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Articles 61 - 90 of 101

Full-Text Articles in Law

The Necessity For Constrained Deliberation, Richard A. Epstein Jan 2000

The Necessity For Constrained Deliberation, Richard A. Epstein

Articles

No abstract provided.


The Constitutional Perils Of Moderation: The Case Of The Boy Scouts, Richard A. Epstein Jan 2000

The Constitutional Perils Of Moderation: The Case Of The Boy Scouts, Richard A. Epstein

Articles

No abstract provided.


Hard Bargains And Real Steals: Land Use Exactions Revisited, Lee Anne Fennell Jan 2000

Hard Bargains And Real Steals: Land Use Exactions Revisited, Lee Anne Fennell

Articles

No abstract provided.


Bringing Politics Back In (Reviewing Lucas A. Powe, Jr., The Warren Court And American Politics (2000)), Gerald Rosenberg Jan 2000

Bringing Politics Back In (Reviewing Lucas A. Powe, Jr., The Warren Court And American Politics (2000)), Gerald Rosenberg

Articles

No abstract provided.


Contest And Consent: A Legal History Of Marital Rape, Jill Elaine Hasday Jan 2000

Contest And Consent: A Legal History Of Marital Rape, Jill Elaine Hasday

Articles

No abstract provided.


American Advice And New Constitutions Global Affairs Experiences, Cass R. Sunstein Jan 2000

American Advice And New Constitutions Global Affairs Experiences, Cass R. Sunstein

Articles

No abstract provided.


Commercial Norms And The Fine Art Of The Small Con: Comments On Daniel Keating's Exploring The Battle Of The Forms In Action, Douglas G. Baird Jan 2000

Commercial Norms And The Fine Art Of The Small Con: Comments On Daniel Keating's Exploring The Battle Of The Forms In Action, Douglas G. Baird

Articles

No abstract provided.


The Parental Rights Of Minors, Emily Buss Jan 2000

The Parental Rights Of Minors, Emily Buss

Articles

No abstract provided.


Understanding The Resemblance Between Modern And Traditional Customary International Law, Eric A. Posner, Jack L. Goldsmith Jan 2000

Understanding The Resemblance Between Modern And Traditional Customary International Law, Eric A. Posner, Jack L. Goldsmith

Articles

No abstract provided.


Regulatory Competition Or Regulatory Harmonization - A Silly Question, Alan O. Sykes Jan 2000

Regulatory Competition Or Regulatory Harmonization - A Silly Question, Alan O. Sykes

Articles

The debate over 'competition versus harmonization' in regulatory policy often confuses the pertinent alternatives. This comment argues that neither pure regulatory competition nor complete regulatory harmonization is desirable or feasible where important international cross-border effects of regulation arise. Instead, a considerable degree of cooperation is almost always needed, yet non-homogeneity of regulatory policies is almost always desirable as well. This proposition holds virtually regardless of the subject matter of regulation.


Copyright, Borrowed Images, And Appropriation Art: An Economic Approach, William M. Landes Jan 2000

Copyright, Borrowed Images, And Appropriation Art: An Economic Approach, William M. Landes

Articles

No abstract provided.


Voting With Intensity, Saul Levmore Jan 2000

Voting With Intensity, Saul Levmore

Articles

Can intense preferences be accommodated in voting schemes without shifting power to wealthier citizens and organized interests? This article first situates the question within the larger issue of the inalienability of some legal rights, and then focuses on collective action problems among voters. These problems offer a way to explain our present rules and intuitions regarding vote buying and related matters in areas ranging from corporate law to associations and to campaign finance reform. But in large-scale general elections, collective action problems are likely to doom strategies for extracting information about intense preferences, and they may even produce perverse results. …


Gaps In International Legal Literature What's Wrong With International Law Scholarship, Lyonette Louis-Jacques Jan 2000

Gaps In International Legal Literature What's Wrong With International Law Scholarship, Lyonette Louis-Jacques

Articles

No abstract provided.


Focal Point Theory Of Expressive Law, Richard H. Mcadams Jan 2000

Focal Point Theory Of Expressive Law, Richard H. Mcadams

Articles

No abstract provided.


Internet And The Dormant Commerce Clause, The, Jack L. Goldsmith, Alan O. Sykes Jan 2000

Internet And The Dormant Commerce Clause, The, Jack L. Goldsmith, Alan O. Sykes

Articles

No abstract provided.


Mass Incarceration: Perspectives On U.S. Imprisonment, Randolph N. Stone Jan 2000

Mass Incarceration: Perspectives On U.S. Imprisonment, Randolph N. Stone

Articles

No abstract provided.


Privacy, Publication, And The First Amendment: The Dangers Of First Amendment Exceptionalism, Richard A. Epstein Jan 2000

Privacy, Publication, And The First Amendment: The Dangers Of First Amendment Exceptionalism, Richard A. Epstein

Articles

The coordination of common law and constitutional norms are of pressing importance on matters of freedom of speech. In the Supreme Court and elsewhere, it is possible to discern two sharply inconsistent attitudes toward this question. One view holds that the First Amendment simply prevents any legislative backsliding from the common law rules that protect freedom of speech and of the press, much as they protect freedom of contract and freedom of action generally. On this view, the standard rule governing damages and injunctive relief apply to speech much as they do anywhere else. On the alternative view of what …


Treaties, Human Rights, And Conditional Consent, Curtis A. Bradley, Jack L. Goldsmith Jan 2000

Treaties, Human Rights, And Conditional Consent, Curtis A. Bradley, Jack L. Goldsmith

Articles

Article II of the Constitution grants the President the "Power, by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, to make Treaties, provided two thirds of the Senators present concur."1 When the President obtains the Senate's advice and consent and ratifies a treaty, the treaty binds the United States internationally. If the treaty is "self-executing,"2 also becomes part of domestic federal law, superseding both prior inconsistent federal law (treaties and statutes) and prior inconsistent state law.3

The constitutional treatymaking process was designed with a particular type of treaty in mind. In the late eighteenth century, treaties were …


A Theory Of Contract Law Under Conditions Of Radical Judicial Error, Eric A. Posner Jan 2000

A Theory Of Contract Law Under Conditions Of Radical Judicial Error, Eric A. Posner

Articles

No abstract provided.


How Changes In Property Regimes Influence Social Norms: Commodifying California's Carpool Lanes, Lior Strahilevitz Jan 2000

How Changes In Property Regimes Influence Social Norms: Commodifying California's Carpool Lanes, Lior Strahilevitz

Articles

No abstract provided.


The Treaty Power And American Federalism, Part Ii, Curtis A. Bradley Jan 2000

The Treaty Power And American Federalism, Part Ii, Curtis A. Bradley

Articles

In an article published in this Review two years ago, I described and critiqued what I called the "nationalist view" of the treaty power. Under this view, the national government has the constitutional power to enter into treaties, and thereby create binding national law by virtue of the Supremacy Clause, without regard to either subject matter or federalism limitations. This view is reflected in the writings of a number of prominent foreign affairs law scholars, as well as in the American Law Institute's Restatement (Third) of Foreign Relations Law of the United States. In my article, I argued that this …


On Philosophy And Economics, Cass R. Sunstein Jan 2000

On Philosophy And Economics, Cass R. Sunstein

Articles

No abstract provided.


Standing For Animals (With Notes On Animal Rights) A Tribute To Kenneth L. Karst, Cass R. Sunstein Jan 2000

Standing For Animals (With Notes On Animal Rights) A Tribute To Kenneth L. Karst, Cass R. Sunstein

Articles

No abstract provided.


Television And The Public Interest, Cass R. Sunstein Jan 2000

Television And The Public Interest, Cass R. Sunstein

Articles

The communications revolution has thrown into question the value of imposing public interest obligations on television broadcasters. But the distinctive nature of this unusual market-with "winner-take-all"features, with viewers as a commodity, with pervasive externalities from private choices, and with market effects on preferences as well as the other way around-justifies a continuing role for government regulation in the public interest. At the same time, regulation best takes the form, not of anachronistic command-and-control regulation, but of (1) disclosure requirements, (2) economic incentives ("pay or play"), and (3) voluntary self-regulation through a privately administered code. Some discussion is devoted to free …


The Adolescent's Stake In The Allocation Of Educational Control Between Parent And State, Emily Buss Jan 2000

The Adolescent's Stake In The Allocation Of Educational Control Between Parent And State, Emily Buss

Articles

Courts policymakers; and scholars have long struggled with the question of how to allocate educational control between parents and the state, particularly where parents' preferences are religiously motivated. While the debate reflects a broad range of viewpoints, these viewpoints share a common blind spot: They focus on the state's interest in imparting certain knowledge and skills; and ignore the state's interest in facilitating interactions among ideologically diverse peers. This Article argues that, particularly for older adolescents, the nature of their peer interactions has a far bigger impact on their development than does the content of their curriculum. Drawing on the …


Ironing Out The Flat Tax, David A. Weisbach Jan 2000

Ironing Out The Flat Tax, David A. Weisbach

Articles

While the Flat Tax has attracted substantial attention, proponents of the tax have not given any details of its implementation. Without this detail, evaluation of the tax is difficult. Claims of simplicity may be false. The efficiency claims for the Flat Tax rely on its relative unavoidability and its cleanly stated economic incentives, but without details, these claims cannot be evaluated Moreover, the distribution of the tax burden will be affected by its implementation. This article attempts to fill in the gap by considering the design issues presented by the Flat Tax. A wide variety of issues are considered, including …


The Uneasy Marriage Of Utilitarian And Libertarian Thought, Richard A. Epstein Jan 2000

The Uneasy Marriage Of Utilitarian And Libertarian Thought, Richard A. Epstein

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No abstract provided.


Deliberating About Dollars: The Severity Shift Empirical Study, Cass R. Sunstein, Daniel Kahneman, David Schkade Jan 2000

Deliberating About Dollars: The Severity Shift Empirical Study, Cass R. Sunstein, Daniel Kahneman, David Schkade

Articles

How does jury deliberation affect the predeliberation judgments of individual jurors? In this paper we make progress on that question by reporting the results of a study of over 500 mock juries composed of over 3000 jury eligible citizens. Our principal finding is that with respect to dollars, deliberation produces a "severity shift," in which the jury's dollar verdict is systematically higher than that of the median of its jurors' predeliberation judgments. A "deliberation shift analysis" is introduced to measure the effect of deliberation. The severity shift is attributed to a "rhetorical asymmetry," in which arguments for higher awards are …


Deliberative Trouble - Why Groups Go To Extremes, Cass R. Sunstein Jan 2000

Deliberative Trouble - Why Groups Go To Extremes, Cass R. Sunstein

Articles

No abstract provided.


Orwell Versus Huxley: Economics, Technology, Privacy And Satire, Richard A. Posner Jan 2000

Orwell Versus Huxley: Economics, Technology, Privacy And Satire, Richard A. Posner

Articles

No abstract provided.