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Full-Text Articles in Law

U.S. Proposal For An Intellectual Property Chapter In The Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement, Sean M. Flynn, Brook Baker, Margot Kaminski, Jimmy Koo Nov 2016

U.S. Proposal For An Intellectual Property Chapter In The Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement, Sean M. Flynn, Brook Baker, Margot Kaminski, Jimmy Koo

Sean Flynn

No abstract provided.


Before Election Day, Some Reminders Of America's Greatness, Alan E. Garfield Nov 2016

Before Election Day, Some Reminders Of America's Greatness, Alan E. Garfield

Alan E Garfield

No abstract provided.


Spoiling The Surprise: Constraints Facing Random Regulatory Inspections In Japan And The United States, Andrew Chin Oct 2016

Spoiling The Surprise: Constraints Facing Random Regulatory Inspections In Japan And The United States, Andrew Chin

Andrew Chin

This Article is organized as follows. Part I presents a rational actor model of legal compliance under an enforcement regime based on random inspections and identifies two classes of reforms that can be applied in combination to improve aggregate compliance. Part II introduces the problem of corrupt tip-offs into the model and argues that exogenous reforms are necessary to combat corruption. Part III surveys the use of random administrative inspections in the United States, reviews the approaches taken by four such programs to improve compliance and fight corruption, and describes the various constraints under which they must operate. Part IV …


Compensation For Takings: An Economic Analysis, Lawrence Blume, Daniel L. Rubinfeld Aug 2016

Compensation For Takings: An Economic Analysis, Lawrence Blume, Daniel L. Rubinfeld

Daniel L. Rubinfeld

Analyzes the provisions of the fifth amendment of the U.S. Constitution related to the regulatory takings and just compensation for private properties in the 1980s. Decision on the supreme court case Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon; Regulation of lower courts on regulatory takings; Provisions on compensation as insurance against regulatory takings.


Conflict Of Laws: Foreign Law As Datum, Herma Hill Kay Aug 2016

Conflict Of Laws: Foreign Law As Datum, Herma Hill Kay

Herma Hill Kay

Examines the contributions of California Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger Traynor to the field of conflict of laws. Review of the case of the 'Estate of Perkins'; Case of 'Bernkrant v. Fowler'; View that Traynor's approach to a conflicts problem cannot be equalled by other judges.


Legal Planning For The Mentally Retarded: The California Experience, Herma Hill Kay, Louise J. Farnham, Beth Davis Karren, Jeanne Knakal Aug 2016

Legal Planning For The Mentally Retarded: The California Experience, Herma Hill Kay, Louise J. Farnham, Beth Davis Karren, Jeanne Knakal

Herma Hill Kay

Focuses on the development of legal planning for the mentally retarded in California from 1960 to 1971. Role of two pioneering organizations on the study of mental health services and retardation; Theoretical basis for requiring court commitment as part of hospital admission process; Effect of legal implications of commitment on the retarded; Impact of legal aspects on parents' motivation for the retarded's care facilities; Creation of legal tool for coordinating services on a personal basis.


European Corporate Law And National Divergences: The Case Of Takeover Regulation, Peer Zumbansen Aug 2016

European Corporate Law And National Divergences: The Case Of Takeover Regulation, Peer Zumbansen

Peer Zumbansen

In this book review, Peer Zumbansen offers a review of Joseph A. McCahery's, Corporate Governance Regimes: Convergence and Diversity, Christin M. Forstinger's, Takeover Law in the EU and the USA: A Comparative Analysis, and Jennifer Payne's, Takeovers in English and German Law.


The Outmoded Debate Over Affirmative Action, Daniel A. Farber Aug 2016

The Outmoded Debate Over Affirmative Action, Daniel A. Farber

Daniel A Farber

Looks at affirmative action programs in universities and schools in the U.S. in the context of the Critical Race Theory. Discussion of the concept of reverse discrimination; History of Critical Race Theory; Rights and protection of minority students.


Is The Radical Critique Of Merit Anti-Semitic, Daniel A. Farber, Suzanna Sherry Aug 2016

Is The Radical Critique Of Merit Anti-Semitic, Daniel A. Farber, Suzanna Sherry

Daniel A Farber

Conventional concepts of merit are under attack by some Critical Legal Scholars, Critical Race Theorists, and radical feminists. These critics contend that "merit" is only a social construct designed to maintain the power of dominant groups. This Article challenges the reductionist view that merit has no meaning except as a tool for those in power to perpetuate the existing social order. The authors observe that certain traditionally oppressed groups, most notably Jews and Asian Americans, are disproportionately represented in some desirable economic and educational positions. They have in that sense "succeeded" beyond the supposedly dominant majority. The economic and educational …


Fiat Flux: Evolving Purposes And Ideals Of The Great American Public Law School, Christopher Edley Jr Aug 2016

Fiat Flux: Evolving Purposes And Ideals Of The Great American Public Law School, Christopher Edley Jr

Christopher Edley

This Essay describes the changing role of American law schools throughout the twentieth century and proposes a vision for the future's Great American Law School. Since the founding of Berkeley Law, the definition of the legal profession has progressed from an interior orientation, which focused predominately on trial courts and appellate advocacy, to an exterior orientation with wide consideration of other forms of lawyering. Along a second axis, legal pedagogy has progressed from a careerist orientation, which focused on case analysis and advocacy skills, to a more academic orientation that integrates questions of theory and methodology. Analyzing these trends, this …


Regulation As Delegation: Private Firms, Decisionmaking, And Accountability In The Administrative State, K. A. Bamberger Aug 2016

Regulation As Delegation: Private Firms, Decisionmaking, And Accountability In The Administrative State, K. A. Bamberger

Kenneth A. Bamberger

Administrative agencies increasingly enlist the judgment of private firms they regulate to achieve public ends. Regulation concerning the identification and reduction of risk--from financial, data and homeland security risk to the risk of conflicts of interest--increasingly mandates broad policy outcomes and accords regulated parties wide discretion in deciding how to interpret and achieve them. Yet the dominant paradigm of administrative enforcement, monitoring and threats of punishment, is ill suited to oversee the sound exercise of judgment and discretion. This Article argues that this kind of regulation should be viewed, instead, as regulatory "delegation" of the type Congress makes to agencies …


The Danger Of Winning: Contract Law Ramifications Of Successful Bailey Challenges For Plea-Convicted Defendants, T. Alper Aug 2016

The Danger Of Winning: Contract Law Ramifications Of Successful Bailey Challenges For Plea-Convicted Defendants, T. Alper

Ty Alper

Evaluates contract law ramifications of successful challenges for plea-convicted defendants. Examination of district courts that allowed reindictment subsequent to successful collateral attack; Defendant obligations under a typical plea agreement; Factors dictating the frequency of using the contract law doctrine of frustration of purpose.


How To Have A Culture War, Kathryn Abrams Aug 2016

How To Have A Culture War, Kathryn Abrams

Kathryn Abrams

No abstract provided.


How To Have A Culture War, Kathryn Abrams Aug 2016

How To Have A Culture War, Kathryn Abrams

Kathryn Abrams

No abstract provided.


Gender In The Military: Androcentrism And Institutional Reform, Kathryn Abrams Aug 2016

Gender In The Military: Androcentrism And Institutional Reform, Kathryn Abrams

Kathryn Abrams

Discusses androcentrism and institutional reform in the military. Need to expose androcentism as a strategy for change; Courts' deference toward military policy.


Fighting Fire With Fire: Rethinking The Role Of Disgust In Hate Crimes, Kathryn Abrams Aug 2016

Fighting Fire With Fire: Rethinking The Role Of Disgust In Hate Crimes, Kathryn Abrams

Kathryn Abrams

Analyzes the community-based responses to hate crimes in the U.S. Discussion on the thesis regarding disgust as a response to hate crimes; Strategies used by Arab and Muslim Americans in response to crimes; Role of disgust in enforcement against group-based violence; Background on the cognitive component of disgust; Efforts made by gays and lesbians to make the streets safer.


Conceptions Of Authority And The Anglo-American Common Law Divide, Dan Priel Jul 2016

Conceptions Of Authority And The Anglo-American Common Law Divide, Dan Priel

Dan Priel

This essay seeks to explain the puzzle of the divergence of American law from the rest of the common law world through the lens of legal theory. I argue that there are four competing ideal-type theories of the authority of the common law: reason, practice, custom, and will. The reason view explains the authority of the common law in terms of correspondence to the demands of pure practical reason; the practice view sees the authority of the common law as derived from the expertise of practitioners (especially judges and practice-oriented academics) who try to develop the common law as a …


Diversity In The Boardroom: A Content Analysis Of Corporate Proxy Disclosures, Aaron A. Dhir Jul 2016

Diversity In The Boardroom: A Content Analysis Of Corporate Proxy Disclosures, Aaron A. Dhir

Aaron A. Dhir

My work in this field has focused on regulation by quota and regulation by disclosure. With regard to quotas, strikingly, the Norwegian law is not located in regulation that explicitly deals with human rights or equality issues; rather, it is found in the heart of the legal regime that gives life and personality to corporations – in Norwegian corporate law. I have conducted qualitative, interview-based research with Norwegian corporate directors, both men and women. It is only through understanding how the goals of the law have translated into the day-to-day existence of these individuals that we can begin to consider …


Book Review: The Great Dissent: How Oliver Wendell Holmes Changed His Mind—And Changed The History Of Free Speech In America, By Thomas Healy, Jamie Cameron Jul 2016

Book Review: The Great Dissent: How Oliver Wendell Holmes Changed His Mind—And Changed The History Of Free Speech In America, By Thomas Healy, Jamie Cameron

Jamie Cameron

This is a book review of Healy, Thomas. The Great Dissent: How Oliver Wendell Holmes Changed his Mind—and Changed the History of Free Speech in America. Metropolitan Books, Henry Holt and Co. 2013.


Water, Water, Everywhere: Surface Water Liability, Jill M. Fraley Feb 2016

Water, Water, Everywhere: Surface Water Liability, Jill M. Fraley

Jill M. Fraley

By 2030 the U.S. will lose around $520 billion annually from its gross domestic product due to flooding. New risks resulting from climate change arise not only from swelling rivers and lakes, but also from stormwater runoff. According to the World Bank, coastal cities risk flooding more from their poor management of surface water than they do from rising sea levels. Surface water liability governs when a landowner is responsible for diverting the flow of water to a neighboring parcel of land. Steep increases in urban flooding will make surface water an enormous source of litigation in the coming decades. …


Politically Motivated Bar Discipline, James E. Moliterno Feb 2016

Politically Motivated Bar Discipline, James E. Moliterno

James E. Moliterno

Bar discipline and admission denial have a century-long history of misuse in times of national crisis and upheaval. The terror war is such a time, and the threat of bar discipline has once again become an overreaction to justifiable fear and turmoil. Political misuse of bar machinery is characterized by its setting in the midst of turmoil, by its target, and by its lack of merit. The current instance of politically motivated bar discipline bears the marks of its historical antecedents.


Targeted Killing: A Legal And Political History, Markus Gunneflo Dec 2015

Targeted Killing: A Legal And Political History, Markus Gunneflo

Markus Gunneflo

Looking beyond the current debate’s preoccupation with the situations of insecurity of the second intifada and 9/11, this book reveals how targeted killing is intimately embedded in both Israeli and US statecraft and in the problematic relation of sovereign authority and lawful violence underpinning the modern state system. The book details the legal and political issues raised in targeted killing as it has emerged in practice including questions of domestic constitutional authority, the norms on the use of force in international law, the law of targeting and human rights. The distinctiveness of Israeli and US targeted killing is accounted for …


Gay Marriage And The Problem Of Property, Andrea B. Carroll Dec 2015

Gay Marriage And The Problem Of Property, Andrea B. Carroll

Andrea Beauchamp Carroll

The Supreme Court’s gay marriage decision in Obergefell has been hailed in almost all corners as a milestone in American jurisprudence. From topics as varied as adoption and taxes, a myriad of rights have now descended upon gay couples as a result of the Court’s ruling. In this Commentary, we explore the little discussed downsides of the decision when it comes to the property rights and debts of the spouses. This is particularly important when considering the rights of third parties and their settled expectations in the context of retroactivity, as well the ways in which the Court’s decision may …