes go, the patent statute has been relatively stable from 1952 to the present. In contrast to copyright law, where Congress has taken a close – indeed at times intense – interest in the details of the statutory scheme, legislative intervention into the patent statute, when it has occurred, has been more limited and narrower in scope. For many reasons, however, patent law has been disequilibrating over time, and calls for patent reform have been increasing in intensity. One of the many factors contributing to this disequilibration in recent years has been the ongoing emergence of the U.S. …
Religious Law Schools: Tension Between Conscience And Academic Freedom, Kent Greenawalt
Religious Law Schools: Tension Between Conscience And Academic Freedom, Kent Greenawalt
Faculty Scholarship
My comments this afternoon are responsive to John Garvey’s Presidential
Address on Institutional Pluralism at last year’s meeting. The gist of his
address, delivered gracefully, undogmatically, and persuasively, is that it may
be desirable to have law schools that are devoted substantially to particular
endeavors and points of view. Dean Garvey mentioned law schools that
concentrate on teaching particular subjects, such as law and economics, or
training for geographical areas, such as northern New York, or preparing
for forms of practice, such as clinical work, or helping a particular group of
potential lawyers, such as African‑Americans, or reflecting a special …
Tax Policy Challenges, Michael J. Graetz
Tax Policy Challenges, Michael J. Graetz
Faculty Scholarship
In 1995, when the late, great Jack Nolan asked me to deliver the inaugural lecture in honor of Larry Woodworth, I was both honored and flattered. I had come to know Larry Woodworth beginning in 1969, when I was a rookie treasury tax policy staffer. At that time, he had already served the Joint Committee on Taxation for 25 years and had been the third Chief of Staff in its history beginning as chief of staff in 1964. Larry Woodworth was not only as knowledgeable about the tax law as anyone you would ever hope to meet, and as savvy …
Explaining The Sioux Military Commission Of 1862, Maeve Glass
Explaining The Sioux Military Commission Of 1862, Maeve Glass
Faculty Scholarship
Part I of this Note describes current scholarship on the history of military commissions and identifies a gap in the prevailing narrative, namely, an explanation for why the military favored a legal process over collective reprisals or summary executions. Part II seeks to address this gap, by examining the circumstances in which the military convened the commission and the context in which President Abraham Lincoln approved it. Part III concludes that this historical perspective helps clarify the original role of military commissions as articulated in the Supreme Court case of Hamdan v. Rumsfeld and calls into question whether an institution …