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Articles 1 - 30 of 138
Full-Text Articles in Law
Don't Take His Eye, Don't Take His Tooth, And Don't Cast The First Stone: Limiting Religious Arguments In Capital Cases, John H. Blume, Sheri Lynn Johnson
Don't Take His Eye, Don't Take His Tooth, And Don't Cast The First Stone: Limiting Religious Arguments In Capital Cases, John H. Blume, Sheri Lynn Johnson
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
Professors John H. Blume and Sheri Lynn Johnson explore the occurrences of religious imagery and argument invoked by both prosecutors and defense attorneys in capital cases. Such invocation of religious imagery and argument by attorneys is not surprising, considering that the jurors who hear such arguments are making life and death decisions, and advocates, absent regulation, will resort to such emotionally compelling arguments. Also surveying judicial responses to such arguments in courts, Professors Blume and Johnson gauge the level of tolerance for such arguments in specific jurisdictions. Presenting proposed rules for prosecutors and defense counsel who wish to employ religious …
Anti-Plaintiff Bias In The Federal Appellate Courts, Kevin M. Clermont, Theodore Eisenberg
Anti-Plaintiff Bias In The Federal Appellate Courts, Kevin M. Clermont, Theodore Eisenberg
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
A recent study of appellate outcomes reveals that defendants succeed significantly more often than plaintiffs on appeal from civil trials-especially from jury trials.
Constitutional Change And International Government, Chantal Thomas
Constitutional Change And International Government, Chantal Thomas
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Lawyers, Guns, And Money, Barry E. Adler, Jules Coleman, Arthur Ripstein
Lawyers, Guns, And Money, Barry E. Adler, Jules Coleman, Arthur Ripstein
Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy
No abstract provided.
The Encryption Export Tax: A Proposed Solution And Remedy To The Issues And Costs Associated With Exporting Encryption Technology, John L. Paik
Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy
No abstract provided.
The Globalization Of Criminal Violence, Edgardo Rotman
The Globalization Of Criminal Violence, Edgardo Rotman
Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy
No abstract provided.
Provocation’S Privileged Desire: The Provocation Doctrine, Homosexual Panic, And The Non-Violent Unwanted Sexual Advance Defense, Christina Pei-Lin Chen
Provocation’S Privileged Desire: The Provocation Doctrine, Homosexual Panic, And The Non-Violent Unwanted Sexual Advance Defense, Christina Pei-Lin Chen
Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy
No abstract provided.
Approaches To Teaching Contracts: Enriching Case Reports, Robert A. Hillman
Approaches To Teaching Contracts: Enriching Case Reports, Robert A. Hillman
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
The White Commission And The Federal Circuit, Carl Tobias
The White Commission And The Federal Circuit, Carl Tobias
Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy
No abstract provided.
Entrepreneurs And Regulators: Internet Technology, Agency Estoppel, And The Balance Of Trust, James T. O'Reilly
Entrepreneurs And Regulators: Internet Technology, Agency Estoppel, And The Balance Of Trust, James T. O'Reilly
Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy
No abstract provided.
Les Jeux Ne Sont Pas Faits: The Right To Dignified Long-Term Care In The Face Of Industry-Wide Financial Failure, Nathalie D. Martin, Elizabeth Rourke
Les Jeux Ne Sont Pas Faits: The Right To Dignified Long-Term Care In The Face Of Industry-Wide Financial Failure, Nathalie D. Martin, Elizabeth Rourke
Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy
No abstract provided.
Sounds Of Silence: What Happened To The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’S Hazardous Waste Recycling Program Reform, Markus G. Puder
Sounds Of Silence: What Happened To The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’S Hazardous Waste Recycling Program Reform, Markus G. Puder
Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy
No abstract provided.
Regulatory Improvement Legislation: Risk Assessment, Cost-Benefit Analysis, And Judicial Review, Fred Anderson, Mary Ann Chirba-Martin, E. Donald Elliott, Cynthia R. Farina, Ernest Gellhorn, John D. Graham, C. Boyden Gray, Jeffrey Holmstead, Ronald M. Levin, Lars Noah, Katherine Rhyne, Jonathan Baert Weiner
Regulatory Improvement Legislation: Risk Assessment, Cost-Benefit Analysis, And Judicial Review, Fred Anderson, Mary Ann Chirba-Martin, E. Donald Elliott, Cynthia R. Farina, Ernest Gellhorn, John D. Graham, C. Boyden Gray, Jeffrey Holmstead, Ronald M. Levin, Lars Noah, Katherine Rhyne, Jonathan Baert Weiner
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
As the number, cost, and complexity of federal regulations have grown over the past twenty years, there has been growing interest in the use of analytic tools such as risk assessment and cost-benefit analysis to improve the regulatory process. The application of these tools to public health, safety, and environmental problems has become commonplace in the peer-reviewed scientific and medical literatures. Recent studies prepared by Resources for the Future, the American Enterprise Institute, the Brookings Institution, and the Harvard Center for Risk Analysis have demonstrated how formal analyses can and often do help government agencies achieve more protection against hazards …
Faith, Hope, And Rationality Or Public Choice And The Perils Of Occam's Razor, Cynthia R. Farina
Faith, Hope, And Rationality Or Public Choice And The Perils Of Occam's Razor, Cynthia R. Farina
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
Product-Related Risk And Cognitive Biases: The Shortcomings Of Enterprise Liability, James A. Henderson Jr., Jeffrey J. Rachlinski
Product-Related Risk And Cognitive Biases: The Shortcomings Of Enterprise Liability, James A. Henderson Jr., Jeffrey J. Rachlinski
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
Products liability law has witnessed a long debate over whether manufacturers should be held strictly liable for the injuries that products cause. Recently, some have argued that psychological research on human judgment supports adopting a regime of strict enterprise liability for injuries caused by product design. These new proponents of enterprise liability argue that the current system, in which manufacturer liability for product design turns on the manufacturer's negligence, allows manufacturers to induce consumers into undertaking inefficiently dangerous levels or types of consumption. In this paper we argue that the new proponents of enterprise liability have: (1) not provided any …
An Ethnography Of Abstractions?, Annelise Riles
An Ethnography Of Abstractions?, Annelise Riles
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Rules And Judicial Review, Emily Sherwin
Rules And Judicial Review, Emily Sherwin
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
Judicial review of statutes on constitutional grounds is affected by a cluster of doctrinal practices that are generally accepted, but not very well explained, by the courts and not entirely consistent with each other. Courts usually judge statutes “as applied” rather than as written; they favor “severance” of valid applications of statutes from invalid or possibly invalid applications when possible; and they interpret statutes in ways that avoid constitutional difficulty. These overlapping practices presumably are intended to preserve legislation, and hence are associated with a modest conception of the role of courts in government. Yet they are not always modest …
Rights And Rules: An Overview, Matthew D. Adler, Michael C. Dorf
Rights And Rules: An Overview, Matthew D. Adler, Michael C. Dorf
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
Prior to recent decades, the United States Supreme Court often invoked the political question doctrine to avoid deciding controversial questions of individual rights. By the 1970s and 1980s, standing limits traced to Article III’s case-or-controversy language had replaced the political question doctrine as the favored justiciability device. Although both political question and standing doctrines remain tools in the Court’s arsenal of threshold decision making,3 in the last decade the Court has turned with increasing frequency to the distinction between facial and as-applied challenges to perform the gatekeeping function. However, although there is a considerable body of scholarship concerning the conventional …
The Heterogeneity Of Rights, Michael C. Dorf
The Heterogeneity Of Rights, Michael C. Dorf
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
What is the implication for the validity of governmental rules of the conclusion that the rule interferes with a constitutional right? This question has implications for two important doctrinal puzzles. The first is the question when, if ever, a litigant has a constitutional right to an exemption from a generally valid rule of law. Many constitutional rights are rule-dependent in the sense that they protect actors against certain kinds of governmental rules rather than shielding acts against governmental interference. This Article denies the claim by scholars and judges that this rule-dependence reflects a deep truth about the nature of constitutional …
Amicus Brief: Kumho Tire V. Carmichael, Neil Vidmar, Richard O. Lempert, Shari Seidman Diamond, Valerie P. Hans, Stephan Landsman, Robert Maccoun, Joseph Sanders, Harmon M. Hosch, Saul Kassin, Marc Galanter, Theodore Eisenberg, Stephen Daniels, Edith Greene, Joanne Martin, Steven Penrod, James Richardson, Larry Heuer, Irwin Horowitz
Amicus Brief: Kumho Tire V. Carmichael, Neil Vidmar, Richard O. Lempert, Shari Seidman Diamond, Valerie P. Hans, Stephan Landsman, Robert Maccoun, Joseph Sanders, Harmon M. Hosch, Saul Kassin, Marc Galanter, Theodore Eisenberg, Stephen Daniels, Edith Greene, Joanne Martin, Steven Penrod, James Richardson, Larry Heuer, Irwin Horowitz
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
This brief addresses the issue of jury performance and jury responses to expert testimony. It reviews and summaries a substantial body of research evidence about jury behavior that has been produced over the past quarter century. The great weight of that evidence challenges the view that jurors abdicate their responsibilities as fact finders when faced with expert evidence or that they are pro-plaintiff, anti-defendant, and anti-business.
The Petitioners and amici on behalf of petitioners make a number of overlapping, but empirically unsupported, assertions about jury behavior in response to expert testimony, namely that juries are frequently incapable of critically evaluation …
Legal Institutions In Professor H.L.A. Hart's Concept Of Law, Robert S. Summers
Legal Institutions In Professor H.L.A. Hart's Concept Of Law, Robert S. Summers
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
What's Half A Lung Worth? Civil Jurors' Accounts Of Their Award Decision Making, Nicole L. Mott, Valerie P. Hans, Lindsay Simpson
What's Half A Lung Worth? Civil Jurors' Accounts Of Their Award Decision Making, Nicole L. Mott, Valerie P. Hans, Lindsay Simpson
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
Jury awards are often criticized as being arbitrary and excessive. This paper speaks to that controversy, reporting data from interviews with civil jurors' accounts of the strategies that juries use and the factors that they consider in arriving at a collective award. Jurors reported difficulty in deciding on awards, describing it as "the hardest part" of jury service and were surprised the court did not provide more guidance to them. Relatively few jurors entered the jury deliberation room with a specified award figure in mind. Once in the deliberation room, however, they reported discussing a variety of relevant factors such …
A Coalition Of Industrialized Nations, Developing Nations, Multilateral Development Banks, And Non-Governmental Organizations: A Pivotal Complement To Current Anti-Corruption Initiatives, Barbara Crutchfield George, Kathleen A. Lacey
A Coalition Of Industrialized Nations, Developing Nations, Multilateral Development Banks, And Non-Governmental Organizations: A Pivotal Complement To Current Anti-Corruption Initiatives, Barbara Crutchfield George, Kathleen A. Lacey
Cornell International Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Fighting Corruption: A Principled Approach: The C Principles (Combating Corruption), David Hess, Thomas W. Dunfee
Fighting Corruption: A Principled Approach: The C Principles (Combating Corruption), David Hess, Thomas W. Dunfee
Cornell International Law Journal
No abstract provided.
The Myth Of Anti-Bribery As Transnational Intrusion, Philip M. Nicholas
The Myth Of Anti-Bribery As Transnational Intrusion, Philip M. Nicholas
Cornell International Law Journal
No abstract provided.
A Delicate Balance: Legislation, Institutional Change, And Transnational Bribery, Steven R. Salbu
A Delicate Balance: Legislation, Institutional Change, And Transnational Bribery, Steven R. Salbu
Cornell International Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Symposium: Fighting International Corruption & (And) Bribery In The 21st Century: Introduction
Symposium: Fighting International Corruption & (And) Bribery In The 21st Century: Introduction
Cornell International Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Bribery And Corruption In Eastern Europe, The Baltic States, And The Commonwealth Of Independent States: What Is To Be Done, Beverley Earle
Bribery And Corruption In Eastern Europe, The Baltic States, And The Commonwealth Of Independent States: What Is To Be Done, Beverley Earle
Cornell International Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Luncheon Address, Miguel Schloss
Luncheon Address, Miguel Schloss
Cornell International Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Gifts, Bribes, And Exchange: Relationships In Non-Market Economies And Lessons For Pax E-Commercia, Timothy L. Fort, James J. Noone
Gifts, Bribes, And Exchange: Relationships In Non-Market Economies And Lessons For Pax E-Commercia, Timothy L. Fort, James J. Noone
Cornell International Law Journal
No abstract provided.