Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Health Law and Policy (5)
- Bioethics and Medical Ethics (3)
- Medicine and Health Sciences (3)
- Business Organizations Law (2)
- Criminal Law (2)
-
- Jurisprudence (2)
- Law and Gender (2)
- Law and Race (2)
- Tax Law (2)
- Torts (2)
- Accounting Law (1)
- Administrative Law (1)
- Banking and Finance Law (1)
- Bankruptcy Law (1)
- Business (1)
- Civil Law (1)
- Civil Rights and Discrimination (1)
- Comparative and Foreign Law (1)
- Computer Law (1)
- Constitutional Law (1)
- Consumer Protection Law (1)
- Contracts (1)
- Criminal Procedure (1)
- Disaster Law (1)
- Dispute Resolution and Arbitration (1)
- Evidence (1)
- Fourteenth Amendment (1)
- Fourth Amendment (1)
- International Business (1)
- Keyword
-
- Tort (2)
- AI (1)
- Abortion (1)
- Adr (1)
- Affordable care act (1)
-
- Algorithmic Decision Making (1)
- Artificial intelligence (1)
- Automation (1)
- Bankruptcy Code (1)
- Bioethics (1)
- Business fellows (1)
- Business organizations (1)
- Chronic pain (1)
- Clinical Practice Guidelines (1)
- Clinical law (1)
- Collateral consequences (1)
- Computational Thinking (1)
- Conflict of laws (1)
- Crisis management (1)
- Cyber boot camp (1)
- Data (1)
- Data protection (1)
- Data-Driven (1)
- Dax Cowart (1)
- Disability determination (1)
- Dispute resolution (1)
- Disruptive AI (1)
- Ellicott City flood (1)
- Emergency management (1)
- Epistemology of Automation (1)
Articles 1 - 16 of 16
Full-Text Articles in Law
Law & Health Care Newsletter, Fall 2019
Law & Health Care Newsletter, Fall 2019
Law & Health Care Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Abortion-Related Disclosures And How The Maryland General Assembly Can Institute A Novel And Innovative Pregnancy Disclosure, Mary L. Scott
Abortion-Related Disclosures And How The Maryland General Assembly Can Institute A Novel And Innovative Pregnancy Disclosure, Mary L. Scott
Maryland Law Review Online
No abstract provided.
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Summer 2019
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Summer 2019
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Automated License Plate Readers: The Difficult Balance Of Solving Crime And Protecting Individual Privacy, Lauren Fash
Automated License Plate Readers: The Difficult Balance Of Solving Crime And Protecting Individual Privacy, Lauren Fash
Maryland Law Review Online
No abstract provided.
Maryland Makes New Evidence Postconviction Review Provisions Available To Defendants With Plea Deals, Felicia Langel
Maryland Makes New Evidence Postconviction Review Provisions Available To Defendants With Plea Deals, Felicia Langel
Maryland Law Review Online
No abstract provided.
What A Long Strange Trip It’S Been For The 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax, Ausher M.B. Kofsky, Bryan P. Schmutz
What A Long Strange Trip It’S Been For The 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax, Ausher M.B. Kofsky, Bryan P. Schmutz
Maryland Law Review Online
No abstract provided.
Law & Health Care Newsletter, Spring 2019
Law & Health Care Newsletter, Spring 2019
Law & Health Care Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Business Law Bulletin, Spring 2019
Regulating Offshore Finance, William J. Moon
Regulating Offshore Finance, William J. Moon
Faculty Scholarship
From the Panama Papers to the Paradise Papers, massive document leaks in recent years have exposed trillions of dollars hidden in small offshore jurisdictions. Attracting foreign capital with low tax rates and environments of secrecy, a growing number of offshore jurisdictions have emerged as major financial havens hosting thousands of hedge funds, trusts, banks, and insurance companies.
While the prevailing account has examined offshore financial havens as “tax havens” that facilitate the evasion or avoidance of domestic tax, this Article uncovers how offshore jurisdictions enable corporations to evade domestic regulatory law. Specifically, recent U.S. Supreme Court cases restricting the geographic …
Data-Informed Duties In Ai Development, Frank A. Pasquale
Data-Informed Duties In Ai Development, Frank A. Pasquale
Faculty Scholarship
Law should help direct—and not merely constrain—the development of artificial intelligence (AI). One path to influence is the development of standards of care both supplemented and informed by rigorous regulatory guidance. Such standards are particularly important given the potential for inaccurate and inappropriate data to contaminate machine learning. Firms relying on faulty data can be required to compensate those harmed by that data use—and should be subject to punitive damages when such use is repeated or willful. Regulatory standards for data collection, analysis, use, and stewardship can inform and complement generalist judges. Such regulation will not only provide guidance to …
The Constitutional Development Of The Nineteenth Amendment In The Decade Following Ratification, Paula A. Monopoli
The Constitutional Development Of The Nineteenth Amendment In The Decade Following Ratification, Paula A. Monopoli
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Teaching Justice-Connectivity, Michael Pinard
Teaching Justice-Connectivity, Michael Pinard
Faculty Scholarship
This Essay conveys the importance of building in law students the foundation to recognize the various systems, institutions, and conditions that often crash into the lives of their clients, as well as the residents of the communities that are just outside law schools’ doors. It does so through proposing a teaching model that I call Justice-Connectivity. This model aims for students to understand and be humbled by the ways in which different institutions, systems, and strands of law converge upon, oppress, isolate, and shun individuals, families, and communities. The ultimate teaching lesson is that individuals, families, and communities are often …
Professional Judgment In An Era Of Artificial Intelligence And Machine Learning, Frank A. Pasquale
Professional Judgment In An Era Of Artificial Intelligence And Machine Learning, Frank A. Pasquale
Faculty Scholarship
Though artificial intelligence (AI) in healthcare and education now accomplishes diverse tasks, there are two features that tend to unite the information processing behind efforts to substitute it for professionals in these fields: reductionism and functionalism. True believers in substitutive automation tend to model work in human services by reducing the professional role to a set of behaviors initiated by some stimulus, which are intended to accomplish some predetermined goal, or maximize some measure of well-being. However, true professional judgment hinges on a way of knowing the world that is at odds with the epistemology of substitutive automation. Instead of …
Rescuing Maryland Tort Law: A Tribute To Judge Sally Adkins, Donald G. Gifford
Rescuing Maryland Tort Law: A Tribute To Judge Sally Adkins, Donald G. Gifford
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.