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Full-Text Articles in Law

No Child Left Behind - Representing Youth And Families In Truancy Matters, Dean Rivkin, Brenda Mcgee Nov 2013

No Child Left Behind - Representing Youth And Families In Truancy Matters, Dean Rivkin, Brenda Mcgee

College of Law Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Footnote Online Supplement: State Truancy Law Compilation, Dean H. Rivkin Oct 2013

Footnote Online Supplement: State Truancy Law Compilation, Dean H. Rivkin

College of Law Faculty Scholarship

This compilation of state truancy laws is being provided as a footnote supplement to the forthcoming article No Child Left Behind? Representing Youth and Families in Truancy Matters (2013) by Prof. Dean Hill Rivkin and Brenda McGee, of The Education Law Practicum at the University of Tennessee College of Law. It is an updated version of the laws listed in the Juvenile Law Center’s excellent amicus curiae brief in Bellevue School District v. E.S., Brief of Juvenile Law Center, et al., As Amicus Curiae on Behalf of Respondent, Bellevue Sch. Dist. v. E.S., 257 P.3d 570 (Wash. 2011) …


A Survey Of The Section 336(E) Regulations, Don Leatherman Sep 2013

A Survey Of The Section 336(E) Regulations, Don Leatherman

College of Law Faculty Scholarship

Under § 336(e), if one corporation owns an affiliated interest in the stock of a second corporation and sells, exchanges, or distributes all of that stock, Congress has authorized a regulatory election to treat the transfer of the second corporation’s stock as a disposition of its assets, thereby avoiding recognized gain or loss on the sale, exchange, or distribution of that stock. Congress added § 336(e) to the Code in the Tax Reform Act of 1986, intending that it be implemented using "principles similar to those of section 338(h)(10)." Thus, § 336(e) has a purpose similar to § 338(h)(10), offering …


Looking At The Monopsony In The Mirror, Maurice E. Stucke Feb 2013

Looking At The Monopsony In The Mirror, Maurice E. Stucke

College of Law Faculty Scholarship

Although still a distant second to monopoly, buyer power and monopsony are hot topics in the antitrust community. Despite the increasing interest in monopsony and buyer power, relatively few cases have actually been brought. Given the relatively few antitrust cases, the legal standards for monopsony claims are less developed than for monopoly claims. In recent years, courts, competition agencies, and scholars in addressing monopsony begin with a simple premise: monopsony is the mirror image of monopoly. But as this Article contends, courts and agencies should be careful when importing monopolization standards for monopsony cases. What works for monopolization claims may …


The Implications Of Behavioral Antitrust, Maurice E. Stucke Feb 2013

The Implications Of Behavioral Antitrust, Maurice E. Stucke

College of Law Faculty Scholarship

Behavioral economics is now mainstream. It is also timely. The financial crisis raised important issues of market failure, weak regulation, moral hazard, and our lack of understanding about how many markets actually operate.

As behavioral economics (with its more realistic assumptions of human behavior) goes mainstream in academia and the business world, one expects lawyers and economists to bring the current economic thinking to the competition agencies. How should the competition agencies respond?

This paper examines how competition authorities can consider the implications of behavioral economics on four levels: first as a gap filler, i.e., to help explain “real world” …


An Empirical Study Of Supreme Court Justice Pre-Appointment Experience, Benjamin H. Barton Feb 2013

An Empirical Study Of Supreme Court Justice Pre-Appointment Experience, Benjamin H. Barton

College of Law Faculty Scholarship

This study compares the years of experience that preceded appointment to the Supreme Court for each Justice. The study seeks to demonstrate that the background experiences of the Roberts Court Justices are quite different from the Justices of earlier Supreme Courts and to persuade the reader that this is insalubrious.


How The Rich Stay Rich: Using A Family Trust Company To Secure A Family Fortune, Iris Goodwin Feb 2013

How The Rich Stay Rich: Using A Family Trust Company To Secure A Family Fortune, Iris Goodwin

College of Law Faculty Scholarship

Abstract HOW THE RICH STAY RICH: USING A FAMILY TRUST COMPANY TO SECURE A FAMILY FORTUNE Iris J. Goodwin Associate Professor, University of Tennessee College of Law This Article is about family trust companies and the role they play in preserving great fortunes. A family trust company is a corporation formed to provide fiduciary services to a related group of people, in contrast to banking institutions established to offer similar services to a larger public. The province of the mega-rich (who remain very much upon the American landscape, the recent economic crisis notwithstanding), these entities have received scant attention from …


The Legal Reader: An Expose, Michael Higdon Jan 2013

The Legal Reader: An Expose, Michael Higdon

College of Law Faculty Scholarship

John Steinbeck once said, “Your audience is one single reader. I have found that sometimes it helps to pick out the person — a real person you know, or an imagined person — and write to that one.” For legal writers, however, this advice is somewhat difficult to follow as their documents are likely to be read by many different kinds of audience members. In this Article, however, I mean to focus specifically on one particular kind of reader: the legally-trained reader or, more simply, the legal reader. After all, the majority of lawyers will find themselves communicating most often …


A Series Of Unfortunate Events In Rio, Or What I Did On My Summer Vacation, Becky Jacobs Jan 2013

A Series Of Unfortunate Events In Rio, Or What I Did On My Summer Vacation, Becky Jacobs

College of Law Faculty Scholarship

This essay describes a particular “day in the life” of the author in Rio de Janeiro and explores how it could be perceived as a series of experiential metonyms for a number of concepts related to the authority and influence of law in Brazilian society.


Foreword To Symposium Volume: The Tennessee Valley Authority (Tva) V. Hill: The Greatest Little Story Never Told, Becky Jacobs Jan 2013

Foreword To Symposium Volume: The Tennessee Valley Authority (Tva) V. Hill: The Greatest Little Story Never Told, Becky Jacobs

College of Law Faculty Scholarship

In 1978, the U.S. Supreme Court determined that Congress intended the Endangered Species Act to afford "the highest of priorities" to endangered species. (Tennessee Valley Authority v. Hill; 437 U.S. 153). The Court's ruling prevented -- at least, for a period of time -- the completion of TVA's Tellico dam project. Since then, it has been endlessly evaluated, celebrated, excoriated, and commemorated. The "snail darter" case (as it has come to be known) has captivated an entire generation of environmental and natural resources law academics, practitioners, and students, and its influence persists some thirty-plus years later. Indeed, the case made …


How To Stop Worrying And Learn To Love The Second Amendment: A Reply To Professor Magarian, Glenn Reynolds, Brannon Denning Jan 2013

How To Stop Worrying And Learn To Love The Second Amendment: A Reply To Professor Magarian, Glenn Reynolds, Brannon Denning

College of Law Faculty Scholarship

In response to Gregory Magarian's Speaking Truth to Firepower: How the First Amendment Destabilizes the Second, 91 Texas Law Review 49, 53-72 (2012), we argue first that the strict dichotomy he posits between an individual right to keep and bear arms aimed at deterring (and furnishing the means for ultimately opposing) governmental tyranny and a right securing the means for private self-defense is a false one. Further, we argue that, to the extent there is any tension between the First and Second Amendments, Heller and McDonald eased that tension by locating individual self-defense at the core of the right. Such …


The Scope Of The General Utilities Repeal, Don Leatherman Jan 2013

The Scope Of The General Utilities Repeal, Don Leatherman

College of Law Faculty Scholarship

More than a quarter of a century ago, Congress repealed the General Utilities doctrine, authorizing Treasury to issue regulations to prevent circumvention of the repeal. Although Treasury has issued several sets of regulations in response, it has never systematically defined the scope of the repeal. Instead, the regulations and other administrative guidance more selectively attack concerns raised by the repeal, almost all of which arise because of the dual nature of stock: A corporate shareholder can choose to treat a subsidiary’s stock as a separate asset or, in certain cases, as an indirect interest in subsidiary assets, a choice facilitated …


A Place In The Academy: Law Faculty Hiring And Socioeconomic Bias, Michael Higdon Jan 2013

A Place In The Academy: Law Faculty Hiring And Socioeconomic Bias, Michael Higdon

College of Law Faculty Scholarship

In the movie Moneyball — based on the nationally bestselling book of the same name — Jonah Hill’s character, Peter Brand remarks, “People are overlooked for a variety of biased reasons and perceived flaws.” Although his character was referring to baseball players, the same could be said of those who attempt to secure jobs as law professors. In fact, many law students are later surprised to learn that their ability to secure a job as a law professor has much less to do with what they have might have done during their legal careers, and more to do with simply …


A Series Of Unfortunate Events In Rio, Or, What I Did On My Summer Vacation, Becky Jacobs Jan 2013

A Series Of Unfortunate Events In Rio, Or, What I Did On My Summer Vacation, Becky Jacobs

College of Law Faculty Scholarship

This essay describes a particular “day in the life” of the author in Rio de Janeiro and explores how it could be perceived as a series of experiential metonyms for a number of concepts related to the authority and influence of law in Brazilian society.