Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Law and Politics (79)
- Constitutional Law (30)
- Law and Society (29)
- Social and Behavioral Sciences (26)
- Public Law and Legal Theory (24)
-
- International Law (23)
- Legislation (22)
- Economics (21)
- Comparative and Foreign Law (20)
- Law and Economics (18)
- Human Rights Law (16)
- Administrative Law (14)
- Courts (13)
- Civil Rights and Discrimination (12)
- State and Local Government Law (12)
- Judges (11)
- Commercial Law (10)
- Jurisprudence (10)
- Business Organizations Law (9)
- Criminal Law (8)
- Legal History (8)
- Religion Law (8)
- Antitrust and Trade Regulation (7)
- Criminal Procedure (7)
- Government Contracts (7)
- International Trade Law (7)
- Civil Law (6)
- Communications Law (6)
- Consumer Protection Law (6)
- Institution
-
- BLR (64)
- Fordham Law School (6)
- University of South Carolina (5)
- Duquesne University (3)
- Maurer School of Law: Indiana University (3)
-
- SelectedWorks (3)
- University of Denver (2)
- University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law (2)
- University of Richmond (2)
- American University Washington College of Law (1)
- Cornell University Law School (1)
- Duke Law (1)
- Georgetown University Law Center (1)
- Hamline University (1)
- Montclair State University (1)
- New York Law School (1)
- Nova Southeastern University (1)
- Pace University (1)
- Schulich School of Law, Dalhousie University (1)
- University of Colorado Law School (1)
- University of Florida Levin College of Law (1)
- University of Georgia School of Law (1)
- University of Massachusetts Boston (1)
- University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School (1)
- Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law (1)
- West Virginia University (1)
- Publication
-
- ExpressO (63)
- Fordham Law Review (6)
- South Carolina Law Review (5)
- Ledewitz Papers (3)
- Federal Communications Law Journal (2)
-
- Human Rights & Human Welfare (2)
- Melissa K. Scanlan (2)
- University of Maryland Law Journal of Race, Religion, Gender and Class (2)
- All Faculty Scholarship (1)
- Arsalan Suleman (1)
- Articles & Chapters (1)
- Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals (1)
- Bookshelf (1)
- Cornell Law Faculty Working Papers (1)
- Dalhousie Law Journal (1)
- David A Schultz (1)
- Elisabeth Haub School of Law Faculty Publications (1)
- Georgetown Law Faculty Lectures and Appearances (1)
- ILSA Journal of International & Comparative Law (1)
- Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies (1)
- Law and Contemporary Problems (1)
- New England Journal of Public Policy (1)
- Public Law and Legal Theory Papers (1)
- Publications (1)
- Publications from President Jonathan G.S. Koppell (1)
- Scholarly Works (1)
- UF Law Faculty Publications (1)
- University of Richmond Law Review (1)
- West Virginia Law Review (1)
- Working Paper Series (1)
- Publication Type
Articles 61 - 90 of 107
Full-Text Articles in Law
Any Place For Ethnicity? The Liberal State And Immigration, David Abraham
Any Place For Ethnicity? The Liberal State And Immigration, David Abraham
ExpressO
When it comes to immigration, almost all liberal states are faced with the contradiction between their universalist principles and the real affinities they feel for ethnic kinsmen. This review essay (4000 words) addresses the different ways a number of liberal democracies have handled this dilemma.
"One Person, One Vote, And The Constitutionality Of The Winner-Take-All Allocation Of Electoral Votes", David A. Schultz
"One Person, One Vote, And The Constitutionality Of The Winner-Take-All Allocation Of Electoral Votes", David A. Schultz
David A Schultz
The winner-take-all method of allocating electoral votes in presidential races is the norm among states, yet nowhere in the Constitution is this practice mandated. This article contends that the winner-take-all allocation of electors unconstitutionally magnifies the battleground states' influence on the final Electoral College tally and that these inequities cannot be reconciled with the principle of one-person, one-vote that the US Supreme Court articulated in the landmark Reynolds v. Sims. In 1966 the Supreme Court declined to hear a case contesting the constitutionality of the winner-take-all system based on the one person, one vote, principle. It is time for the …
On Letters Of Reference As Frames Of Reference, Roderick A. Macdonald, Alexandra Law
On Letters Of Reference As Frames Of Reference, Roderick A. Macdonald, Alexandra Law
Dalhousie Law Journal
Requesting, writing and reading letters of reference are everyday features of academic life. Yet they are neglected as a matter of professorial training and their pedagogical importance is rarely acknowledged. This paper reviews various practical aspects of the reference process, with emphasis on its politics and ethics. It argues that letters of reference frame the lived experience of candidate, writer, reader and community-both for the present and the future.
Vanquishing Copyright Pirates And Patent Trolls: The Divergent Evolution Of Copyright And Patent Laws, Robert E. Thomas
Vanquishing Copyright Pirates And Patent Trolls: The Divergent Evolution Of Copyright And Patent Laws, Robert E. Thomas
ExpressO
In the last decade copyright law has followed an almost linear path of increasing legal protections for copyright holders’ battle against digital piracy. By contrast, proposed changes in patent law are decidedly anti-patent holder due to efforts to battle patent trolls – companies that acquire and use patent portfolios to extract payoffs from technology companies. Patent law reform faces a far more contentious path and will likely lose several of its most significant provisions. This paper analyzes efforts to change the laws of copyright and patent using James Q. Wilson’s theory of regulation. With little concerted opposition, copyright law has …
The Unexplored Option: Jewish Settlements In A Palestinian State, David M. Phillips
The Unexplored Option: Jewish Settlements In A Palestinian State, David M. Phillips
ExpressO
The withdrawal of Israeli settlers and soldiers from the Gaza Strip, the recent Hamas victory in the Palestinian Authority elections, and the results of the Israeli elections in which the newly-formed Kadima Party received a plurality of the votes have all focused attention upon the fate of Israeli Jewish settlements on the West Bank. Most parties consider the continued existence of the settlements as precluding a peaceful resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and their establishment as having violated international law. The assumption that their presence precludes peace is premised primarily on the assumption that Israeli settlements will eventually mean Israeli …
Halos, Billboards, And The Taxation Of Charitable Sponsorships, Ethan G. Stone
Halos, Billboards, And The Taxation Of Charitable Sponsorships, Ethan G. Stone
ExpressO
This article reexamines the controversy in the 1990s over the tax treatment of revenues charities earn by selling sponsor acknowledgements. The controversy erupted when the IRS tried to tax Mobil Cotton Bowl and John Hancock Bowl on their sponsorship revenues, claiming that it represented payment for advertising. It ended when Congress amended to tax code to grant sponsorship revenues an effective exemption from tax. Traditionally, this has been understood as a simple and sordid story of raw lobbying power supplanting good tax policy. I argue that the controversy reflects the overriding importance of political symbolism in understanding the charitable tax …
Keep These Branches Untangled, Bruce Ledewitz
Keep These Branches Untangled, Bruce Ledewitz
Ledewitz Papers
Published scholarship collected from academic journals, law reviews, newspaper publications & online periodicals
The Unexplored Option: Jewish Settlements In A Palestinian State, David M. Phillips
The Unexplored Option: Jewish Settlements In A Palestinian State, David M. Phillips
ExpressO
The withdrawal of Israeli settlers and soldiers from the Gaza Strip, the recent Hamas victory in the Palestinian Authority elections, and the forthcoming Israeli elections in which the newly-formed Kadima Party is expected to receive a plurality of the votes have all focused attention upon the fate of Israeli settlements on the West Bank. The present head of the Kadima Party, Acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, has even signalled that, if Kadima forms the next Israeli government, Israel will withdraw from many of the settlements on the West Bank, although different statements from different Kadima spokespeople leave ambiguous which settlements …
Buried Online: State Laws That Limit E-Commerce In Caskets, Jerry Ellig, Asheesh Agarwal
Buried Online: State Laws That Limit E-Commerce In Caskets, Jerry Ellig, Asheesh Agarwal
ExpressO
Consumers seeking to purchase caskets online could benefit from the Supreme Court’s 2005 decision that states cannot discriminate against interstate direct wine shipment. Federal courts have reached conflicting conclusions when asked whether state laws requiring casket sellers to be licensed funeral directors violate the U.S. Constitution’s Due Process Clause. In Powers v. Harris, the 10th Circuit even offered an unprecedented ruling that economic protectionism is a legitimate state interest that can justify otherwise unconstitutional policies. In Granholm v. Heald, however, the Supreme Court declared that discriminatory barriers to interstate wine shipment must be justified by a legitimate state interest, and …
Legislative Threats, Guy Halfteck
Legislative Threats, Guy Halfteck
ExpressO
The Article presents a theory of legislative threats that pierces the fundamental concept of the legal system as a regulatory institution and more generally as a mechanism of social governance. It examines ten case studies that demonstrate the use of legislative threats in diverse areas of law and social policy. Conceptually, legislative threats encompass a variety of threats that legislators exert on firms and financial institutions, organizations and institutional shareholders, professions and industrial sectors, universities and public institutions, federal agencies, and possibly even U.S. states, according to which legislators will exercise their legislative mandate and enact adverse legislation in order …
Arms Embargoes And The Right To Self-Defense In International Law , Matthew D. Vandermyde
Arms Embargoes And The Right To Self-Defense In International Law , Matthew D. Vandermyde
ExpressO
Over the past few decades, a number of nations have argued that the mandatory arms embargoes imposed against them violated their right to self-defense. In some cases the Security Council has responded by adjusting the embargo to exclude its application to arms destined for the government, such as in Rwanda and Sierra Leone. But in other cases the Security Council has rejected the argument and refused to lift or adjust the embargo, such as in Bosnia and Liberia. In December of 2005, Somalia put forth a similar line of argument, asking the Security Council to lift the arms embargo imposed …
The Children Of Science: Property, People, Or Something In Between?, Star Q. Lopez
The Children Of Science: Property, People, Or Something In Between?, Star Q. Lopez
ExpressO
How should states classify embryos? The war has often waged between two classifications, people versus property. But what if a state assumed something in between, finding the embryo to be a potential person entitled to special respect? If a state adopted this position, how would the law affect medical research?
Presuming embryos constitute potential persons, the debate would continue with how to define “special respect.” The status of a potential person runs along a spectrum between property and personhood. How one defines “special respect” determines where the potential person falls along this spectrum. Special respect would create a spectrum of …
How Do You Take Your Multi-State, Class-Action Litigation? One Lump Or Two?, Daniel R. Karon
How Do You Take Your Multi-State, Class-Action Litigation? One Lump Or Two?, Daniel R. Karon
ExpressO
The Class Action Fairness Act of 2005, which essentially federalizes all multi-state class-action cases, has introduced the class-action bar, and necessarily the judiciary, to myriad substantive and procedural issues never before envisioned in class-action litigation’s history. While some of these issues have already surfaced, many others haven’t but will as newly federalized multi-state class-action lawsuits move through litigation to the class certification stage. A major and unavoidable issue involves whether federal judges, when deciding multi-state claims’ class certification under Federal Rule 23, may consider well-developed, state class-action jurisprudence applying a single state’s substantive law or whether doing so violates the …
The Promise (And Limits) Of Neuroeconomics, Jedediah S. Purdy
The Promise (And Limits) Of Neuroeconomics, Jedediah S. Purdy
ExpressO
Neuroeconomics – the study of brain activity in people engaged in tasks of reasoning and choice – looks set to be the next behavioral economics: a set of findings about how people make decisions that casts doubt on widely accepted premises about rationality and social life. This essay explains what is most exciting about the new field and lays out some specific research tasks for it.
By enabling researchers to view the mind at work, neuroeconomics puts in question the most basic premise of twentieth-century empiricism, sometimes called positivism or behaviorism: that people are black boxes to one another, and …
Auditing Executive Discretion, Mariano-Florentino Cuellar
Auditing Executive Discretion, Mariano-Florentino Cuellar
ExpressO
Executive branch officials routinely make thousands of decisions affecting public security and welfare. While it is rare that such discretionary decisions are entirely immune from some kind of judicial review, courts’ role is often so circumscribed or deferential that in some domains the probability of uncovering problems through such review almost certainly falls close to zero. The resulting amount of executive discretion carries considerable risks along with rewards. Some discretionary decisions undoubtedly benefit from the speed and flexibility that results from limiting judicial review. Yet judicial review’s evisceration as a tool to restrain certain forms of discretion also makes it …
Regulatory Status Of Voip In The Post-Brand X World, Jerry Ellig
Regulatory Status Of Voip In The Post-Brand X World, Jerry Ellig
ExpressO
During the past several years, the Federal Communications Commission has engaged in a series of rulemakings to determine the regulatory status of Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP). The Supreme Court’s Brand X decision clarifies that even if the FCC’s determination conflicts with that of a court, the FCC’s judgment holds sway as long as the decision is reasonable. We believe that VoIP should be classified as an information service, rather than a telecommunications service, for several reasons. First, the Internet Protocol nature of VoIP technology means that it functions like an information service, rather than a telecommunications service. Second, in …
Backlash To Globalization In The Form Of State Legislation: Constitutional Implications, John R. Weber
Backlash To Globalization In The Form Of State Legislation: Constitutional Implications, John R. Weber
ExpressO
This paper will examine the Constitutional issues raised by the influx of state anti-outsourcing legislation using a recently enacted New Jersey statute. The New Jersey statute is very similar to, and contains many of the same features as, many other bills introduced in legislatures across the nation. Moreover, the political impetus for the introduction and enactment of the legislation reflects the struggle over the outsourcing issue that is occurring in communities nationwide.
The Opacity Of Transparency, Mark Fenster
The Opacity Of Transparency, Mark Fenster
UF Law Faculty Publications
The normative concept of transparency, along with the open government laws that purport to create a transparent public system of governance, promises the moon -- a democratic and accountable state above all, and a peaceful, prosperous, and efficient one as well. But transparency, in its role as the theoretical justification for a set of legal commands, frustrates all parties affected by its ambiguities and abstractions. The public's engagement with transparency in practice yields denials of reasonable requests for essential government information, as well as government meetings that occur behind closed doors. Meanwhile, state officials bemoan the significantly impaired decision-making processes …
Electoral College Reform Is Heating Up, And Posing Some Tough Choices, Robert Bennett
Electoral College Reform Is Heating Up, And Posing Some Tough Choices, Robert Bennett
Public Law and Legal Theory Papers
Electoral College reform is beginning to get some attention, with two different emphases, a move to institute a nationwide popular vote without a constitutional amendment, and a move to forbid faithless electoral votes. There is no logical incompatibility between the two, but in political and public policy terms, there are tensions between them. This paper evaluates the relative merits and importance of the two efforts and explores the tensions in simultaneous pursuit of the two.
The New Biopolitics: Autonomy, Demography, And Nationality, Jedediah S. Purdy
The New Biopolitics: Autonomy, Demography, And Nationality, Jedediah S. Purdy
ExpressO
No abstract provided.
"You Can't Wear That To Vote": The Constitutionality Of State Laws Prohibiting The Wearing Of Political Message Buttons, Kimberly J. Tucker
"You Can't Wear That To Vote": The Constitutionality Of State Laws Prohibiting The Wearing Of Political Message Buttons, Kimberly J. Tucker
ExpressO
My research for this article began on Election Day 2004 when I was told that I could not wear a campaign button into the polling room while voting in Virginia. The article outlines the laws of all 50 states that restrict a voter’s right to speak in and around polling places. It focuses on the 10 states that explicitly prohibit a voter from wearing “buttons” to the polls.
“It’S The [Tort System], Stupid:” Consumer Deductibles; How To More Equitably Distribute The Risks Of Medical Malpractice And Adequately Compensate Victims Without Statutory Damage Caps., Bradford Luke Ledbetter
“It’S The [Tort System], Stupid:” Consumer Deductibles; How To More Equitably Distribute The Risks Of Medical Malpractice And Adequately Compensate Victims Without Statutory Damage Caps., Bradford Luke Ledbetter
ExpressO
No abstract provided.
Card Check Recognition: The Ongoing Legal And Legislative Battle, Michael E. Aleo
Card Check Recognition: The Ongoing Legal And Legislative Battle, Michael E. Aleo
ExpressO
A great debate has been brewing for years over whether unions should be able to organize employees outside of the traditional election procedures provided by the National Labor Relations Act (“NLRA” or “the Act”). Typically, in an organizing drive, a union solicits support from employees to indicate a desire to run a National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB” or “Board”) election. The union does this by collecting cards from employees affirming the employees’ desire to have a representation election. If the union collects valid cards from at least one-third of eligible employees in the appropriate bargaining unit, the union may then …
Lincoln, The Constitution Of Necessity, And The Necessity Of Constitutions, Michael Kent Curtis
Lincoln, The Constitution Of Necessity, And The Necessity Of Constitutions, Michael Kent Curtis
ExpressO
Some invoke the legacy of Abraham Lincoln to justify largely unchecked executive power which in times of war trumps constitutional limits and guarantees of liberty. This article suggests that the Lincoln model is a poor one to follow: because some of his actions were inconsitent with democratic government, because the administration invoked the doctrine of necessity when many of the cabinet thought no necessity existed, and because in the end, Lincoln himself refused to follow his logic to its inevitable conclusion. It critiques two article by Michael Paulsen invoking Lincoln to justify largely unchecked executive power.
On The Legal Construction Of Ethnic Cleansing, Timothy V. Waters
On The Legal Construction Of Ethnic Cleansing, Timothy V. Waters
ExpressO
On the Legal Construction of Ethnic Cleansing
Timothy William Waters, Univ. Mississippi School of Law
Abstract
What is the true shape of our commitment to prohibit ethnic cleansing? This Article explores that question by considering a case observers have universally decided does not constitute ethnic cleansing. It examines the recent controversy in the European Union, when Sudeten Germans demanded that the Czech Republic apologize for having expelled them after WWII before being admitted to the EU. Their demands were universally rejected and the legality of the expulsions was reconfirmed by all relevant actors. So what is the consequence for customary …
Legislation And Legitimation: Congress And Insider Trading In The 1980s, Thomas W. Joo
Legislation And Legitimation: Congress And Insider Trading In The 1980s, Thomas W. Joo
ExpressO
Legislation and Legitimation:
Congress and Insider Trading in the 1980s
Abstract
Orthodox corporate law-and-economics holds that American corporate and securities regulation has evolved inexorably toward economic efficiency. That position is difficult to square with the fact that regulation is the product of government actors and institutions. Indeed, the rational behavior assumptions of law-and-economics suggest that those actors and institutions would tend to place their own self-interest ahead of economic efficiency. This article provides anecdotal evidence of such self-interest at work. Based on an analysis of legislative history—primarily Congressional hearings—this article argues that Congress had little interest in the economic policy …
Protecting Posterity: Economics, Abortion, Politics, And The Law, Bruce Ledewitz
Protecting Posterity: Economics, Abortion, Politics, And The Law, Bruce Ledewitz
Ledewitz Papers
Published scholarship collected from academic journals, law reviews, newspaper publications & online periodicals
Diminishing Borders In Trade And Terrorism: An Examination Of Regional Apllicability Of Gatt Article Xxi National Security Trade Sanctions, Eric J. Lobsinger
Diminishing Borders In Trade And Terrorism: An Examination Of Regional Apllicability Of Gatt Article Xxi National Security Trade Sanctions, Eric J. Lobsinger
ILSA Journal of International & Comparative Law
The concept of "war" has undergone extensive usage in U.S. foreign policy since the terrorist attacks of September 11,2001.
Detainee Treatment Act Of 2005, Arsalan M. Suleman
Detainee Treatment Act Of 2005, Arsalan M. Suleman
Arsalan Suleman
This Recent Development focuses on the legal standards that would govern the treatment and interrogation tactics applicable to detainees held by the United States abroad after the passage of the Detainee Treatment Act (DTA). The article first discusses the legal implications of the DTA as to U.S. law on the use of torture or CID treatment, which primarily concerns Sections 1002 and 1003 of the DTA. Then, it explores certain shortfalls in the scope of these sections on this issue, as the sections do not fully address all of the potential ways in which detainee abuse and torture might continue. …
Protecting The Public Trust And Human Rights In The Great Lakes, Melissa K. Scanlan
Protecting The Public Trust And Human Rights In The Great Lakes, Melissa K. Scanlan
Melissa K. Scanlan
No abstract provided.