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Articles 1 - 30 of 94
Full-Text Articles in Law
Tax Anti-Avoidance Law In Australia And The United States, Susan C. Morse, Robert Deutsch
Tax Anti-Avoidance Law In Australia And The United States, Susan C. Morse, Robert Deutsch
The International Lawyer
No abstract provided.
The Quad (The 2015 Alumni Magazine), Southern Methodist University, Dedman School Of Law
The Quad (The 2015 Alumni Magazine), Southern Methodist University, Dedman School Of Law
The Quad (Law Alumni Magazine), 1988-present
• A Legacy of Public Service
• Clinic Program - Since 1947
• New Inns of Court Program sponsored by Haynes & Boone, LLP
• Students impact the community through public service
• The Mustang Bar Law Alumni Association & Mustang Exchange
Combating Terrorism And Violent Extremism In Nigeria: Defining A New Approach To Winning Modern Jihadist Conflict, Steven E. Hendrix
Combating Terrorism And Violent Extremism In Nigeria: Defining A New Approach To Winning Modern Jihadist Conflict, Steven E. Hendrix
The International Lawyer
No abstract provided.
Military Tribunals And Due Process In Post-Revolutionary Egypt, Bianca C. Isaias
Military Tribunals And Due Process In Post-Revolutionary Egypt, Bianca C. Isaias
The International Lawyer
No abstract provided.
Employment Law--Hobby Lobby's Narrow Holding Guards Against Discrimination, Cristina Squiers
Employment Law--Hobby Lobby's Narrow Holding Guards Against Discrimination, Cristina Squiers
SMU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Probability, Confidence, And Twombly's Plausibility Standard, Luke Meier
Probability, Confidence, And Twombly's Plausibility Standard, Luke Meier
SMU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Personalized Medicine In The Information Age: Myriad's De Facto Monopoly On Breast Cancer Research, Angela M. Oliver
Personalized Medicine In The Information Age: Myriad's De Facto Monopoly On Breast Cancer Research, Angela M. Oliver
SMU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Alan R. Bromberg Curriculum Vitae (Cv) & Photo
Patent Stewardship, Choice Of Law, And Weighing Competing Interests, David O. Taylor
Patent Stewardship, Choice Of Law, And Weighing Competing Interests, David O. Taylor
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
Xuan-Thao Nguyen’s recent article, "In the Name of Patent Stewardship: The Federal Circuit’s Overreach into Commercial Law", is important for at least two potential reasons that Nguyen herself highlights. First, to the extent that the Federal Circuit’s decisions related to commercial law differ from state courts’ decisions related to commercial law, it might call into question the Federal Circuit’s competency with respect to commercial law. And, second, it certainly highlights something that practitioners might need to know to adapt their advice and strategies for reaching their clients’ desired ends. But Nguyen’s critique is important for a third reason. Assuming the …
Moving Forward, Looking Back: A Retrospective On Sexual Harassment Law, Joanna L. Grossman
Moving Forward, Looking Back: A Retrospective On Sexual Harassment Law, Joanna L. Grossman
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
The fiftieth anniversary of Title VII provides an appropriate occasion to look back to an era when women suffered sexual abuse in the workplace (and many other places) with no possible recourse. Once feminist writers and litigators connected the dots, judges came to understand that a broad mandate to end sex discrimination had to include a mandate to eliminate sexual harassment at work. The decades that followed saw the step-by-step construction of a doctrine that ostensibly protects employees from unwanted sexual behavior at work.
In this symposium issue the author examines the impact of sexual harassment law citing several court …
Calibrating Liquefied Natural Gas Export Life Cycle Assessment: Accounting For Legal Boundaries And Post-Export Markets, James W. Coleman, Adebola Kasumu, Jeanne Liendo, Vivian Li, Sarah Marie Jordaan
Calibrating Liquefied Natural Gas Export Life Cycle Assessment: Accounting For Legal Boundaries And Post-Export Markets, James W. Coleman, Adebola Kasumu, Jeanne Liendo, Vivian Li, Sarah Marie Jordaan
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
The climate impact of liquefied natural gas (LNG) export from North America is one of the most pressing questions for Canadian and world energy policy today. This paper performs the first life cycle assessment (LCA) of the greenhouse gas emissions from LNG exports from Canada, assuming that importing countries use the natural gas for electricity generation. It shows that the climate impact of LNG depends on where it is sent. If LNG from Canada displaces electricity in coal-dependent countries, it will likely lower global greenhouse gas emissions. If it displaces electricity from countries that rely on low carbon sources such …
Taking Another Look At Second-Look Sentencing, Meghan J. Ryan
Taking Another Look At Second-Look Sentencing, Meghan J. Ryan
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
A historically unprecedented number of Americans are currently behind bars. Our high rate of incarceration, and the high bills that it generates for American taxpayers, has led to a number of proposals for sentencing reform. For example, bills were recently introduced in both the House and Senate that would roll back federal mandatory minimum sentences for certain drug offenders, and the Obama Administration has announced a plan to grant clemency to hundreds of non-violent drug offenders. Perhaps the most revolutionary proposal, though, is one advanced by the drafters of the Model Penal Code, namely that judges be given the power …
Public-Private Financed Road Infrastructure Development In North-Central Region Of Nigeria, Adamu Mudi, John S. Lowe, David Manase
Public-Private Financed Road Infrastructure Development In North-Central Region Of Nigeria, Adamu Mudi, John S. Lowe, David Manase
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
The development and provision of road infrastructure in Nigeria has primarily been through the traditional forms of procurement strategies by the federal, state and local governments through budgetary allocations and door-financed loans and grants this thereby leaves the Nigerian road sector in a precarious situation. In recent time, with the demand for more road infrastructure arising from the population explosion and urban-ruralmigration coupled with the financial crisis experienced by the Federal Government resulting from globaleconomic and financial crisis the Federal Government of Nigeria therefore sought to involve the private sectors in the development of road infrastructure facilities via Public-Private Partnerships …
Brief Of Amici Curiae Former Consular Officers In Support Of Respondent, Kerry V. Din, No. 13-1402 United States Supreme Court, Ira J. Kurzban, Edward F. Ramos, Jeffrey D. Kahn, Trina Realmuto
Brief Of Amici Curiae Former Consular Officers In Support Of Respondent, Kerry V. Din, No. 13-1402 United States Supreme Court, Ira J. Kurzban, Edward F. Ramos, Jeffrey D. Kahn, Trina Realmuto
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
This brief argues that certain visa application denials, particularly those based on information originating from agencies other than the Department of State, can be qualitatively different from denials based on consular discretion. Although the end result looks the same – “Visa Denied” – denials based on database and watchlist information maintained in the United States by the Department of Homeland Security, the FBI, and other agencies, bear little resemblance to the traditional exercise of consular discretion because the specific information which requires the consular officer to deny these visas is usually not available for him or her to evaluate. Real …
Self-Interest Or Self-Inflicted? How The United States Charges Its Service Members For Violating The Laws Of War, Chris Jenks
Self-Interest Or Self-Inflicted? How The United States Charges Its Service Members For Violating The Laws Of War, Chris Jenks
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
This chapter explores the aspects of self-interest implicated by the US military prosecuting its own service members who violate the laws of war under different criminal charges than it prosecutes enemy belligerents who commit substantially similar offences. The chapter briefly explains how the US asserts criminal jurisdiction over its service members before turning to how the US military reports violations of the laws of war. It then sets out the US methodology for charging such violations as applied to its service members, and compares this methodology to that applied to those tried by military commissions. The chapter then discusses the …
Economic Theory, Divided Infringement And Enforcing Interactive Patents, W. Keith Robinson
Economic Theory, Divided Infringement And Enforcing Interactive Patents, W. Keith Robinson
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
High tech companies – especially in the emerging areas of the Internet of Things, wearable devices, and personalized medicine – have found it difficult to enforce their patents on interactive technologies. This is especially true when multiple parties combine to perform all of the steps of a claimed method. This problem is referred to as joint or divided infringement, and some commentators advocate that “interactive” patents susceptible to divided infringement should not be enforced.
In contrast, this article argues that economic theory supports the enforcement of interactive patents. Previous papers have analyzed divided infringement problems from a doctrinal and policy …
Recent Developments In Intellectual Property Law — A 2014 Retrospective, W. Keith Robinson
Recent Developments In Intellectual Property Law — A 2014 Retrospective, W. Keith Robinson
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
The year 2014 was an eventful one for intellectual property law. Every branch of government affected intellectual property law in one way or another. The Supreme Court ruled on several important intellectual property law cases; federal and state legislatures contemplated and enacted various new statutes that changed the intellectual property law landscape; and the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office continued to implement new procedures governing the issuance and reconsideration of intellectual property rights. These events captured the consciousness of the American public and garnered significant media attention, more so than any year in recent memory. As these events proved, technological …
Legislative Responses To Patent Assertion Entities, David O. Taylor
Legislative Responses To Patent Assertion Entities, David O. Taylor
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
While the existence of patent assertion entities is not new, in recent years they have proliferated, spawning debate concerning their impact on the patent system and, more broadly, on technological innovation. Despite the fear that they instill in their targets — or perhaps because of it — patent assertion entities arguably serve a beneficial purpose in the patent system. Theoretically they should be able to help individual inventors and small businesses, in particular, obtain a return on their investment in research and development. To the extent patent assertion entities assert patent claims that should be held invalid, not infringed, or …
Family Law's Loose Cannon Book Review, Joanna L. Grossman
Family Law's Loose Cannon Book Review, Joanna L. Grossman
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
No abstract provided.
Introduction To Amici Curiae Brief In Young V. United Parcel Service, Inc., Joanna L. Grossman, Deborah L. Brake
Introduction To Amici Curiae Brief In Young V. United Parcel Service, Inc., Joanna L. Grossman, Deborah L. Brake
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
On March 25, 2015, the U.S. Supreme Court issued its decision in Young v. United Parcel Service, Inc., the most important pregnancy discrimination case before the Court in nearly a quarter century. The Court ruled for Peggy Young in a decision that will chart the path of pregnancy discrimination litigation for years to come. Our brief, published here with a short introduction, lays out our theory for why an employer’s refusal to accommodate pregnancy with light-duty assignments on the same terms as other medical conditions similarly affecting work violates Title VII and the Pregnancy Discrimination Act. The brief was …
Regulating Information Flows In Capital Markets, Onnig H. Dombalagian
Regulating Information Flows In Capital Markets, Onnig H. Dombalagian
SMU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Reflections On The Securities Broker As A Fiduciary, Norman S. Poser
Reflections On The Securities Broker As A Fiduciary, Norman S. Poser
SMU Law Review
No abstract provided.
India, Kavita Mohan, Raj Barot, Aseem Chawla, Ashish Jerjurkar, Divya Ashta, Gagan Kumar, Niyati Chanana, Sharanya G. Ranga, Laxmi Joshi, Fatema Merchant, Priyanka Sharma Goswami, Poorvi Chothani
India, Kavita Mohan, Raj Barot, Aseem Chawla, Ashish Jerjurkar, Divya Ashta, Gagan Kumar, Niyati Chanana, Sharanya G. Ranga, Laxmi Joshi, Fatema Merchant, Priyanka Sharma Goswami, Poorvi Chothani
The International Lawyer
This article surveys significant legal developments in India during the year 2014.
Where Trade And Industrial Policy Converge: How Developing Countries Can Utilize Trade Preferences To Generate Sustainable, Local Growth In The Garment Sector, Collette Van Der Ven
Where Trade And Industrial Policy Converge: How Developing Countries Can Utilize Trade Preferences To Generate Sustainable, Local Growth In The Garment Sector, Collette Van Der Ven
The International Lawyer
The rise of the textile and apparel global value chains and trade preferences has created unprecedented opportunities for developing countries to participate in trade in textiles and apparel. Yet, while some countries have managed to build backward linkages and engage in industrial upgrading, others remain locked in the lower echelons of the textile and apparel value chai
This Article demonstrates that trade preferences and rules of origin alone do not explain countries' diverging experiences in the apparel value chain. Rather, a country's industrial policy is crucial in determining sustainable growth: is it solely export-oriented, or does it balance promoting growth …
New Forms Of Dialects Between Intellectual Property And Public Health: Pharmaceutical Patent-Related Investment Disputes, Valentina Vadi
New Forms Of Dialects Between Intellectual Property And Public Health: Pharmaceutical Patent-Related Investment Disputes, Valentina Vadi
The International Lawyer
No abstract provided.
Agency Publicity In The Internet Era, Nathan Cortez
Agency Publicity In The Internet Era, Nathan Cortez
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
This Report, prepared for the Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS), details how federal agencies use modern forms of publicity - including press releases, agency web sites, searchable online databases, and social media - to achieve regulatory ends. It evaluates the benefits and burdens of modern agency publicity practices, using three agencies as case studies: the Food and Drug Administration (FDA); the Federal Trade Commission (FTC); and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). Part V recommends a series of largely procedural reforms that balance the need for public disclosure with the need to protect those potentially injured by adverse …
Taxing The Cloud, Orly Mazur
Taxing The Cloud, Orly Mazur
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
Transacting business in the “cloud” has quickly gained popularity worldwide as the new method of providing information technology resources. Instead of purchasing or downloading software, we can now use the Internet to access software and other fundamental computing resources located on remote computer networks operated by third parties. These transactions offer companies lower operating costs, increased scalability and improved reliability, but also give rise to a host of international tax issues. Despite the rapid growth and prevalent use of cloud computing, U.S. taxation of international cloud computing transactions has yet to receive significant scholarly attention. This Article seeks to fill …
Recent Developments In Intellectual Property Law — A 2014 Retrospective, David O. Taylor, W. Keith Robinson
Recent Developments In Intellectual Property Law — A 2014 Retrospective, David O. Taylor, W. Keith Robinson
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
The year 2014 was an eventful one for intellectual property law. Every branch of government affected intellectual property law in one way or another. The Supreme Court ruled on several important intellectual property law cases; federal and state legislatures contemplated and enacted various new statutes that changed the intellectual property law landscape; and the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office continued to implement new procedures governing the issuance and reconsideration of intellectual property rights. These events captured the consciousness of the American public and garnered significant media attention, more so than any year in recent memory. As these events proved, technological …
Firearm Regionalism And Public Carry: Placing Southern Antebellum Case Law In Context, Eric Ruben, Saul A. Cornell
Firearm Regionalism And Public Carry: Placing Southern Antebellum Case Law In Context, Eric Ruben, Saul A. Cornell
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
In recent years, following the Supreme Court’s landmark originalist opinion in District of Columbia v. Heller, courts have been asked to strike down restrictions on the public carrying of handguns on the basis of the original understanding of the Second Amendment. One of the key sources used to justify this outcome is a family of opinions from the antebellum South asserting an expansive right to carry weapons in public. In this essay we explore whether that body of case law reflected a national consensus on the meaning of the right to bear arms or, in the alternative, a narrower regional …
Me And Mr. Jones: A Systems-Based Analysis Of A Catastrophic Defense Outcome, Pamela R. Metzger
Me And Mr. Jones: A Systems-Based Analysis Of A Catastrophic Defense Outcome, Pamela R. Metzger
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
Leo S. Jones spent four months in jail, accused of a probation that had long since expired. His incarceration was illegal. It was also preventable.
In this essay, I describe the unique data collection project that identified Mr. Jones’ case. Then, I analyze the various individual, institutional, and systemic practices that contributed to Mr. Jones’ illegal incarceration. I show how an investigation of Mr. Jones’ case led to the discovery of widespread latent errors that may have adversely affected innumerable other detainees. I conclude by explaining what this case reveals about how data collection and analysis can improve public defender …