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Articles 1 - 15 of 15

Full-Text Articles in Law

Towards A History Of Essential Federalism: Another Look At Owen In America, Carol Weisbrod Jul 1989

Towards A History Of Essential Federalism: Another Look At Owen In America, Carol Weisbrod

Faculty Articles and Papers

No abstract provided.


On The Expressive Functions Of Family Law, Carol Weisbrod Apr 1989

On The Expressive Functions Of Family Law, Carol Weisbrod

Faculty Articles and Papers

No abstract provided.


The Changing Education And Role Of Lawyers, Ellen Ash Peters Jan 1989

The Changing Education And Role Of Lawyers, Ellen Ash Peters

Faculty Articles and Papers

No abstract provided.


Lawyers And Conscience, Thomas Morawetz Jan 1989

Lawyers And Conscience, Thomas Morawetz

Faculty Articles and Papers

No abstract provided.


Charles Guiteau And The Christian Nation, Carol Weisbrod Jan 1989

Charles Guiteau And The Christian Nation, Carol Weisbrod

Faculty Articles and Papers

No abstract provided.


United States Report: The Protection Of Worker's Rights In The Event Of Insolvency And Business Reorganization: A Symposium, Phillip Blumberg Jan 1989

United States Report: The Protection Of Worker's Rights In The Event Of Insolvency And Business Reorganization: A Symposium, Phillip Blumberg

Faculty Articles and Papers

No abstract provided.


The Economics Of The Insurance Antitrust Suits: Toward An Exclusionary Theory, Peter Siegelman, Ian Ayres Jan 1989

The Economics Of The Insurance Antitrust Suits: Toward An Exclusionary Theory, Peter Siegelman, Ian Ayres

Faculty Articles and Papers

On March 22, 1988, the Attorneys General of eight states filed antitrust actions in state and federal courts' alleging that major insurance and reinsurance companies colluded to boycott specific types of insurance coverage in violation of section 1 of the Sherman Act. The suits suggest that this collusion was responsible for the unprecedented increase in premiums and concomitant erosion of coverage that has come to be known as "the insurance crisis."' The lawsuits have provoked fierce denials by insurance industry participants, including assertions that the suits, which came in an election year, were politically motivated.' The litigation is certain to …


Why Is There Taylor V. Caldwell - Thre Propositions About Impracticability, Robert Birmingham Jan 1989

Why Is There Taylor V. Caldwell - Thre Propositions About Impracticability, Robert Birmingham

Faculty Articles and Papers

No abstract provided.


Common Law Antecendents Of Constitutional Law In Connecticut, Ellen Ash Peters Jan 1989

Common Law Antecendents Of Constitutional Law In Connecticut, Ellen Ash Peters

Faculty Articles and Papers

No abstract provided.


Original Intentions, Standard Meanings And The Legal Character Of The Constitution, Richard Kay Jan 1989

Original Intentions, Standard Meanings And The Legal Character Of The Constitution, Richard Kay

Faculty Articles and Papers

No abstract provided.


The Common Law Tradition, Mark Weston Janis Jan 1989

The Common Law Tradition, Mark Weston Janis

Faculty Articles and Papers

No abstract provided.


Self, Others, And Section 7: Mutualism And Protected Protest Activities Under The National Labor Relations Act, Michael Fischl Jan 1989

Self, Others, And Section 7: Mutualism And Protected Protest Activities Under The National Labor Relations Act, Michael Fischl

Faculty Articles and Papers

No abstract provided.


Labor, Management And The First Amendment: Whose Rights Are These Anyway?, Michael Fischl Jan 1989

Labor, Management And The First Amendment: Whose Rights Are These Anyway?, Michael Fischl

Faculty Articles and Papers

No abstract provided.


Neoclassical Difficulties: Tort As Deterrence For Latent Injuries, Peter Siegelman, W.L.F. Felstiner Jan 1989

Neoclassical Difficulties: Tort As Deterrence For Latent Injuries, Peter Siegelman, W.L.F. Felstiner

Faculty Articles and Papers

Economists often claim that the tort system leads firms to provide consumers and workers with the socially optimal level of safety. Moreover, in the case of work-related hazards, employers are alleged to have another source of incentives to take precautions. If wages are sensitive to job-related risks, employers should spend money to reduce such risks when, by doing so, they can save more in wage costs than the costs of the precautions taken. Whatever their merits in other settings, in the case of latent injuries such as workplace exposure to asbestos neither tort nor market are likely to provide an …


Moral Knowledge And Constitutional Adjudication, Richard Kay Jan 1989

Moral Knowledge And Constitutional Adjudication, Richard Kay

Faculty Articles and Papers

No abstract provided.