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Articles 421 - 434 of 434
Full-Text Articles in Law
An Overview Of Health Law Research And An Annotated Bibliography, Richard A. Danner, Claire M. Germain
An Overview Of Health Law Research And An Annotated Bibliography, Richard A. Danner, Claire M. Germain
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Modernist Social Theory: Roberto Unger’S Passion, James Boyle
Modernist Social Theory: Roberto Unger’S Passion, James Boyle
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Legal Education And Public Policy, Lawrence G. Baxter
Legal Education And Public Policy, Lawrence G. Baxter
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
A Symposium Of Critical Legal Studies: Introduction, James Boyle
A Symposium Of Critical Legal Studies: Introduction, James Boyle
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Foreword: Public And Private Barriers To Competitive Reform Of Health Care Services Delivery, Clark C. Havighurst
Foreword: Public And Private Barriers To Competitive Reform Of Health Care Services Delivery, Clark C. Havighurst
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Private Credentialing Of Health Care Personnel: An Antitrust Perspective, Part 1, Clark C. Havighurst, Nancy M. P. King
Private Credentialing Of Health Care Personnel: An Antitrust Perspective, Part 1, Clark C. Havighurst, Nancy M. P. King
Faculty Scholarship
This Article explores the antitrust and other implications of private credentialing and accrediting programs in the health care industry. Although such programs are usually sponsored by powerful competitor groups, they serve the procompetitive purpose of providing useful information and authoritative advice to independent decision makers. Part One examines the risk that credentialing will sometimes be unfair to competitors and deceive consumers. Its survey of common-law, antitrust, and regulatory interventions to correct such unfairness and deception seeks to determine the degree of oversight to which credentialing and similar activities have been and should be subjected. In recommending that judicial or regulatory …
Health Planning And Antitrust Law: The Implied Amendment Doctrine Of The Rex Hospital Case, Clark C. Havighurst
Health Planning And Antitrust Law: The Implied Amendment Doctrine Of The Rex Hospital Case, Clark C. Havighurst
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Private Credentialing Of Health Care Personnel: An Antitrust Perspective, Part 2, Clark C. Havighurst, Nancy M. P. King
Private Credentialing Of Health Care Personnel: An Antitrust Perspective, Part 2, Clark C. Havighurst, Nancy M. P. King
Faculty Scholarship
Having argued in Part One against extensive judicial or regulatory interference with private personnel credentialing in the health care field, this Article now shifts its focus to emphasize the anticompetitive hazards inherent in credentialing as practiced by professional interests. Competitor-sponsored credentialing is shown to be a vital part of a larger cartel strategy to curb competition by standardizing personnel and services and controlling the flow of information to health care consumers. Instead of altering the conclusions reached in Part One, however, Part Two sets forth a new and hitherto unexplored agenda for antitrust enforcement, one that the authors believe will …
Foreword: Symposium On Hospital Law, Clark C. Havighurst
Foreword: Symposium On Hospital Law, Clark C. Havighurst
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
The Regime Of Diplomacy And The Tehran Hostages, Kazimierz Grzybowski
The Regime Of Diplomacy And The Tehran Hostages, Kazimierz Grzybowski
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
More On Regulation: A Reply To Stephen Weiner, Clark C. Havighurst
More On Regulation: A Reply To Stephen Weiner, Clark C. Havighurst
Faculty Scholarship
In Volume 3, Number 3 of this journal, Professor Havighurst* wrote a brief Comment in which he observed that the function of health care cost-containment regulation is the rationing of health care resources, and argued that the fostering of health care consumers' and providers' free choice in the competitive marketplace is preferable to conventional cost-containment regulation as a mechanism for such rationing. He briefly outlined various reforms, including changes in federal tax treatment of health insurance premiums, aimed at implementing his ap- proach. Subsequently, in a Comment in Volume 4, Number 1, Stephen M.Weiner, then Chairman of the Massachusetts Rate …
Health Care Cost-Containment Regulation: Prospects And An Alternative, Clark C. Havighurst
Health Care Cost-Containment Regulation: Prospects And An Alternative, Clark C. Havighurst
Faculty Scholarship
Regulation of the health care system to achieve appropriate containment of overall costs is characterized by Professor Havighurst as requiring public officials to engage, directly or indirectly, in the rationing of medical services. This rationing function is seen by the author as peculiarly difficult for political institutions to perform, given the public's expectations and the symbolic importance of health care. An effort on the part of regulators to shift the rationing burden to providers is detected, as is a trend toward increasingly arbitrary regulation, designed to minimize regulators' confrontations with sensitive issues. Irrationality and ignorance are found to plague regulatory …
Book Review, Michael E. Tigar
Criminal Justice 1968: Developments And Directions, A. Kenneth Pye
Criminal Justice 1968: Developments And Directions, A. Kenneth Pye
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.