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Articles 1 - 15 of 15
Full-Text Articles in Law
Who Gets To Make A Living? Street Vending In America, Joseph Pileri
Who Gets To Make A Living? Street Vending In America, Joseph Pileri
Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals
Street vending has long provided those at the margins of American society with the opportunity for economic advancement. A key segment of the informal economy, street vending has low barriers of entry and attracts entrepreneurs who lack the resources, ability, or desire to start brick-and-mortar businesses or work for someone else. Street vending also contributes to the vitality and safety of urban America.
Despite the pivotal role that street vending plays, cities around the country criminalize vending by treating the violation of street vending regulations as a criminal offense. Recent high-profile vendor arrests in New York City and Washington, DC …
Widening The Lens On Content Moderation, Jenna Ruddock, Justin Sherman
Widening The Lens On Content Moderation, Jenna Ruddock, Justin Sherman
Joint PIJIP/TLS Research Paper Series
No abstract provided.
Testimony Before The U.S. House Of Representatives Committee On Financial Services On “Addressing Climate As A Systemic Risk: The Need To Build Resilience Within Our Banking And Financial System” In June 2021, Hilary J. Allen
Congressional and Other Testimony
No abstract provided.
Sandbox Boundaries, Hilary J. Allen
Sandbox Boundaries, Hilary J. Allen
Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals
Around the world, subnational and national regulatory sandboxes are being adopted in an effort to promote fintech innovation. These regulatory sandboxes seek to achieve this by rolling back some of the consumer protection and prudential regulations that would otherwise apply to the firms trialing their financial products and services in the sandbox. While sacrificing such protections in order to promote innovation is problematic, such sacrifice may nonetheless be justifiable if, by working with innovators in the sandbox, regulators are educated about new technologies in a way that enhances their ability to effectively promote consumer protection and financial stability in other …
It's Time To Remove The 'Mossified' Procedures For Ftc Rulemaking, Jeffrey Lubbers
It's Time To Remove The 'Mossified' Procedures For Ftc Rulemaking, Jeffrey Lubbers
Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals
This article, prepared for The George Washington Law Review’s Symposium “The FTC at 100,” addresses the FTC’s rulemaking process — specifically the quasi-adjudicative process mandated by the Magnuson-Moss Warranty — Federal Trade Commission Improvement Act of 1975 and the additional procedures added by the Federal Trade Commission Improvements Act of 1980 (collectively called the “Magnuson-Moss Procedures”). The article compares how long it took the FTC to complete or terminate the rulemakings it undertook under the Magnuson-Moss Procedures (including amendments to previously issued rules) with the amount of time it took the FTC to issue rules under the “regular” Administrative Procedure …
Access To Health Care As An Incentive For Healthy Behavior, Lindsay Wiley
Access To Health Care As An Incentive For Healthy Behavior, Lindsay Wiley
Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals
Hundreds of thousands of lives have been saved by vehicle safety standards. For many years, the auto industry fought the adoption of even the most basic standards tooth and nail, arguing that driver responsibility was the key to preventing auto accidents. In doing so, vehicle manufacturers "reinforceled] certain common sense ideas about traffic safety"-that drivers were responsible for car accidents and that vehicle design could not do much to make serious crashes survivable-"and suppressled] others." Auto insurers-who bear much of the economic cost of car crashes through a combination of first party and liability insurance-initially joined auto manufacturers in pushing …
Sugary Drinks, Happy Meals, Social Norms, And The Law, Lindsay Wiley
Sugary Drinks, Happy Meals, Social Norms, And The Law, Lindsay Wiley
Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals
What role should government play in discouraging harmful overconsumption? What modes of government intervention best strike the balance between effectiveness and political acceptability? It is well established that government has a legitimate interest in protecting the health and safety of the people, even from their own choices and actions. Furthermore, there is no fundamental right to sell or purchase particular services or products in particular configurations. The appropriate question, then, is not what government may do to prevent non- communicable diseases that are associated with individual behavior choices, but rather what government should do. This comment on David Friedman's Public …
Shame, Blame, And The Emerging Law Of Obesity Control, Lindsay Wiley
Shame, Blame, And The Emerging Law Of Obesity Control, Lindsay Wiley
Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals
In using law as a tool to combat the obesity epidemic, legal scholars and policymakers are drawing heavily on the lessons of tobacco control. This Article describes the resulting emergence of "obesity control law" and argues for a radical reorientation of it from a "denormalization" strategy based on the tobacco control experience to a "destigmatization" strategy based on the HIV prevention experience. The war on obesity is nearing a political crossroads. Subsidies and food industry regulations aimed at making our environment more conducive to physical activity and healthy eating are in danger of losing out to cheaper and more politically …
Brief Of Aarp, The National Legislative Association On Prescription Drug Prices, Community Catalyst, And Prescription Policy Choices, As Amici Curiae In Support Of Appellees, Ims Health Inc. V. Sorrell, Sean Flynn
Amicus Briefs
This brief supports protecting the confidentiality of prescription records in the state of Vermont from commercial uses by pharmeceutical companies to market new drugs to physicians directly.
Introduction To Symposium On Integrating New Economic Learning With Antitrust Doctrine, Jonathan Baker
Introduction To Symposium On Integrating New Economic Learning With Antitrust Doctrine, Jonathan Baker
Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals
No abstract provided.
Most Favored Nation Clauses, Jonathan Baker, William Kopit, Thomas Overstreet, Robert Mcnair, Jr., Steven Snow
Most Favored Nation Clauses, Jonathan Baker, William Kopit, Thomas Overstreet, Robert Mcnair, Jr., Steven Snow
Presentations
Event descriptionThe Federal Trade Commission and Department of Justice will commence public hearings in Washington, D.C. on February 26, 2003 on the implications of competition law and policy for health care financing and delivery. The hearings will broadly consider the impact of competition law and policy on the cost, quality, and availability of health care, and the incentives for innovation in the field.Specific subjects to be considered include hospital mergers, the significance of non-profit status, vertical integration, quality and efficiencies, the boundaries of the state action and Noerr-Pennington doctrines, monopsony power, the adequacy of existing remedies for anticompetitive conduct, and …
The Evolution Of Free Trade In The Americas: Nafta Case Studies, Claudio Grossman
The Evolution Of Free Trade In The Americas: Nafta Case Studies, Claudio Grossman
Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals
No abstract provided.
Garbage In: Emerging Media And Regulation Of Unsolicited Commercial Solicitiations, Michael W. Carroll
Garbage In: Emerging Media And Regulation Of Unsolicited Commercial Solicitiations, Michael W. Carroll
Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals
No abstract provided.
A Hazardous Mix: Discretion To Disclose And Incentives To Suppress Under Osha's Hazard Communication Standard [Note], Susan Carle
A Hazardous Mix: Discretion To Disclose And Incentives To Suppress Under Osha's Hazard Communication Standard [Note], Susan Carle
Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals
Discusses hazardous products and the Hazardous Communication Standard which requires chemical manufacturers to provide warnings for dangerous products.
The Freedom Of Information Act And Vaughn V. Rosen, Robert Vaughn
The Freedom Of Information Act And Vaughn V. Rosen, Robert Vaughn
Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals
INTRODUCTION: Beginning in the summer of 1969, large numbers of law students were mobilized by Ralph Nader for intensive studies of federal agencies. These projects culminated in a number of critical reports focusing on the Federal Trade Commission, the Interstate Commerce Commission, the National Air Pollution Control Administration, and the Food and Drug Administration.' The project participants encountered the bureaucratic roadblocks which citizens commonly face in attempting to invoke the Freedom of Information Act.