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2000

Faculty Scholarship

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Articles 1 - 30 of 405

Full-Text Articles in Law

Deferral: Consider Ending It Instead Of Expanding It, J. Clifton Fleming Jr. Dec 2000

Deferral: Consider Ending It Instead Of Expanding It, J. Clifton Fleming Jr.

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


The Right To Silence Helps The Innocent: A Game-Theoretic Analysis Of The Fifth Amendment Privilege, Alex Stein, Daniel J. Seidmann Dec 2000

The Right To Silence Helps The Innocent: A Game-Theoretic Analysis Of The Fifth Amendment Privilege, Alex Stein, Daniel J. Seidmann

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Soul For Sale: An Empirical Study Of Associate Satisfaction, Law Firm Culture, And The Effects Of Billable Hour Requirements, Susan Saab Fortney Dec 2000

Soul For Sale: An Empirical Study Of Associate Satisfaction, Law Firm Culture, And The Effects Of Billable Hour Requirements, Susan Saab Fortney

Faculty Scholarship

This article analyzes the results of an empirical study to illustrate the effect of billable hour requirements on associate satisfaction and law firm culture. Part I briefly describes the survey design and the general profile of the survey respondents. Part II discusses current billing practices and pressures analyzing the study results related to billing expectations and guidance as well as firm culture and work alternatives. Using findings from the study, Part III considers the detrimental micro and macro effects of increasing billable hour expectations. Part IV proposes various steps and measures that can be taken to address the negative consequences …


The Floodgates Of Strict Liability: Bursting Reservoirs And The Adoption Of Fletcher V. Rylands In The Guided Age, Jed Handelsman Shugerman Nov 2000

The Floodgates Of Strict Liability: Bursting Reservoirs And The Adoption Of Fletcher V. Rylands In The Guided Age, Jed Handelsman Shugerman

Faculty Scholarship

Part I presents an overview of Rylands v. Fletcher and then discusses the phases of the American response: the initial acceptance; the Northeastern rejections in the 1870s, which have been the basis for the erroneous scholarly conclusions; and the overlooked tide of acceptances across the country, beginning in the late 1880s and increasing in the 1890s. Part II places this wave of acceptance in its historical context of changing social forces, although these brief sketches are not the primary emphasis of this Note. First, during a period of rapid urbanization, a small number of courts sought to protect residential areas …


The Skills Of The Unskilled In The American Industrial Revolution, James Bessen Nov 2000

The Skills Of The Unskilled In The American Industrial Revolution, James Bessen

Faculty Scholarship

Were ordinary factory workers unskilled and was technology "de-skilling" during the Industrial Revolution? I measure foregone output to estimate the human capital investments in mule spinners and power loom tenders in ante-bellum Lowell. These investments rivaled those of craft apprentices, suggesting a different view of industrial technology. Accounting for skill, multi-factor productivity growth was negligible, contrary to previous findings. From 1834-55, firms made increasing investments in skill, allowing workers to tend more machines and generating rapid growth of per-capita output. This growing investment was motivated partly by changing factor prices and more by a changing labor supply. Calculations show that …


The Constitution Outside The Courts, James E. Fleming Nov 2000

The Constitution Outside The Courts, James E. Fleming

Faculty Scholarship

In this Book Review, Professor Fleming examines Professor Tushnet's arguments against judicial supremacy and in support of making constitutional interpretation less court-centered to pursue a populist constitutional law. The review concedes that Professor Tushnet's arguments that the “thick Constitution”--in particular, its commitments to federalism, states' rights, and separation of powers--is self-enforcing through the political processes are compelling. But it contends that he fails to make the case that the “thin Constitution”--for example, its fundamental guarantees of equality, freedom of expression, and liberty-- should be treated as similarly self-enforcing. Furthermore, Professor Fleming charges that Professor Tushnet does not adequately elaborate how …


2000 Survey Of Florida Law: Real Property, Ronald B. Brown, Joseph M. Grohman Oct 2000

2000 Survey Of Florida Law: Real Property, Ronald B. Brown, Joseph M. Grohman

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


From Pirates To Partners: Protecting Intellectual Property In China In The Twenty-First Century, Peter K. Yu Oct 2000

From Pirates To Partners: Protecting Intellectual Property In China In The Twenty-First Century, Peter K. Yu

Faculty Scholarship

During the late 1980s and early 1990s, the United States repeatedly threatened China with a series of economic sanctions, trade wars, non-renewal of most-favored-nation status, and opposition to entry into the World Trade Organization. Such threats eventually led to compromises by the Chinese government and the signing of intellectual property agreements in 1992, 1995, and 1996. Despite these agreements, intellectual property piracy remains rampant in China.

Although China initially had serious concerns about the United States's threats of trade sanctions, the constant use of such threats by the U.S. government has led China to change its reaction and approach. By …


Takings, Efficiency, And Distributive Justice: A Response To Professor Dagan, Glynn S. Lunney Jr Oct 2000

Takings, Efficiency, And Distributive Justice: A Response To Professor Dagan, Glynn S. Lunney Jr

Faculty Scholarship

In a recent article, Professor Hanoch Dagan argues that courts should incorporate the principle of distributive justice into their decisions as to whether a particular property owner should receive compensation in response to a government-imposed redistribution of property. To that end, he proposes a concept called "progressive" compensation that he believes will better serve distributive justice than present doctrine while at the same time improving the efficiency of governmental decision-making. This Essay questions key aspects of Professor Dagan's analysis, proposes as an alternative a uniform few-many rule for resolving takings issues. If funded through progressive taxation, such a rule would …


E-Obviousness, Glynn S. Lunney Jr Oct 2000

E-Obviousness, Glynn S. Lunney Jr

Faculty Scholarship

In 1790, Congress enacted the first patent statute and imposed two substantive requirements before a patent could issue: novelty and utility. Administrators of the patent system, however, recognized from the outset that patents ought not be granted for every trivial advance in an art; some more substantial improvement was required In 1851, the Court formally tied this third substantive requirement for patentability to the language of the Constitution by distinguishing minor improvements reflecting "the work of the skilful mechanic" from substantial improvements reflecting "[the work] of the inventor."

In 1952, Congress formally incorporated this third requirement, mandating substantial improvements, into …


It's Good To Be The King: Prosecuting Heads Of State And Former Heads Of State Under International Law, Mary Margaret Penrose Oct 2000

It's Good To Be The King: Prosecuting Heads Of State And Former Heads Of State Under International Law, Mary Margaret Penrose

Faculty Scholarship

This Article criticizes historical practices regarding the prosecution of sitting and former heads of state. It argues that such persons should stand trial for their alleged crimes. However, as the Article illustrates, state practice and international law as they currently exist offer only limited help toward advancing this goal. Although the Pinochet precedent offers evidence that states may be shifting toward a willingness to prosecute heads of state, Professor Penrose advocates the enactment of prosecutorial rules and regulations and urges countries to take the necessary steps to create an international criminal court so that criminal defendants may be tried in …


Book Review - Reviewing William D. Popkin, Statutes In Court: The History And Theory Of Statutory Interpretation (1999), Stephen R. Alton Oct 2000

Book Review - Reviewing William D. Popkin, Statutes In Court: The History And Theory Of Statutory Interpretation (1999), Stephen R. Alton

Faculty Scholarship

Book Review Extract:

In his well-written and well-argued book, William D. Popkin delivers on the promise denoted in his title. Part I of the book details the Anglo-American history of statutory interpretation. Part 11 begins by surveying the most important contemporary theories in the field of statutory interpretation. Part 11 ends with the author's rejection of these theories and the exposition of his own theory, which he calls "ordinary judging." Popkin argues that his is "the best perspective for understanding the discretionary judicial role [in interpreting statutes] . . . whereby judges indulge a modest competence to contribute to good …


Principled Standard Setting Requires Consideration Of More Than Science (Aei-Brookings Joint Center For Regulatory Studies, Brief 00-02) Brief Amicus Curiae In Support Of Respondents, Browner V. American Trucking Associations, Inc., No. 99-1257, (U.S. September 11, 2000)(With 20 Law Professors, Economists, And Scientists), Jonathan B. Wiener, Cary Coglianese, Gary Marchant Sep 2000

Principled Standard Setting Requires Consideration Of More Than Science (Aei-Brookings Joint Center For Regulatory Studies, Brief 00-02) Brief Amicus Curiae In Support Of Respondents, Browner V. American Trucking Associations, Inc., No. 99-1257, (U.S. September 11, 2000)(With 20 Law Professors, Economists, And Scientists), Jonathan B. Wiener, Cary Coglianese, Gary Marchant

Faculty Scholarship

Summary of Argument: Throughout this proceeding, EPA has identified no policy or normative criteria to justify its NAAQS standards, thus suggesting that science alone can be used to determine the appropriate air quality standard. Science plays a critical, indeed essential, role in evaluating the risks of possible air quality standards being considered for adoption by EPA. However, science by itself cannot provide the justification for selecting a particular air quality standard. Especially in setting standards for non-threshold pollutants, such as in this case, scientific evidence cannot alone indicate where the standard should be set, since any level above zero will …


Unbending Gender: Why Family And Work Conflict And What To Do About It, Martha M. Ertman Aug 2000

Unbending Gender: Why Family And Work Conflict And What To Do About It, Martha M. Ertman

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


The Trade Dress Emperor's New Clothes: Why Trade Dress Does Not Belong On The Principal Register, Glynn S. Lunney Jr Aug 2000

The Trade Dress Emperor's New Clothes: Why Trade Dress Does Not Belong On The Principal Register, Glynn S. Lunney Jr

Faculty Scholarship

We take it largely for granted today that the Trademark Act of 1946 permits the registration of trade dress on the principal register, but that has not always been the rule. Until 1958, the Patent and Trademark Office, following Congress's intent expressed in the Act's plain language and legislative history, excluded trade dress from the principal register as a matter of law. In 1958, Assistant Commissioner Daphne Robert Leeds changed the rule and allowed the registration of a product package as a trademark on the principal register. Unable to find any legitimate basis for reading the Trademark Act to permit …


The Attorney-Client Privilege: Practical Military Applications Of A Professional Core Value, Joshua E. Kastenberg, Norman K. Thompson Jul 2000

The Attorney-Client Privilege: Practical Military Applications Of A Professional Core Value, Joshua E. Kastenberg, Norman K. Thompson

Faculty Scholarship

This article examines the historical development of the attorney-client privilege and then explores the privilege generally before tackling some specific areas where the privilege commonly arises in military practice. We explore important aspects of the privilege from three different perspectives: (1) a prosecution perspective-saving court-martial cases involving alleged compromise of attorney-client privileged material by trial counsel and/or investigators, (2) a defense perspective-using the privilege to protect information about the whereabouts of a client and the contents of a defense counsel's appointment schedule, and, (3) a general military practice perspective-the potential conflicts of interest which may arise when the privilege is …


Global Finance And The International Monetary Fund's Neoliberal Agenda: The Threat To The Employment, Ethnic Identity, And Cultural Pluralism Of Latina/O Communities, Timothy A. Canova Jul 2000

Global Finance And The International Monetary Fund's Neoliberal Agenda: The Threat To The Employment, Ethnic Identity, And Cultural Pluralism Of Latina/O Communities, Timothy A. Canova

Faculty Scholarship

This Article places recent Lat-Crit scholarship in an institutional and inter-disciplinary context. It serves not just as an indictment of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) agenda of structural adjustment and liberalization. It also questions the positioning of Lat-Crit scholars to remain silent or complicit with the IMF's agenda. Canova provides a counter-narrative that is rich in historical revisionism, heterodox economics, and sociological conclusions. His recognition of the global unemployment crisis - made largely invisible by orthodox economics and flawed government measurements - is combined with existential insights about the nature of underemployment on the formation of individual identity and cultural …


Some Questions For Civil Society-Revivalists, Linda C. Mcclain, James E. Fleming Jul 2000

Some Questions For Civil Society-Revivalists, Linda C. Mcclain, James E. Fleming

Faculty Scholarship

The Article raises some questions for proponents of reviving civil society as a cure for many of our nation's political, civic, and moral ills (whom McClain and Fleming designate as "civil society-revivalists"). How does civil society serve as "seedbeds of virtue" and foster self-government? Have liberal conceptions of the person corroded civil society and undermined self-government? Does the revivalists' focus on the family focus on the right problems? Have gains in equality and liberty caused the decline of civil society? Should we revive civil society or "a civil society"? Would a revitalized civil society support democratic self-government or supplant it? …


Banks And Inner Cities: Market And Regulatory Obstacles To Development Lending, Keith N. Hylton Jul 2000

Banks And Inner Cities: Market And Regulatory Obstacles To Development Lending, Keith N. Hylton

Faculty Scholarship

Why are poor inner cities underserved by financial institutions, and why is it so difficult to find a solution to this problem? Explanations of the lending shortfall problem range between theories based on discrimination to the view that the lending market is working flawlessly. Drawing largely on the economic development literature, I elaborate an alternative explanation here. The asymmetric information theory I offer yields the prediction that urban minority communities will be underserved by financial institutions even in the absence of discriminatory intent.

I claim that the existing framework of banking regulation is in part responsible for the difficulty in …


Shedding A Little Light On A Well-Kept Secret, Malinda L. Seymore Jul 2000

Shedding A Little Light On A Well-Kept Secret, Malinda L. Seymore

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Foreword: Legal And Constitutional Implications Of The Calls To Revive Civil Society, Linda C. Mcclain, James E. Fleming Jul 2000

Foreword: Legal And Constitutional Implications Of The Calls To Revive Civil Society, Linda C. Mcclain, James E. Fleming

Faculty Scholarship

This symposium addresses legal and constitutional implications of the calls to revive or renew civil society (a realm between the individual and the state, including the family and religious, civic, and other voluntary associations). The erosion or disappearance of civil society is a common diagnosis of what underlies civic and moral decline in America, and its renewal features prominently as a cure for such decline. To date, there has been a great deal of discussion of civil society and proposals for its revival or renewal, but not enough discussion of legal and constitutional implications of such proposals. This symposium seeks …


Latinas And Religion: Subordination Or State Of Grace?, Laura M. Padilla Jul 2000

Latinas And Religion: Subordination Or State Of Grace?, Laura M. Padilla

Faculty Scholarship

This Essay addresses how religion simultaneously subordinates Latinas while serving as a source of strength. More specifically, it focuses on Catholicism and how the same church and religion have a fragmented and varied impact on Latinas, particularly Mexican-Americans, with whom I am most familiar.


Children In Poverty: In Search Of State And Federal Constitutional Protections In The Wake Of Welfare Reforms, April Land Jul 2000

Children In Poverty: In Search Of State And Federal Constitutional Protections In The Wake Of Welfare Reforms, April Land

Faculty Scholarship

The elimination of the federal entitlement to welfare and the shifting of essential policy making to states raises serious questions about the procedural due process rights of people in poverty. It also changes the focus of the legal battleground for welfare families, bringing important state constitutional issues into focus across the nation. Overall, the Article emphasizes that in exploring the potential constitutional protections for families in poverty, it will be important to focus on the detrimental effects that welfare reforms have on children. By emphasizing the impact that welfare cuts have on children, it may be possible to provide a …


Liability Without Cause? Further Ruminations On Cause-In-Fact As Applied To Handgun Liability, Aaron Twerski, A. J. Sebok Jul 2000

Liability Without Cause? Further Ruminations On Cause-In-Fact As Applied To Handgun Liability, Aaron Twerski, A. J. Sebok

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Accountability And Democracy In The Case Of Using Force Under International Auspices, Charlotte Ku, Harold K. Jacobson Jun 2000

Accountability And Democracy In The Case Of Using Force Under International Auspices, Charlotte Ku, Harold K. Jacobson

Faculty Scholarship

This presentation derives from a large research project that has been more than three years in progress and reflects the work of a multinational team of lawyers, policy analysts, and political scientists. The project is supported by the Ford Foundation and will conclude at the end of 2000 with the completion of a book that will cover the experience of nine democracies in deploying their military forces under international auspices as this experience relates to two large questions.

The project examines two questions:

  • What is the interactive relationship between international commitments and national constitutional and political requirements?
  • How does this …


Regulating Research With Decisionally Impaired Individuals: Are We Making Progress?, Diane E. Hoffmann, Jack Schwartz, Evan G. Derenzo Jun 2000

Regulating Research With Decisionally Impaired Individuals: Are We Making Progress?, Diane E. Hoffmann, Jack Schwartz, Evan G. Derenzo

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Environmental Damage Resulting From The Nato Military Action Against Yugoslavia, Aaron Schwabach May 2000

Environmental Damage Resulting From The Nato Military Action Against Yugoslavia, Aaron Schwabach

Faculty Scholarship

During the 1999 war between NATO and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, NATO targeted and destroyed chemical plants and storage facilities at Pancevo, Kragujevac, and elsewhere. A United Nations inspection team found that the NATO attacks had caused measurable, but not catastrophic, environmental damage wityin the territory of Yugoslavia. This article explores the historical evolution and current status of the body of law regarding protection of the environment during wartime, as well as the legality of NATO's actions. It concludes that NATO probably did not violate international law as it currently stands. However, the postwar reactions of states, including the …


The Paradox Of Free Market Democracy: Rethinking Development Policy, Amy L. Chua Apr 2000

The Paradox Of Free Market Democracy: Rethinking Development Policy, Amy L. Chua

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Intuition And Technology In Product Design Litigation: An Essay On Proximate Causation, Aaron Twerski, J. A. Henderson Apr 2000

Intuition And Technology In Product Design Litigation: An Essay On Proximate Causation, Aaron Twerski, J. A. Henderson

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


The Necessity Of (And The Threat Posed By) Consumer Financial Education For The New Financial Conglomerates, James A. Fanto Apr 2000

The Necessity Of (And The Threat Posed By) Consumer Financial Education For The New Financial Conglomerates, James A. Fanto

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.