Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Law
A Hot Topic: Is The Fda’S Approach To Sunscreen Regulation Failing Consumers?, Haley Westman
A Hot Topic: Is The Fda’S Approach To Sunscreen Regulation Failing Consumers?, Haley Westman
Seattle University Law Review
This Note suggests a better balance between allowing sunscreen innovation and protecting the public from unsafe products. Part I of this Note will review the factual background of the public’s attention to sunscreen, explain the current sunscreen issues in the news, and highlight the different actors involved in the growing discourse surrounding sunscreen. Part I will also show that the actors involved in the sunscreen industry—scientific researchers, social media influencers, and the public at large—have considerable influence on consumers’ trust in sunscreen, their buying habits, and the FDA’s approach to sunscreen regulation. Part II of this Note will outline the …
The Effects Of Visions Condition In E-Consumer Protection A Comparative Study In Transaction Law, Ali Al-Mehdawi
The Effects Of Visions Condition In E-Consumer Protection A Comparative Study In Transaction Law, Ali Al-Mehdawi
UAEU Law Journal
The introduction of electronic financial transactions, which have been classified as distance and international contracts, has created the necessity of creating domestic and international laws that deal with such transactions; the e-consumer protection occupies a large proportion of this field. This study discusses e-consumer protection with an emphasis on analyzing the Emirates' Civil Transaction Legislation, Electronic Transaction Legislation No. 1, 2006 and the Consumer Protection Law No. 24, 2006. The study includes a discussion of e-consumer protection through `viewing goods stipulation, the problems that arise from such a protective condition, and suggests solutions to solve such problems.
Learning From Law Students: How Phds Might Seek Legal Remedy In The Face Of Widespread Unemployment, Emily Grothoff
Learning From Law Students: How Phds Might Seek Legal Remedy In The Face Of Widespread Unemployment, Emily Grothoff
Indiana Law Journal
This Note examines overproduction and underemployment problems facing the academic market and PhD graduates9 from a legal perspective. Part I will briefly review key legal takeaways from several distinctive cases that law school graduates brought against their almae matres regarding poor employability. Part II then describes the particularities of the “PhD problem” and how it compares and contrasts with the problem that J.D. holders recently faced. Finally, Part III will examine what legal remedies disenfranchised PhDs might pursue and whether such remedies could—and should—be sought in the courts.
Pay-For-Delay: How Brand-Name And Generic Pharmaceutical Drug Companies Collude And Cost Consumer Billions, Raymond J. Prince
Pay-For-Delay: How Brand-Name And Generic Pharmaceutical Drug Companies Collude And Cost Consumer Billions, Raymond J. Prince
South Carolina Law Review
No abstract provided.