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Slides: Oil Shale Water Needs, State Water Planning And The Colorado River Compact, Daniel R. Birch 2010 University of Colorado Law School

Slides: Oil Shale Water Needs, State Water Planning And The Colorado River Compact, Daniel R. Birch

The Promise and Peril of Oil Shale Development (February 5)

Presenter: Daniel R. Birch, Deputy General Manager & Chief Engineer, Colorado River District

17 slides


Slides: Energy Development Water Needs Assessment And Water Supply Alternatives And Analysis, Benjamin Harding 2010 University of Colorado Law School

Slides: Energy Development Water Needs Assessment And Water Supply Alternatives And Analysis, Benjamin Harding

The Promise and Peril of Oil Shale Development (February 5)

Presenter: Benjamin Harding, Principal Engineer, AMEC Earth and Environmental

15 slides


The Ftc's Anticompetitive Pricing Case Against Intel, Herbert J. Hovenkamp 2010 University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School

The Ftc's Anticompetitive Pricing Case Against Intel, Herbert J. Hovenkamp

Faculty Scholarship at Penn Carey Law

The FTC’s wide ranging complaint against Intel Corporation indicates that the FTC intends to rely on the “unfair methods of competition” language in §5 of the FTC Act to reach beyond the proscriptions on unilateral conduct contained in §2 of the Sherman Act. The Supreme Court has expressly authorized such expansion, and statutory text, legislative history and legal policy all support it. While §2 reaches only conduct that threatens to “monopolize” a market, the “unfair methods of competition” language can reach improper abuses of a dominant position that fall short of creating monopoly. Further, the FTC has expertise that courts …


Presidential Control Of Administrative Agencies: A Debate Over Law Or Politics?, Cary Coglianese 2010 University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School

Presidential Control Of Administrative Agencies: A Debate Over Law Or Politics?, Cary Coglianese

Faculty Scholarship at Penn Carey Law

No abstract provided.


End The Failed Chevron Experiment Now: How Chevron Has Failed And Why It Can And Should Be Overruled, Jack M. Beermann 2010 Boston University School of Law

End The Failed Chevron Experiment Now: How Chevron Has Failed And Why It Can And Should Be Overruled, Jack M. Beermann

Faculty Scholarship

In Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. NRDC, decided in 1984, the Supreme Court announced a startling new approach to judicial review of statutory interpretation by administrative agencies, which requires courts to defer to agency interpretations of ambiguous statutes. Although it was perhaps hoped that Chevron would simplify judicial review and increase deference to agency interpretation, the opposite has occurred. Chevron has complicated judicial review and at best it is uncertain whether it has resulted in increased deference to agency interpretation. In fact, for numerous reasons, Chevron has been a failure on any reasonable measure and should be overruled. Further, overruling Chevron …


Don't Take The Bait: Why Usda Organic Certification Is Wrong For Salmon, Jessica Hass 2010 William & Mary Law School

Don't Take The Bait: Why Usda Organic Certification Is Wrong For Salmon, Jessica Hass

William & Mary Environmental Law and Policy Review

No abstract provided.


Fiduciary Administration: Rethinking Popular Representation In Agency Rulemaking, Evan J. Criddle 2010 William & Mary Law School

Fiduciary Administration: Rethinking Popular Representation In Agency Rulemaking, Evan J. Criddle

Faculty Publications

Do administrative agencies undermine popular sovereignty when they make federal law? Over the last several decades, some scholars have argued that rulemaking by unelected agency officials imperils popular sovereignty and that federal law should resolve the apparent tension between regulatory practice and democratic principle by allowing the President to serve as a proxy for the "will of the people" in the administrative state. According to this view, placing federal rulemaking power firmly within the President's managerial control would advance popular preferences throughout the federal system.

This conventional wisdom is misguided. As political scientists have long recognized, the electorate's relative disengagement …


Voip Jurisdiction And Regulation: Who Should Regulate The Technology Of Tomorrow? (Panelist), Daniel Lyons 2010 Boston College Law School

Voip Jurisdiction And Regulation: Who Should Regulate The Technology Of Tomorrow? (Panelist), Daniel Lyons

Daniel Lyons

No abstract provided.


Appeal No. 0815: Bass Energy, Inc. V. Division Of Oil & Gas Resources Management And Duck Creek Energy, Inc., Ohio Oil & Gas Commission 2010 Case Western Reserve University School of Law

Appeal No. 0815: Bass Energy, Inc. V. Division Of Oil & Gas Resources Management And Duck Creek Energy, Inc., Ohio Oil & Gas Commission

Ohio Oil & Gas Commission Decisions

Chief's Order 2009-29 (Beta Drive Unit #1 Well)


False Imprisonment As A Tort In India, Hari Priya 2010 NALSAR University of Law

False Imprisonment As A Tort In India, Hari Priya

Hari Priya

The tort of false imprisonment is one of the most severe forms of human rights violation, and this paper aims to define and to understand the concept of false imprisonment as a tort in India. It also seeks to know about the evolution of the notion of false imprisonment as a tort, with reference to Indian and foreign cases, and understand who and when can one be held liable for the tort of false imprisonment. It further deals with the remedies available for the said tort.


Evolutionary Due Process, Louis J. Virelli III 2010 Northwestern Pritzker School of Law

Evolutionary Due Process, Louis J. Virelli Iii

NULR Online

The issue of evolution instruction in American public schools is becoming increasingly complex, both legally and politically. Until recently, the controversy over whether and how to teach evolution in public school science classes has been singularly focused on the constitutional limits of government support for religion under the First Amendment’s Establishment Clause. Current measures in Louisiana and Texas, however, represent a shift toward a new “adjudicative model” for addressing questions of evolution instruction. This adjudicative model permits individual educators to treat evolution issues on a case-by-case basis, which, in turn, implicates a new constitutional issue in the evolution education debate: …


Decision On Bt-Brinjal: Issues Of Legal Certainty, Nupur Chowdhury, Nidhi Srivastava 2010 University of Twente

Decision On Bt-Brinjal: Issues Of Legal Certainty, Nupur Chowdhury, Nidhi Srivastava

Nupur Chowdhury

The recent decision of the government of India to impose a moratorium on the release of Bt-Brinjal has been hailed by civil society and scientists alike as a victory for transparency and has demonstrated that the government is responsive to societal demands. This decision is also important since it could set a precedent within environmental regulation with reference to technologies with significant environmental risks. However, the decision also reflects a clear departure from procedure and its legal basis is tenuous and therefore the risk of it being reversed remains. This establishes a clear case for ensuring legal certainty in environmental …


Fcc Regulation And Increased Ownership Concentration In The Radio Industry, Peter DiCola 2010 Northwestern University School of Law

Fcc Regulation And Increased Ownership Concentration In The Radio Industry, Peter Dicola

Faculty Working Papers

In 1996, Congress increased the limits on how many radio stations one firm can own within a single "radio market." To enforce these limits, the FCC used an idiosyncratic method of defining radio markets, based on the complex geometry of the signal contour patterns of radio stations' broadcasts. Using a unique geographic data set, this paper provides the first calculations of the pre- and post-1996 limits on local radio ownership as actually implemented by the FCC. The limits are surprisingly permissive and vary considerably from city to city. While the limits were seldom binding on radio firms, I find a …


Public Wrongs And Private Bills: Indemnification And Government Accountability In The Early Republic, James E. Pfander, Jonathan L. Hunt 2010 Northwestern University School of Law

Public Wrongs And Private Bills: Indemnification And Government Accountability In The Early Republic, James E. Pfander, Jonathan L. Hunt

Faculty Working Papers

Students of the history of administrative law in the United States regard the antebellum era as one in which strict common law rules of official liability prevailed. Yet conventional accounts of the antebellum period often omit a key institutional feature. Under the system of private legislation in place at the time, federal government officers were free to petition Congress for the passage of a private bill appropriating money to reimburse the officer for personal liability imposed on the basis of actions taken in the line of duty. Captain Little, the officer involved in one oft-cited case, Little v. Barreme, pursued …


Can The Law Track Scientific Risk And Technological Innovation?: The Problem Of Regulatory Definitions And Nanotechnology, David A. Dana 2010 Northwestern University School of Law

Can The Law Track Scientific Risk And Technological Innovation?: The Problem Of Regulatory Definitions And Nanotechnology, David A. Dana

Faculty Working Papers

The functioning of a regulatory regime often turns on what is defined to be included in the scope of regulation and what is defined to be outside. In constructing the definitions of what is regulated, two key challenges are to align the defintions with the risks that motivated the establishment of the regulatory regime and to build in dynamism into the defintions so that they adapt to changes in scientific understanding and technology. This Chapter of a forthcoming book from Cambridge University Press (David Dana, ed., The Nanotechnology Challenge), explores these challnegs in the context of nanotechnology.


Medical Rights For Same-Sex Couples And Rainbow Families, Anisa Mohanty 2010 SelectedWorks

Medical Rights For Same-Sex Couples And Rainbow Families, Anisa Mohanty

Anisa Mohanty

No abstract provided.


Legal Processing Outsourcing: Is The Lack Of A Regulatory Framework One Of The Challenges Facing The Lpo Industry In India?, Mubashshir Sarshar 2010 National Law University, Delhi

Legal Processing Outsourcing: Is The Lack Of A Regulatory Framework One Of The Challenges Facing The Lpo Industry In India?, Mubashshir Sarshar

Mubashshir Sarshar

No abstract provided.


Case Study: 1950-1970 Section- 6, The Transfer Of Property Act, 1882, Mubashshir Sarshar 2010 National Law University, Delhi

Case Study: 1950-1970 Section- 6, The Transfer Of Property Act, 1882, Mubashshir Sarshar

Mubashshir Sarshar

No abstract provided.


Amartya Sen's Theory Of Poverty, Mubashshir Sarshar 2010 National Law University, Delhi

Amartya Sen's Theory Of Poverty, Mubashshir Sarshar

Mubashshir Sarshar

No abstract provided.


Professional Communication And Confidential Communication, Mubashshir Sarshar 2010 National Law University, Delhi

Professional Communication And Confidential Communication, Mubashshir Sarshar

Mubashshir Sarshar

No abstract provided.


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