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Articles 1 - 7 of 7

Full-Text Articles in Law

Defining The Problem Of Cost In Federal Civil Litigation, Emery G. Lee Iii, Thomas E. Willging Dec 2010

Defining The Problem Of Cost In Federal Civil Litigation, Emery G. Lee Iii, Thomas E. Willging

Duke Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Likeability V. Competence: The Impossible Choice Faced By Female Politicians, Attenuated By Lawyers, Andrea Kupfer Schneider, Catherine H. Tinsley, Sandra Cheldelin, Emily T. Amanatullah May 2010

Likeability V. Competence: The Impossible Choice Faced By Female Politicians, Attenuated By Lawyers, Andrea Kupfer Schneider, Catherine H. Tinsley, Sandra Cheldelin, Emily T. Amanatullah

Duke Journal of Gender Law & Policy

No abstract provided.


More Harm Than Good: A Summary Of Scientific Research On The Intended And Unintended Effects Of Corporal Punishment On Children, Elizabeth T. Gershoff Apr 2010

More Harm Than Good: A Summary Of Scientific Research On The Intended And Unintended Effects Of Corporal Punishment On Children, Elizabeth T. Gershoff

Law and Contemporary Problems

No abstract provided.


Prevalence, Societal Causes, And Trends In Corporal Punishment By Parents In World Perspective, Murray A. Straus Apr 2010

Prevalence, Societal Causes, And Trends In Corporal Punishment By Parents In World Perspective, Murray A. Straus

Law and Contemporary Problems

No abstract provided.


Are Spanking Injunctions Scientifically Supported?, Robert E. Larzelere, Diana Baumrind Apr 2010

Are Spanking Injunctions Scientifically Supported?, Robert E. Larzelere, Diana Baumrind

Law and Contemporary Problems

No abstract provided.


The Special Problem Of Cultural Differences In Effects Of Corporal Punishment, Jennifer E. Lansford Apr 2010

The Special Problem Of Cultural Differences In Effects Of Corporal Punishment, Jennifer E. Lansford

Law and Contemporary Problems

No abstract provided.


Administrative Law, Filter Failure, And Information Capture, Wendy E. Wagner Apr 2010

Administrative Law, Filter Failure, And Information Capture, Wendy E. Wagner

Duke Law Journal

There are no provisions in administrative law for regulating the flow of information entering or leaving the system, or for ensuring that regulatory participants can keep up with a rising tide of issues, details, and technicalities. Indeed, a number of doctrinal refinements, originally intended to ensure that executive branch decisions are made in the sunlight, inadvertently create incentives for participants to overwhelm the administrative system with complex information, causing many of the decision-making processes to remain, for all practical purposes, in the dark. As these agency decisions become increasingly obscure to all but the most well-informed insiders, administrative accountability is …