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Populist Politics And International Business Policy: Problems, Practices, And Prescriptions For Mnes, Paul Vaaler, Christopher Hartwell, Barclay James, Thomas Lindner, Jakob Müllner Jan 2024

Populist Politics And International Business Policy: Problems, Practices, And Prescriptions For Mnes, Paul Vaaler, Christopher Hartwell, Barclay James, Thomas Lindner, Jakob Müllner

Articles

In this editorial introduction to the Special Issue on populism, we discuss different approaches to defining populism in ways relevant to multinational enterprise (MNE) strategy and organization. In addition, we demonstrate how populist host-country government policies often target MNEs in ways that give rise to distinctly new forms of discriminatory treatment. This theoretical background sets the stage for the papers of this Special Issue, explaining the origins of these populist host-country government policies and the impact of such policies on FDI and international trade. We conclude with various suggestions for advancing IB policy research on populism, including building a better …


Centralizing Pharmaceutical Innovation, Sapna Kumar Jan 2024

Centralizing Pharmaceutical Innovation, Sapna Kumar

Articles

The United States has a mostly decentralized system for promoting new medicine development. By offering patents and regulatory exclusivities, the government incentivizes pharmaceutical companies to invent and bring to market new medicines. Although this development model offers benefits for promoting innovation, it comes at a cost: Market-based incentives lead companies to prioritize research and development (“R&D”) for medicines that offer a safe path to profitability, as opposed to those that offer the greatest social benefit. In particular, pharmaceutical companies are reluctant to invest in R&D for critically-needed antibiotics and infectious disease vaccines—both of which are difficult to develop and provide …


Mitigating Citation Errors In The Interlibrary Loan System, Scott Dewey, David Zopfi-Jordan Jan 2023

Mitigating Citation Errors In The Interlibrary Loan System, Scott Dewey, David Zopfi-Jordan

Articles

Journal articles from most academic disciplines have long shown high rates of citation errors. American law reviews, with their careful cite-checking, are a rare exception to the overall rule. Incorrect citations are especially costly and problematic for interlibrary loan librarians. This article offers practical suggestions to address the problem.


Crimmigrating Narratives: Examining Third-Party Observations Of Us Detained Immigration Court, Linus Chan Jan 2023

Crimmigrating Narratives: Examining Third-Party Observations Of Us Detained Immigration Court, Linus Chan

Articles

Examining what we call “crimmigrating narratives,” we show that US immigration court criminalizes non-citizens, cements forms of social control, and dispenses punishment in a non-punitive legal setting. Building on theories of crimmigration and a sociology of narrative, we code, categorize, and describe third-party observations of detained immigration court hearings conducted in Fort Snelling, Minnesota, from July 2018 to June 2019. We identify and investigate structural factors of three key crimmigrating narratives in the courtroom: one based on threats (stories of the non-citizen’s criminal history and perceived danger to society), a second involving deservingness (stories of the non-citizen’s social ties, hardship, …


The Multifaceted Method Of Comparative Law And Economics, Francesco Parisi Jan 2023

The Multifaceted Method Of Comparative Law And Economics, Francesco Parisi

Articles

As initially conceived of in the Eighties, Comparative Law and Economics provided legal scholars a neutral language for the exploration of similarities and differences across legal systems. Its value added is the theoretical rigour of its models and the possibility to engage in a scientific dialogue not hampered by jurisdiction-specific features. At a later stage, comparative approaches became fully embedded in economic research and its empirical methods. Possible synergies with comparative legal research abound, but the organization of academic structures has so far prevented to fully exploit them.


Doing Injustice: Exchanging One “Arbitrary, Cruel, And Reckless” Sentencing System For Another, Michael Tonry Jan 2023

Doing Injustice: Exchanging One “Arbitrary, Cruel, And Reckless” Sentencing System For Another, Michael Tonry

Articles

Marvin Frankel’s characterization of American sentencing in Criminal Sentences: Law Without Order remarkably successfully distilled ideas that were in the air and emerging. His main proposals—a sentencing commission, sentencing rules, requirements that judges explain their decisions, and meaningful appellate sentence review—would in a better America go a long way toward establishing the kind of rational, humane, and just process he imagined. Despite some early, partial successes, however, Frankel’s proposals remain largely untested. In retrospect, he underestimated, misunderstood, or chose to ignore formidable political impediments to serious sentencing reform in late twentieth century America. He also largely ignored two intractable problems, …


Supporting Families In A Post-Dobbs World: Politics And The Winner-Take-All Economy, June Carbone Jan 2023

Supporting Families In A Post-Dobbs World: Politics And The Winner-Take-All Economy, June Carbone

Articles

The pathway to stable and secure middle-class status involves two elements: the ability to postpone family formation to facilitate human capital investment and the ability to marshal the emotional and material resources needed to address children needs. Yet, the ability to meet the middle-class threshold for family investment is under assault as the class-based COVID-19 pandemic vulnerabilities and the Supreme Court's decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization illustrate. While the American Rescue Plan demonstrates the federal government's considerable ability to address children's needs, Dobbs represents the judicial assault on federal power and the ongoing devolution in responsibility for …


Moderating The Fediverse: Content Moderation On Distributed Social Media, Alan Rozenshtein Jan 2023

Moderating The Fediverse: Content Moderation On Distributed Social Media, Alan Rozenshtein

Articles

No abstract provided.


The Blue Family Constitution, June Carbone Jan 2023

The Blue Family Constitution, June Carbone

Articles

No abstract provided.


Process As Suffering: How U.S. Immigration Court Process And Culture Prevent Substantive Justice, Linus Chan Jan 2023

Process As Suffering: How U.S. Immigration Court Process And Culture Prevent Substantive Justice, Linus Chan

Articles

In this article, we argue that there is a form of double punishment unique to the immigration court system that attorneys and their noncitizen clients must navigate throughout changing political contexts. The first form of punishment is the court process during removal proceedings, and the second form of punishment is removal from the United States. Our interviews with removal defense attorneys in the U.S. Upper Midwest illustrate how these punishments intersect with one another and push attorneys to adopt strategies that may not lead to winning a case, but intend to protect their clients by losing as slowly as possible. …


Enforcement-Proofing Work Law, Charlotte Garden Jan 2023

Enforcement-Proofing Work Law, Charlotte Garden

Articles

No abstract provided.


Appointed Or Elected: How Justices On Elected State Supreme Courts Are Actually Selected, Herbert M. Kritzer Jan 2023

Appointed Or Elected: How Justices On Elected State Supreme Courts Are Actually Selected, Herbert M. Kritzer

Articles

During at least part of the post–World War II period, the constitutions of thirty-six states called for the popular election of the judges of the states’ highest courts. In practice, only slightly more than half of those judges (excluding strictly interim appointees) initially obtained their positions by election. This article examines the likelihood of initial election in actual practice, how it has varied over time, and various factors that might be related to election versus appointment (e.g., type of election, mandatory retirement). It concludes that state norms play a substantial role in determining patterns of actual selection.


The Belfast/Good Friday Agreement And Transformative Change: Promise, Power And Solidarity, Fionnuala Ní Aoláin Jan 2023

The Belfast/Good Friday Agreement And Transformative Change: Promise, Power And Solidarity, Fionnuala Ní Aoláin

Articles

In 2023 the 1998 Belfast/Good Friday Agreement marks its twenty-fifth anniversary. For many the Agreement projects a global image of a successfully concluded end to conflict. However, key aspects of the agreement remain under-enforced or simply undelivered: in particular, provisions related to significant and wide-ranging guarantees addressing human rights and equality of opportunity. As a result, socio-economic and cultural deficits persist, undermining the capacity to achieve a ‘positive peace’. In this article we address the question of how transformative the Agreement and associated reforms have been in addressing the root causes of the conflict and the structures that underpinned it. …


The Public Administration Of Justice, Nicholas Bednar Jan 2023

The Public Administration Of Justice, Nicholas Bednar

Articles

Adjudicatory agencies decide who receives social-welfare benefits, which inventions deserve patents, and which noncitizens get to remain in the United States. Scholars have argued that agency adjudication lacks sufficient structural and procedural protections to ensure unbiased decision-making. Yet these critiques miss a key problem with agency adjudication: the lack of adjudicatory capacity. This Article argues that low-capacity agencies cannot satisfy the Due Process Clause's demand for accurate decision-making. To produce accurate decisions, adjudicatory agencies need sufficient levels of capacity: (1) material resources, (2) expert adjudicators, and (3) support staff When agencies lack these resources, their adjudicators rely on various coping …


Bureaucratic Autonomy And The Policymaking Capacity Of United States Agencies, 1998–2021, Nicholas Bednar Jan 2023

Bureaucratic Autonomy And The Policymaking Capacity Of United States Agencies, 1998–2021, Nicholas Bednar

Articles

Despite a renewed interest in the health of the US administrative state, the absence of meaningful time-series measures of bureaucratic capacity hinders the testing of core theories of bureaucratic and executive politics. Using over 190 million personnel records, I estimate 5590 yearly policymaking-capacity scores for 261 unique agencies from 1998 to 2021. These measures provide an invaluable tool as either an independent or dependent variable in studies of administrative policymaking. To illustrate the value of these measures, I test longstanding theories about the relationship between bureaucratic autonomy and capacity. In contrast with emerging survey research, this study demonstrates that agencies …


The Virtuous Executive, Alan Rozenshtein Jan 2023

The Virtuous Executive, Alan Rozenshtein

Articles

As currently conceived, executive power law and scholarship detach the identity of the President from the powers and duties of the presidency. Whether an official was properly dismissed without cause, whether a pardon was validly issued, whether a foreign policy debacle rose to the level of an impeachable offense—the answers to all these questions are not supposed to depend on the President’s personal characteristics.

This Article argues that this veil of ignorance is incompatible with a correct understanding of Article II. To properly empower good Presidents and constrain bad ones, constitutional actors must take into account the President’s personal characteristics. …


The Court’S Morality Play: The Punishment Lens, Sex, And Abortion, June Carbone, Naomi Cahn Jan 2023

The Court’S Morality Play: The Punishment Lens, Sex, And Abortion, June Carbone, Naomi Cahn

Articles

This Article uncovers the hidden framework for the Supreme Court’s approach to public values, a framework that has shaped—and will continue to shape—the abortion debate. The Court has historically used a “punishment lens” to allow the evolution of moral expression in the public square, without enmeshing the Court itself in the underlying values debate. The punishment lens allows a court to redirect attention by focusing on the penalty rather than the potentially inflammatory subject for which the penalty is being imposed, regardless of whether the subject is contraception, abortion, Medicaid expansion, or pretrial detention.

This Article is unique in discussing …


Promoting Patent Practitioner Diversity: Expanding Non-Jd Pathways And Removing Barriers, Christopher M. Turoski Jan 2022

Promoting Patent Practitioner Diversity: Expanding Non-Jd Pathways And Removing Barriers, Christopher M. Turoski

Articles

No abstract provided.


The Many Faces Of Modern Legal Realism, Brian Bix Jan 2022

The Many Faces Of Modern Legal Realism, Brian Bix

Articles

This work offers an overview of the consequences and implications of the work of the American Legal Realists. First, the article considers Brian Leiter’s naturalist understanding of the realist project and how he uses it as an occasion to argue for a generally naturalist approach to legal philosophy. Second, Frederick Schauer transforms a legal realist-like focus on the concerns of average citizens for legal enforcement to advocate for the view that coercion is central to understanding law. Third, self-styled New Legal Realists try to merge a realist-inspired search for the effects of legal rules with a more traditional respect for …


Will Competition Reduce Attention Costs In Social Media?, Francesco Parisi Jan 2022

Will Competition Reduce Attention Costs In Social Media?, Francesco Parisi

Articles

Unlike other monopolies, social media networks almost uniformly give access to their services for free to everybody. Economists refer to these markets as “zero-price markets.” The main, and often sole, source of revenue for the network owners comes from fees that are paid by advertisers. Network owners offer access to users in exchange for users’ attention to advertisements. Economists refer to these implicit market exchanges under the heading of “attention economy.” Regulatory solutions and antitrust remedies have been considered to foster cost reduction in the market economy. This paper investigates the conditions under which an increase in competition in the …


Injurers Versus Victims: (A)Symmetric Reactions To Symmetric Risks, Francesco Parisi, Alice Guerra Jan 2021

Injurers Versus Victims: (A)Symmetric Reactions To Symmetric Risks, Francesco Parisi, Alice Guerra

Articles

Tort models assume symmetry in the behavior of injurers and victims when faced by a threat of liability and a risk of harm without compensation, respectively. This assumption has never been empirically validated. Using a novel experimental design, we study the behavior of injurers and victims when facing symmetric accident risks. Experimental results provide qualified support for the symmetric behavior hypothesis.


Judicial Restoration Of Rights As An Auxiliary To The Pardon Power, Janeanne Murray Jan 2021

Judicial Restoration Of Rights As An Auxiliary To The Pardon Power, Janeanne Murray

Articles

No abstract provided.


Second Look = Second Chance: Turning The Tide Through Nacdl's Model Second Look Legislation, Janeanne Murray, Sean Hecker, Michael Skocpol, Marissa Elkins Jan 2021

Second Look = Second Chance: Turning The Tide Through Nacdl's Model Second Look Legislation, Janeanne Murray, Sean Hecker, Michael Skocpol, Marissa Elkins

Articles

No abstract provided.


What Both Hart And Fuller Got Wrong, Oren Gross Jan 2021

What Both Hart And Fuller Got Wrong, Oren Gross

Articles

No abstract provided.


Uncoupling, June Carbone, Naomi Cahn Jan 2021

Uncoupling, June Carbone, Naomi Cahn

Articles

No abstract provided.


The Law Of Energy Exports, Alexandra Klass, Shantal Pai Jan 2021

The Law Of Energy Exports, Alexandra Klass, Shantal Pai

Articles

No abstract provided.


Legal Analysis, Policy Analysis, And The Price Of Deference: An Empirical Study Of Mayo And Chevron, Jonathan H. Choi Jan 2021

Legal Analysis, Policy Analysis, And The Price Of Deference: An Empirical Study Of Mayo And Chevron, Jonathan H. Choi

Articles

No abstract provided.


Energy Transitions In The Trump Administration And Beyond, Alexandra Klass Jan 2021

Energy Transitions In The Trump Administration And Beyond, Alexandra Klass

Articles

No abstract provided.


A Consumer Guide To Empirical Family Law, June Carbone Jan 2020

A Consumer Guide To Empirical Family Law, June Carbone

Articles

No abstract provided.


Asylum Under Attack: Is It Time For A Constitutional Right?, Steve Meili Jan 2020

Asylum Under Attack: Is It Time For A Constitutional Right?, Steve Meili

Articles

No abstract provided.