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- Draft Rules on Non-Navigational Uses of International Watercourses (8)
- International lakes (8)
- International rivers (8)
- International water courses (8)
- International watercourses (8)
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- Law (8)
- United Nations International Law Commission (8)
- Water (8)
- Water rights (international law) (8)
- ILC (7)
- Irrigation (5)
- Background (4)
- Overview (4)
- Utah (4)
- Aquifers (3)
- Beneficial use (3)
- Colorado (3)
- Drought management (3)
- Empirical legal studies (3)
- Federal Central Valley Project (3)
- Fish (3)
- Flood control (3)
- General principles (3)
- Harmful conditions and emergency situations (3)
- Implementation (3)
- International watercourse systems (3)
- Introductory articles (3)
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- Mexico (3)
- New Mexico (3)
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- Innovation in Western Water Law and Management (Summer Conference, June 5-7) (20)
- The Law of International Watercourses: The United Nations International Law Commission's Draft Rules on the Non-Navigational Uses of International Watercourses (October 18) (8)
- Cornell Law Faculty Publications (3)
- Resource Law Notes: The Newsletter of the Natural Resources Law Center (1984-2002) (2)
- Scholars and Artists Bibliographies (1)
Articles 31 - 34 of 34
Full-Text Articles in Law
Water Planning: The Oregon Approach, William H. Young
Water Planning: The Oregon Approach, William H. Young
Innovation in Western Water Law and Management (Summer Conference, June 5-7)
64 pages.
Resource Law Notes Newsletter, No. 22, Mar. 1991, University Of Colorado Boulder. Natural Resources Law Center
Resource Law Notes Newsletter, No. 22, Mar. 1991, University Of Colorado Boulder. Natural Resources Law Center
Resource Law Notes: The Newsletter of the Natural Resources Law Center (1984-2002)
No abstract provided.
The Relationship Between Plaintiff Sucess Rates Before Trial And At Trial, Theodore Eisenberg
The Relationship Between Plaintiff Sucess Rates Before Trial And At Trial, Theodore Eisenberg
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
Legal cases that reach trial are a biased subset of underlying disputes. This makes it difficult to study the legal system by observing tried cases. This paper examines the relationship between plaintiff success at pretrial motion and trial stages across many categories of cases. The large, significant positive relationship between plaintiff success rates at these two procedural stages suggests that characteristics of case categories influence outcomes at both stages. Observers of a category of tried cases or cases resolved by motion can make informed judgments about how that category of cases fares at the other procedural stage.
The Quiet Revolution In Products Liability, James A. Henderson Jr., Theodore Eisenberg
The Quiet Revolution In Products Liability, James A. Henderson Jr., Theodore Eisenberg
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
Most revolutions are noisy, tumultuous affairs. This is as true of significant shifts in legal doctrine as it is of shifts of political power through force of arms. Indeed, the pro-plaintiff revolution in American products liability in the early 1960s will forever be associated with heroic, martial images, epitomized in Prosser's description of the assault upon, and fall of, the fortress citadel of privity. The same sort of terminology aptly could be used to describe the last five or ten years of legislative reform activity in the various states. Reacting to what many see as "crises" brought on by courts …