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A Brief Illustrated Chronicle Of Retroactive Copyright Term Extension, Robert Brauneis Jan 2015

A Brief Illustrated Chronicle Of Retroactive Copyright Term Extension, Robert Brauneis

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

At least since the Supreme Court’s 2003 decision in Eldred v. Ashcroft, it has been widely known that whenever Congress has extended copyright term, it has done so retroactively, granting the benefit of the extension to all works still under copyright on the effective date of the extension. However, I have never found succinct, complete tables and charts detailing the periods during which works received various copyright terms given the retroactive effect of all extension legislation. It is the modest aim of this article to provide that information, and to provide some examples of the operation of retroactive term extension. …


Hobby Lobby And The Dubious Enterprise Of Religious Exemptions, Ira C. Lupu Jan 2015

Hobby Lobby And The Dubious Enterprise Of Religious Exemptions, Ira C. Lupu

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

The experience of the past fifty years, culminating in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc., is grounds for deep skepticism of any sweeping regime of religious exemptions. Part I of this essay locates the problem in the current legal and cultural moment, which includes religious objections to employer-provided contraceptive care for women, and religion-based refusals by wedding vendors and others to facilitate the celebration of same sex marriages. Part II broadens the time frame to analyze the regimes of religious exemption – federal and state, constitutional and statutory -- in which such disputes play out. Such regimes will tend …


Religious Exemptions And The Limited Relevance Of Corporate Identity, Ira C. Lupu, Robert W. Tuttle Jan 2015

Religious Exemptions And The Limited Relevance Of Corporate Identity, Ira C. Lupu, Robert W. Tuttle

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Corporate religious liberty appears to be on the rise. The Supreme Court’s unanimous decision in Hosanna Tabor v. EEOC (2012) energized sweeping theories about “freedom of the church.” The Court’s more controversial decision in Burwell v Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. (2014) determined that for-profit entities may be legally entitled to claim a corporate religious character. Speaking in the language of rights, commentators have vigorously debated the foundations and meaning of these decisions.

This chapter argues that these debates are misdirected. The special treatment of religion in American constitutional law does not properly rest on any theory that religious entities …


Coercive Vs. Cooperative Enforcement: Effect Of Enforcement Approach On Environmental Management, Robert L. Glicksman, Dietrich Earnhart Jan 2015

Coercive Vs. Cooperative Enforcement: Effect Of Enforcement Approach On Environmental Management, Robert L. Glicksman, Dietrich Earnhart

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

A spirited debate explores the comparative merits of two different approaches to the enforcement ofregulatory law: the coercive approach, which emphasizes the deterrence of noncompliance throughinflexibly imposed sanctions, and the cooperative approach, which emphasizes the inducement of com-pliance through flexibility and assistance. Both scholarly and policymaking communities are interestedin this topic of enforcement approach within the realms of finance, tax compliance, occupational safety,food and drug safety, consumer product safety, and environmental protection. To inform this debate,our study explores enforcement of environmental protection laws where the debate has been especiallyspirited yet lacking in much empirical evidence. Specifically our study empirically analyzes …


Autonocoin: A Proof-Of-Belief Cryptocurrency, Michael B. Abramowicz Jan 2015

Autonocoin: A Proof-Of-Belief Cryptocurrency, Michael B. Abramowicz

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This paper proposes a self-governing cryptocurrency, dubbed Autonocoin. Cryptocurrency owners play formal tacit coordination games by making investments recorded on the block chain. Such investments represent bets about the focal point resolution of normative issues, such as whether a proposed change to Autonocoin should occur. The game produces a result that resolves the issue. With a typical cryptocurrency, the client software establishes conventions that ultimately lead to the identification of the authoritative block chain. Autonocoin completes a circle by making transactions on the block chain determine the authoritative client software. The distributed consensus mechanism embodied by formal tacit coordination games, …


Berkshire's Disintermediation: Buffett's New Managerial Model, Lawrence A. Cunningham Jan 2015

Berkshire's Disintermediation: Buffett's New Managerial Model, Lawrence A. Cunningham

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Berkshire Hathaway, among history’s largest and most successful corporations, shuns middlemen; its chairman, the legendary investor Warren Buffett, excoriates financial intermediaries. The acquisitive conglomerate rarely borrows money, retains brokers, or hires consultants. Its governance is lean, using an advisory board and bucking all forms of corporate bureaucracy. Berkshire’s shareholders also minimize the roles of intermediaries like stockbrokers and stock exchanges by trading little and holding for lengthy periods.

By exploring Berkshire’s antipathy to intermediation, this article supports the view that public policy ought to make considerable room for companies to define their own internal business practices and that more companies …


Berkshire Versus Kkr: Intermediary Influence And Competition, Lawrence A. Cunningham Jan 2015

Berkshire Versus Kkr: Intermediary Influence And Competition, Lawrence A. Cunningham

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Kathryn Judge of Columbia University documents how financial intermediaries persistently impose high fees compared to the value rendered, attributes this to political influence, and suggests countervailing policy strategies, including stoking competition and enhancing disclosure to reduce excessive transaction costs. In this solicited comment, I concur with Judge's findings and prescriptions by adding a paired example: that of Berkshire Hathaway versus Kohlberg Kravis Roberts. In the field of corporate acquisitions, these rivals are opposites, Berkshire shunning intermediaries and generating virtually no transaction costs while KKR feasts on multiple and lavish fees. The contrast reflects broader differences between Berkshire and private equity …


Book Review: Lessons In Censorship: How Schools And Courts Subvert Students’ First Amendment Rights (Catherine J. Ross), Naomi R. Cahn Jan 2015

Book Review: Lessons In Censorship: How Schools And Courts Subvert Students’ First Amendment Rights (Catherine J. Ross), Naomi R. Cahn

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This book review of Catherine Ross's Lessons in Censorship places issues involving the free speech rights of public school students in the context of family law.


China’S Legal System And The Fourth Plenum, Donald C. Clarke Jan 2015

China’S Legal System And The Fourth Plenum, Donald C. Clarke

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) Central Committee’s Fourth Plenum, held in October 2014, was its first meeting specifically devoted to the legal system, and as such attracted much from those interested in Chinese law. But the official Decision of the Fourth Plenum does not represent a conversion to the ideology of rule of law. Even if the leadership were to desire the system of accountability and institutionalized restraint on government that is generally understood by the term “rule of law,” it could not be accomplished any time soon and would require changes in entrenched features of the current political and …


The Return Of Lochner, Thomas Colby, Peter J. Smith Jan 2015

The Return Of Lochner, Thomas Colby, Peter J. Smith

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

For a very long time, it has been an article of faith among liberals and conservatives alike that Lochner v. New York was obviously and irredeemably wrong. Lochner is one of only a few cases that constitute our “anticanon,” universally reviled by the legal community as the “worst of the worst.” Our first claim in this Article is that the orthodoxy in modern conservative legal thought about Lochner is on the verge of changing. We believe that conservatives are ready, once again, to embrace Lochner— although perhaps not in name—by recommitting to some form of robust judicial protection for economic …


Ruth Bader Ginsburg And The Interaction Of Legal Systems, Paul Schiff Berman Jan 2015

Ruth Bader Ginsburg And The Interaction Of Legal Systems, Paul Schiff Berman

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

The idea of legal pluralism is that law must always negotiate situations when multiple communities and legal authorities seek to regulate the same act or actor. These overlapping jurisdictional assertions may occur because of federalism, or because disputes often cross territorial borders, or because of complicated inter-jurisdictional arrangements, as with Indian tribes in the United States. In all of these situations, judges must develop strategies for determining how best to balance the competing claims of multiple communities: does the law of one community triumph, does the law of the other community triumph, or is there some hybrid solution available?

This …


Johnson’S Differentiation Theory: Is It Really Empirically Supported?, Joan S. Meier Jan 2015

Johnson’S Differentiation Theory: Is It Really Empirically Supported?, Joan S. Meier

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Michael Johnson’s differentiation of ‘‘types’’ of domestic violence has had a significant impact on courts and providers, in part because of its claim to an empirical basis. Unfortunately, the label ‘‘situational couple violence’’ has already been used by judges and evaluators to minimize abuse claims in custody cases. Johnson’s repeated assertion that SCV is the most common form of domestic violence reinforces the marginalizing of domestic violence. But what do his data actually show? Here Professor Meier takes a close look at the research Johnson relies on and finds that it fails to prove his thesis. Rather, the data suggest …


The Us Legal System On Data Protection In The Field Of Law Enforcement. Safeguards, Rights And Remedies For Eu Citizens, Francesca Bignami Jan 2015

The Us Legal System On Data Protection In The Field Of Law Enforcement. Safeguards, Rights And Remedies For Eu Citizens, Francesca Bignami

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

At the request of the LIBE Committee of the European Parliament, this study surveys the U.S. system of data protection in the field of federal law enforcement. Since the legal category of “data protection” does not formally exist in U.S. law, the study begins by setting out the substantive and procedural requirements of EU law that are canvassed in the context of information-gathering and surveillance by U.S. law enforcement agencies. The study then analyzes the data protection law governing federal agencies according to two criteria: sources and methods of surveillance and data collection. It first reviews the two principal sources …


Nuclear Power, Risk, And Retroactivity, Emily Hammond Jan 2015

Nuclear Power, Risk, And Retroactivity, Emily Hammond

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

The 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster presented a familiar scenario from a risk perception standpoint. It combined a classic “dread risk” (radioactivity), a punctuating event (the disaster itself), and resultant stigmatization (involving worldwide repercussions for nuclear power). Some nuclear nations curtailed nuclear power generation, and decades-old opposition to nuclear power found a renaissance. In these circumstances, risk theory predicts a regulatory knee-jerk response, potentially resulting in inefficient overregulation. But it also suggests procedural palliatives that conveniently overlap with administrative law values, making room for the engagement of the full spectrum of stakeholders. This Essay sketches the U.S. regulatory response to Fukushima. …


The Puzzle Of Alfarabi's Parallel Works, Miriam Galston Jan 2015

The Puzzle Of Alfarabi's Parallel Works, Miriam Galston

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Scholars disagree about the correct interpretation of Alfarabi’s Political Regime and Virtuous City, treatises that have striking similarities, yet notable differences. For some, the treatises encapsulate Alfarabi’s philosophy; for others, they express only politically salutary opinions. Both interpretations fail to explain why he wrote parallel works. If both reflect Alfarabi’s genuine philosophic doctrines, why did he compose separate but parallel treatises, both written when his philosophy was mature? Alternatively, if the treatises are political or rhetorical, why did Alfarabi compose two versions, and why did he choose these two accounts rather than others? To answer these questions, I discuss several …


The Price Of Paid Prioritization: The International And Domestic Consequences Of The Failure To Protect Net Neutrality In The United States, Arturo J. Carrillo, Dawn C. Nunziato Jan 2015

The Price Of Paid Prioritization: The International And Domestic Consequences Of The Failure To Protect Net Neutrality In The United States, Arturo J. Carrillo, Dawn C. Nunziato

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This article examines the international trade and human rights obligations of the United States as they relate to net neutrality to determine the extent to which the approach adopted by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in 2015 to promote an open Internet complies with those obligations. In March of that year, the FCC adopted new rules to promote and protect an open Internet that, inter alia, reclassified broadband providers as common carriers subject to nondiscrimination obligations and codified strong net neutrality protections. The authors argue that the 2015 FCC Order, contrary to its predecessors, largely meets the requirements of the …


Class, Politics, Gender And The Marriage Divide In The United States, Naomi R. Cahn, June Carbone Jan 2015

Class, Politics, Gender And The Marriage Divide In The United States, Naomi R. Cahn, June Carbone

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

In this article we use the idea of the 'marriage divide' to describe the transformation of the family to meet the needs of the information economy and the divisions that the transformation has created. In doing so, we emphasise three types of 'marriage divides' in the United States: class and racial, ideological and political, and family law/gender ideology.


Extent Of Cooperative Enforcement: Effect Of The Regulator-Regulated Facility Relationship On Audit Frequency, Dietrich Earnhart, Robert L. Glicksman Jan 2015

Extent Of Cooperative Enforcement: Effect Of The Regulator-Regulated Facility Relationship On Audit Frequency, Dietrich Earnhart, Robert L. Glicksman

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

A spirited debate explores the comparative merits of two different approaches to the enforcement of environmental law: the noncooperative approach, which emphasizes the deterrence of noncompliance through inflexibly imposed sanctions, and the cooperative approach, which emphasizes the inducement of compliance through flexibility and assistance. Both scholarly and policymaking communities are interested in this topic of enforcement approach within the realms of finance, tax compliance, occupational safety, food and drug safety, consumer product safety, and environmental protection, among others. To inform this debate, our study explores enforcement of environmental protection laws where the debate has been especially spirited yet lacking in …


Book Review: Casting Off The Canon: Family Law Reimagined, Laurie S. Kohn Jan 2015

Book Review: Casting Off The Canon: Family Law Reimagined, Laurie S. Kohn

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Jill Hasday's book, Family Law Reimagined, offers a clear-eyed vision of what family law is, what it is not, and where it might be headed. Hasday considers family law's canon-the set of principles by which we have come to characterize family law-and then debunks the canon by methodically setting forth each notion and illustrating its inaccuracies or limitations. In doing so, Hasday urges the reader to clear the noise of the canon and to see the law in all its messy inconsistencies and shortcomings.


Authentication And Hearsay: Which Trumps?, Stephen A. Saltzburg Jan 2015

Authentication And Hearsay: Which Trumps?, Stephen A. Saltzburg

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This article addresses the relationship between two federal rules of evidence: Rules 104(a) and 104(b) and which standards a trial judge should apply in admitting hearsay evidence when its authentication is in question. Focusing on United States v. Harvey, 117 F.3d 1044 (7th Circ. 1997) and a simple hypothetical, the article concludes that evidence must be authenticated under Rule 104(b) as well as satisfying the hearsay rule and Rule 104(a).


Debunking Revisionist Understandings Of Environmental Cooperative Federalism: Collective Action Responses To Air Pollution, Jessica Wentz Jan 2015

Debunking Revisionist Understandings Of Environmental Cooperative Federalism: Collective Action Responses To Air Pollution, Jessica Wentz

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

The federal Clean Air Act initiated Congress's venture into cooperative environmental federalism in 1970. Forty-five years later, misconceptions about the nature of that venture (and similar examples of cooperative federalism under other federal environmental statutes) persist. In particular, some recent judicial decisions characterize environmental cooperative federalism as an equal partnership between the federal Environmental Protection Agency and the states. They also take umbrage at efforts by EPA to override state policies and initiatives that fail to conform to the minimum responsibilities that the statutes impose on the states, characterizing them as unlawful affronts to state sovereignty.

This chapter argues that …


The Clean Power Plan: Issues To Watch, Robert L. Glicksman, Emily Hammond, Alice Kaswan, William Buzbzee, Kirsten H. Engel, David M. Driesen, Victor Byers Flatt, Alexandra B. Klass, Thomas Owen Mcgarity, Melissa Powers, Joseph P. Tomain Jan 2015

The Clean Power Plan: Issues To Watch, Robert L. Glicksman, Emily Hammond, Alice Kaswan, William Buzbzee, Kirsten H. Engel, David M. Driesen, Victor Byers Flatt, Alexandra B. Klass, Thomas Owen Mcgarity, Melissa Powers, Joseph P. Tomain

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Although the Clean Air Act is an imperfect tool for addressing the nation’s greenhouse gas emissions, it is the only available federal mechanism for directly addressing power plant carbon emissions. The Obama Administration’s Clean Power Plan, published in final form in August 2015, tackles the challenge. This paper from the Center for Progressive Reform (CPR) compiles 13 separately authored essays from 11 CPR Member Scholars, each addressing a different topic related to the Clean Power Plan, and each representing the expertise and views of its individual author(s). Published in July 2015, just before the release of the final rule, the …


Whither/Wither Alimony?, June Carbone, Naomi R. Cahn Jan 2015

Whither/Wither Alimony?, June Carbone, Naomi R. Cahn

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Can alimony be saved? Historically, alimony protected women's dependence during marriage. The most fundamental challenge for its continuation therefore rests on reconciling alimony with an era in which the majority of women, including 71% of mothers with children under 18, are in the labor market. This requires reconsideration of the nature of marriage, not just as a partnership ideal, which arguably it has long been, or as a relationship between equals, which has emerged more recently, but as an integrated part of a new economic model. This review of The Marriage Buyout by Cynthia Starnes assesses her justification for the …


Emerging Policy And Practice Issues (2015), Steven L. Schooner Jan 2015

Emerging Policy And Practice Issues (2015), Steven L. Schooner

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This paper, presented at the West Government Contracts Year in Review Conference (covering 2014), attempts to identify the key trends and issues in U.S. federal procurement for 2014. Consistent with prior practice, this chapter offers extensive coverage of the federal procurement, grant, and defense spending trends and attempts to predict what lies ahead, particularly with regard to legislative and executive activity (which, this year, was highlighted by Executive Order activity). The paper discusses, in addition to data, changes to OFPP and DoD leadership and the continued Defense Department Better Buying Power Initiative (now in version 3.0) and acquisition performance measurement …


Public Procurement Law: Key International Developments In 2014 — Part I: An American Perspective On The New European Public Procurement Directives, Christopher R. Yukins Jan 2015

Public Procurement Law: Key International Developments In 2014 — Part I: An American Perspective On The New European Public Procurement Directives, Christopher R. Yukins

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

The year 2014 saw major developments in European public procurement law, as a number of new procurement directives finally came into force. This paper focuses on the two elements of the new European Union procurement directive, 2014/24/EU, most likely to affect the U.S. procurement community: new flexibility in the use of best-value negotiations, and expanded grounds for excluding potential contractors, for corruption or otherwise. The paper also will discuss how the new procurement directive may affect ongoing trade negotiations, especially between the United States and Europe under the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP).


The Regulatory Contract In The Marketplace, Emily Hammond, David Spence Jan 2015

The Regulatory Contract In The Marketplace, Emily Hammond, David Spence

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

For decades, energy policy has struggled to reconcile two distinct visions for the future: the first seeks ever-more-competitive, efficient, and dynamic electricity markets; while the second seeks an ever-greener mix of electricity generation sources. Caught within this push-and-pull dynamic is the regulatory contract — a nineteenth-century concept that stands more for ordered regulation than competitive markets. This Article examines how piecemeal pursuit of two energy visions has produced mismatches between rapidly evolving markets and governance institutions that cannot change as quickly. To better evaluate these mismatches, the Article develops a framework that accounts not just for market operation and environmental …


Mandatory Disclosure: A Case Study In How Anti-Corruption Measures Can Affect Competition In Defense Markets, Christopher R. Yukins Jan 2015

Mandatory Disclosure: A Case Study In How Anti-Corruption Measures Can Affect Competition In Defense Markets, Christopher R. Yukins

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

In the U.S. defense procurement market, regulators require contractors to make “mandatory disclosures” if principals at those firms determine, after due review, that there is credible evidence that the firms engaged in certain crimes (fraud, bribery or gratuities), civil fraud, or significant overpayment by the government. Failure to make such a mandatory disclosure, required by clause and by regulation, can lead to (among other things) the debarment of the contractor -- a potentially devastating result. Mandatory disclosure is a natural extension of a separate requirement, that contractors maintain effective corporate compliance and ethics systems, and the Defense Department’s largest prime …


First Report Of The Special Rapporteur On Crimes Against Humanity, Sean D. Murphy Jan 2015

First Report Of The Special Rapporteur On Crimes Against Humanity, Sean D. Murphy

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

In the field of international law, three core crimes generally make up the jurisdiction of international criminal tribunals: war crimes; genocide; and crimes against humanity. Only two of these crimes (war crimes and genocide) are the subject of a global treaty that requires States to prevent and punish such conduct and to cooperate among themselves toward those ends. By contrast, there is no such treaty dedicated to preventing and punishing crimes against humanity.

Yet crimes against humanity may be more prevalent than either genocide or war crimes. Such crimes may occur in situations not involving armed conflict and do not …


Demand Side Reform In The Poor People’S Court, Jessica K. Steinberg Jan 2015

Demand Side Reform In The Poor People’S Court, Jessica K. Steinberg

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

A crisis in civil justice has seized the lowest rungs of state court where the great majority of American justice is meted out. Nineteen million civil cases are filed each year in the so-called “poor people’s court,” and seventy to ninety-eight percent of those matters involve an unrepresented litigant who is typically low-income and often a member of a vulnerable population. This Article challenges the predominant scholarly view in favor of “supply side” remedies for improving access to justice—that is, remedies focused exclusively on supplying counsel to litigants, either through adoption of “civil Gideon,” a universal civil right to counsel, …


Food And Condiments For The Twenty-First Century: Business, Science, And Policy, Lewis D. Solomon Jan 2015

Food And Condiments For The Twenty-First Century: Business, Science, And Policy, Lewis D. Solomon

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

We are in the midst of a paradigm shift in the food industry. People are more closely examining the impact of food not only on their health and wellness but also on the environment. Some are also concerned about the relationship between food and animal welfare as well as resource scarcities. Big food conglomerates face competition from upstart rivals. The for-profit companies profiled in this work, Nu-tek Food Science, Lyrical Foods, Hampton Creek, Beyond Meat, Impossible Foods, Modern Meadow, and Rosa Labs, are leading the reinvention of condiments and food. Although picking winners and also-rans represents a difficult endeavor, some …