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Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Insurance Law
Mhpaea & Marble Cake: Parity & The Forgotten Frame Of Federalism, Taleed El-Sabawi
Mhpaea & Marble Cake: Parity & The Forgotten Frame Of Federalism, Taleed El-Sabawi
Dickinson Law Review (2017-Present)
No abstract provided.
Competition As A Means Of Regulating Insurance, Jason C. Blackford
Competition As A Means Of Regulating Insurance, Jason C. Blackford
Cleveland State Law Review
The sole thesis of this paper is that competition among insurers, tempered by state supervision of their financial control, is a workable alternative to active state control of the business of insurance. It is not the purpose of this analysis to question the basic concept and the workability of affirmative government control of insurance. To test this thesis, a case study will be made of the rating process used in the business of automobile liability insurance in the State of Ohio.
Insurance - Regulation - The Extraterritorial Effect Of Insurance Regulation, With Particular Emphasis On New York, Bartlett A. Jackson S.Ed.
Insurance - Regulation - The Extraterritorial Effect Of Insurance Regulation, With Particular Emphasis On New York, Bartlett A. Jackson S.Ed.
Michigan Law Review
The past fifteen years have seen extensive examination of the process of regulation of the insurance industry. The recognition that insurance is interstate commerce has caused a reappraisal of the traditional system of state regulation. This examination has been primarily oriented toward determining whether diverse regulation by the various states is adequate in the light of the possibility of centralized federal control.
Non-Profit Hospital Service Plans, Leo A. Simpson
Non-Profit Hospital Service Plans, Leo A. Simpson
Cleveland State Law Review
Hospital service plans fulfill a vital social need. In view of the continuing support and apparently expanding activities of the plans, it is well to understand their legal nature. At the present time problems are arising that could not have been foreseen 25 years ago. The favorable treatment which hospital service plans have received under the law should be continued so long as the plans continue realistically to meet these problems as they have in the past.
The Law Of Burial Insurance, Charles T. Cady
The Law Of Burial Insurance, Charles T. Cady
Vanderbilt Law Review
Burial insurance, used in the sense of a risk-shifting device to aid the less fortunate, has existed in the form of friendly societies from time immemorial. Indeed, it is probable that this noncommercial type was the first form of insurance. There is some evidence that such societies existed in Egypt, 2500 B.C. There exists more concrete evidence that they thrived in ancient China, India, Greece and Rome. The Grecian societies, although largely religious and ritualistic, had as their main function the guarantee of a decent burial for their members. The existence around A.D. 117-138 of Roman societies, called collegia, is …