Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- International Law (20)
- Supreme Court of the United States (19)
- Bankruptcy Law (17)
- Business Organizations Law (12)
- Constitutional Law (12)
-
- Social and Behavioral Sciences (11)
- Civil Rights and Discrimination (10)
- Courts (10)
- Securities Law (10)
- First Amendment (8)
- Banking and Finance Law (7)
- Comparative and Foreign Law (7)
- Legal Profession (6)
- Legislation (6)
- Religion Law (6)
- Arts and Humanities (5)
- Business (5)
- Environmental Law (5)
- Human Rights Law (5)
- Law and Economics (5)
- Law and Gender (5)
- Law and Race (5)
- Physical Sciences and Mathematics (5)
- Criminal Law (4)
- Criminal Procedure (4)
- Environmental Sciences (4)
- Health Law and Policy (4)
- Law and Politics (4)
- Law and Society (4)
- Keyword
-
- First Amendment (5)
- Climate change (4)
- ESG (4)
- Supreme Court (4)
- Bankruptcy Code (3)
-
- Corporate governance (3)
- Human rights (3)
- Liability (3)
- United Nations (3)
- AI regulation (2)
- Chapter 11 (2)
- Diversity (2)
- Environmental protection (2)
- FDA (2)
- Free Exercise Clause (2)
- Gender (2)
- Infrastructure (2)
- Public company (2)
- Regulation (2)
- Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) (2)
- Social media (2)
- Statelessness (2)
- Supreme court (2)
- U.S. Constitution (2)
- ADA (1)
- Abortion (1)
- Academic classroom (1)
- Active citizenship (1)
- Addictive technology (1)
- Affiliates (1)
- Publication
- Publication Type
Articles 91 - 102 of 102
Full-Text Articles in Law
Laicite Or Laicita: The Regulation Of Religious Symbols In French And Italian Public Schools, Aubrie Kent
Laicite Or Laicita: The Regulation Of Religious Symbols In French And Italian Public Schools, Aubrie Kent
Emory Law Journal
Both France and Italy regulate the presence of religious symbols in public classrooms with the aim of transmitting national values and culture to students and promoting state unity. As more students of non-Christian backgrounds immigrate to France and Italy from outside Europe, the debate around religion in public schools has intensified, especially concerning Muslim students. France enforces a strictly neutral secular space by requiring the removal of any religious symbols, including head coverings like hijabs and yarmulkas. Italy mandated the display of the crucifix in every public school classroom until 2021, when the option was introduced to remove it. A …
Procedural Justice And The Shadow Docket, Taraleigh Davis, Sara C. Benesh
Procedural Justice And The Shadow Docket, Taraleigh Davis, Sara C. Benesh
Emory Law Journal
This Article critically examines the role of procedural justice in shaping public perceptions of the U.S. Supreme Court’s legitimacy, particularly in light of recent Court actions, including the leak of a major opinion and the increasing, potentially politicized, use of its shadow docket. Drawing from the procedural justice model—which posits that legitimacy is primarily founded on the decision-making processes and principled judgments of the Court—this Article investigates whether the decline in confidence experienced by the Court can be attributed, at least in part, to its shadow docket.
Utilizing an experimental survey conducted over three critical time points—coinciding with the leak …
Section 1115 Waivers: Innovation Through Experimentation, Or Stagnation Through Routine?, Nicole Johnson
Section 1115 Waivers: Innovation Through Experimentation, Or Stagnation Through Routine?, Nicole Johnson
Emory Law Journal
The Medicaid program operates as a federal-state partnership, in which the states agree to meet certain federally mandated requirements in exchange for federal matching funds for program expenditures. These federal matching funds can be anywhere from 50–90% of health care expenses incurred through state Medicaid programs. As such, states have a substantial interest in continuing this partnership and ensuring that their state plans comply with federal requirements. There is a way, though, in which states can gain more freedom in building their individual state plans. Through section 1115 waivers, states can ask the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (“CMS”) …
Teaching Bankruptcy Valuations To Law Students And Other Unnatural Acts, Jack F. Williams
Teaching Bankruptcy Valuations To Law Students And Other Unnatural Acts, Jack F. Williams
Emory Bankruptcy Developments Journal
We often measure that which we can as opposed to that in which we are most interested, and fail to appreciate the difference between the two. Experts may aid a trier of fact in measuring fair market value, fair value, investment value, or some other measure of value; however, courts make determinations with regard to a legal standard, not a financial standard. For example, “fair valuation” may be used for determinations of insolvency or the “fair and equitable” rule may be used for determinations of chapter 11 cramdown plan confirmation disputes. Other measures of value may be used in determining …
Alliance Politics In Corporate Debt Restructurings, Diane Lourdes Dick
Alliance Politics In Corporate Debt Restructurings, Diane Lourdes Dick
Emory Bankruptcy Developments Journal
Alliance politics have always been a complicating factor in corporate restructurings. Negotiations between and among large groups of corporate stakeholders naturally require that parties expend time and resources on building coalitions, overcoming holdouts, and fleshing out their collective action. But recent trends suggest that alliance politics—rather than sound financial and economic decisions—may be driving restructuring outcomes, introducing new risks and inefficiencies in the financial markets. For instance, restructuring proponents increasingly use wedge strategies and divide-and-conquer tactics to exacerbate the coordination problems that lenders in large syndicates already face, giving rise to hostile restructurings that have the potential to introduce dangerous …
Reconceptualizing Bankruptcy Education Requirements For Incarcerated Debtors, Sydney Calas
Reconceptualizing Bankruptcy Education Requirements For Incarcerated Debtors, Sydney Calas
Emory Bankruptcy Developments Journal
In the eighteen years since Congress enacted the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act (BAPCPA), bankruptcy scholars and professionals have launched countless critiques against two of the Act’s more drastic amendments: (1) mandatory pre-filing credit counseling and (2) a mandatory post-filing financial management course. Without completing the pre-filing requirement, one cannot qualify as a debtor under the Code and is thus barred from filing for bankruptcy. Without completing the post-filing requirement, one cannot receive a discharge. Notwithstanding the volume and breadth of valid criticisms, the specific harm of BAPCPA’s education requirements has been largely ignored for one population: incarcerated …
“Engaged In”: The Rocky Marriage Between Commercial And Business Activity And Subchapter V Eligibility, Blake Clevenger
“Engaged In”: The Rocky Marriage Between Commercial And Business Activity And Subchapter V Eligibility, Blake Clevenger
Emory Bankruptcy Developments Journal
The Small Business Reorganization Act of 2019, which created subchapter V bankruptcy relief for eligible small business debtors, is a step towards a small-business-friendly bankruptcy environment. The legislative history of subchapter V stated the goal of this new statute was to provide a cost-effective and streamlined path to reorganization to allow financially distressed small businesses to remain in business. To be eligible for subchapter V relief, a debtor must, among other requirements, be “engaged in commercial or business activities.” However, courts have continuously disagreed on the meaning of “engaged in commercial or business activities.” Courts have …
America’S Public Shell Trafficking Problem: Ripe For Reprocessing, Harrison Lipsky
America’S Public Shell Trafficking Problem: Ripe For Reprocessing, Harrison Lipsky
Emory Bankruptcy Developments Journal
The scourge of public shell trafficking has led to fraudsters taking advantage of and pilfering the hard-earned dollars of the American investing public for decades. These fraudsters seek to abuse the chapter 11 bankruptcy process by discharging the debt of such public shells, so that they can increase the profitability of schemes that target innocent investors, such as reverse mergers and pump-and-dump schemes. Regulators and lawmakers alike have fought back against this phenomenon through statutory reform and targeted regulatory programs; recently, their principal method of fighting back has been to consistently object to chapter 11 plans of reorganization that could …
Bankruptcy In The Golden Years: The Case For Increasing Exemptions For Elderly Americans, Danny Fitzpatrick
Bankruptcy In The Golden Years: The Case For Increasing Exemptions For Elderly Americans, Danny Fitzpatrick
Emory Bankruptcy Developments Journal
This Comment analyzes 11 U.S.C. § 522(d) and several state exemption statutes for their success at providing elderly debtors sufficient exemptions to maintain their quality of life after filing for bankruptcy. Exemptions are assets that are excluded from an individual debtor’s estate upon filing for bankruptcy and that serve as protection against creditors stripping the debtor of all pre-petition property interests. State and federal exemptions vary dramatically, with some states carving out additional exemptions specifically for elderly debtors. For example, states like Massachusetts and Maine recognize additional exemptions for elderly debtors with regards to their homesteads.
Bankruptcy filing …
Fake And Real People In Bankruptcy, Melissa B. Jacoby
Fake And Real People In Bankruptcy, Melissa B. Jacoby
Emory Bankruptcy Developments Journal
This essay explores the bankruptcy system’s structural bias in favor of artificial persons—for-profit companies, non-profit enterprises, and municipalities given independent life by law—relative to humans. The favorable treatment extends to foundational issues such as the scope and timing of debt relief, the conditions to receiving any bankruptcy protections, and the flexibility to depart from the Bankruptcy Code by asserting that doing so will maximize economic value. The system’s bias also contributes to the “bad-apple-ing” of serious policy problems, running counter to other areas of law that have deemed harms like discrimination to be larger institutional phenomena rather than merely the …
Standardizing And Unbundling The Sub Rosa Dip Loan, Kenneth Ayotte, Alex Zhicheng Huang
Standardizing And Unbundling The Sub Rosa Dip Loan, Kenneth Ayotte, Alex Zhicheng Huang
Emory Bankruptcy Developments Journal
In many recent chapter 11 cases, debtor-in-possession (“DIP”) loans determine reorganization plan payoffs at the outset of the case. Recent DIP loans are tied to plan terms including rights offerings, which give the DIP lender exclusive rights to purchase discounted equity in the reorganized company, and backstop fees, which pay the rights holder for committing to purchase them. Terms like these raise fears that DIP loan approval is being used to short circuit the chapter 11 reorganization plan process—in bankruptcy parlance, that the DIP loan is a sub rosa plan. How should bankruptcy law manage this sub rosa DIP loan …
Big Banks & Small Consequences In Chapter 13, Alexandra P.E. Sickler
Big Banks & Small Consequences In Chapter 13, Alexandra P.E. Sickler
Emory Bankruptcy Developments Journal
Mortgage creditors struggle to properly service mortgages in chapter 13 cases, as evidenced by numerous cases describing violations of Bankruptcy Rule 3002.1. The consumer bankruptcy system, however, is not calibrated to compel systemwide compliance from these large, institutional repeat actors. This Essay argues that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) is well-suited to support the consumer bankruptcy system by exercising its monitoring and enforcement powers to promote, and even compel, mortgage creditor compliance in chapter 13 cases.