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Articles 31 - 46 of 46
Full-Text Articles in Law
Hedonic Adaptation And The Settlement Of Civil Lawsuits, Jonathan S. Masur, John Bronsteen, Christopher Buccafusco
Hedonic Adaptation And The Settlement Of Civil Lawsuits, Jonathan S. Masur, John Bronsteen, Christopher Buccafusco
Jonathan S. Masur
This paper examines the burgeoning psychological literature on happiness and hedonic adaptation (a person’s capacity to preserve or recapture her level of happiness by adjusting to changed circumstances), bringing this literature to bear on a previously overlooked aspect of the civil litigation process: the probability of pre-trial settlement. The glacial pace of civil litigation is commonly thought of as a regrettable source of costs to the relevant parties. Even relatively straightforward personal injury lawsuits can last for as long as two years, delaying the arrival of necessary redress to the tort victim and forcing the litigants to expend ever greater …
Remedies For Wrong Preliminary Injunctions: The Case For Disgorgement Of Profits And Only Partial Liability For Harms, Barak Medina, Ofer Grosskopf
Remedies For Wrong Preliminary Injunctions: The Case For Disgorgement Of Profits And Only Partial Liability For Harms, Barak Medina, Ofer Grosskopf
Barak Medina
A party who applies for a preliminary injunction is required to post a bond that would cover the harms inflicted on any party who is found to have been wrongfully enjoined or restrained. Yet, the moving-party’s liability frequently covers only a fraction of the actual costs and harms inflicted by the injunction. In addition, courts reject most claims for restitution of benefits gained by the plaintiff on the basis of the wrong preliminary injunction. This Article demonstrates that these practices are only partially justified. It supports the practice of requiring the moving-party to compensate the defendant for only part of …
Beyond The Four Corners Of A Written Contract: A Global Challenge To U.S. Contract Law, Chunlin Leonhard
Beyond The Four Corners Of A Written Contract: A Global Challenge To U.S. Contract Law, Chunlin Leonhard
Chunlin Leonhard
U.S. contract law has developed on the basis of certain essential assumptions such as freedom of contract, autonomy and liberal individualism. Because of those basic assumptions, U.S. contract law primarily concerns itself with only protecting the resulting bargain reached by the parties. Relying on a set of well entrenched contract interpretation and construction principles, U.S. courts will generally refuse to look beyond the four corners of the written contract. Hence, in a U.S. court, a party is entitled to enforce terms of a written contact to the letter. U.S. contract law’s underlying assumptions, however, reflect the core values of the …
The Boundaries Of Contact Law In Cyberspace, Leon E. Trakman
The Boundaries Of Contact Law In Cyberspace, Leon E. Trakman
Leon E Trakman Dean
Cyberspace has introduced novel ways in which to conclude, perform and terminate agreements. It has also raised doubts about whether traditional principles of contract law can adequately regulate new categories of contracts like click-wrap and browse-wrap agreements that were unheard of a few decades ago. This article explores these exciting new developments. Starting with an examination of late Nineteenth and early Twentieth adhesion contracts and the law of unconscionability, it evaluates innovations in contracting that have evolved since then. Uncovering the complexities associated with “wrap” contracts and End User Licensing Agreements [EULAs], it scrutinizes how legislatures and courts have responded …
Bundles Of Hope: Putting Aspirations In Order, Marc A. Morgan
Bundles Of Hope: Putting Aspirations In Order, Marc A. Morgan
Marc A. Morgan
The primary purpose of this paper is to discuss cardinal utility theories of how aspiration affects negotiation and to propose an alternative ordinal utility theory of how aspiration affects negotiation. In the cardinal utility theories, used by some legal scholars, aspiration in negotiation is a utility maximizing point after which negotiators become increasingly loss averse. While in the ordinal utility theory this paper proposes, aspiration in negotiation is a goal that maximizes utility subject to constraints and subjective preferences.
Peer Pressure: Correlations Between Membership In Regional And Regional Economic Organizations And Wto Dispute Resolution Claims And Their Implications, Alexandra R. Harrington
Peer Pressure: Correlations Between Membership In Regional And Regional Economic Organizations And Wto Dispute Resolution Claims And Their Implications, Alexandra R. Harrington
Alexandra R. Harrington
Abstract: Peer Pressure: Correlations Between Membership in Regional and Regional Economic Organizations and WTO Dispute Resolution Claims and Their Implications. Alexandra R. Harrington, Esq. Peer pressure is a well-known phenomenon, believed responsible for everything from teenage experimentation and angst to the cliff-diving habits of lemmings. But peer pressure is less commonly thought of as a motivation for a state to act – or fail to act – in the international trade arena. The goal of this article is to explore the relationship between a state’s membership in a variety of regional and regional economic organizations and its history of bringing …
Compelling Mediation In The Context Of Med-Arb Agreements, Sean-Patrick Wilson, David J. Mclean
Compelling Mediation In The Context Of Med-Arb Agreements, Sean-Patrick Wilson, David J. Mclean
Sean-Patrick Wilson
The recent case of Advanced Bodycare v. Thione, 07-12309, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 8584 (11th Cir. Apr. 21, 2008) invited the Eleventh Circuit to explore which types of ADR are considered “arbitration” for purpose of the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 1 (“FAA”). According to the Eleventh Circuit, an agreement to mediate, as well as an agreement to either mediate or arbitrate, falls outside of the FAA’s scope, making the FAA’s remedies unavailing to parties wishing to use its provisions to stay litigation or to compel a single agreement which requires the parties to either mediate or arbitrate. The …
Sovereign Rivalry Between Korea And Japan Fermented By A Distorting Fisheries Agreement, Young K. Kim
Sovereign Rivalry Between Korea And Japan Fermented By A Distorting Fisheries Agreement, Young K. Kim
Young K Kim
The 1998 Fishery Agreement between Korea and Japan has been reviewed in view of the law of treaty, in this article. In concluding the 1998 Fishery Agreement, the contracting parties failed to reach even the preliminary point of mutual consent and evaded the differences of stance in delineating the provisionally arranged zone in the East China Sea, by concealing them with intended ambiguous terms, simply for the purpose of maintaining superficial contractual relations. In delineating another provisionally arranged zone in East Sea/the Sea of Japan, a legal confusion in the part of Korea and Japanese side’s persistent intention to earn …
Capital In Chaos: The Subprime Mortgage Crisis And The Social Capital Response, Raymond H. Brescia
Capital In Chaos: The Subprime Mortgage Crisis And The Social Capital Response, Raymond H. Brescia
Raymond H Brescia
“Capital in Chaos: The Subprime Mortgage Crisis and the Social Capital Response,” examines the role of trust and the absence of social capital in the subprime mortgage crisis, with a particular focus on the impact of the subprime crisis on communities of color.
Bargaining In The Shadow Of Violence: The Npt, Iaea, And Nuclear Non-Proliferation Negotiations, Arsalan M. Suleman
Bargaining In The Shadow Of Violence: The Npt, Iaea, And Nuclear Non-Proliferation Negotiations, Arsalan M. Suleman
Arsalan Suleman
The NPT non-proliferation regime is both a multilateral treaty of international law and a dispute system designed to manage conflict over the use of nuclear technology. The system seeks to balance the competing desires of member-states to have access to peaceful nuclear technology and to provide national security. In the course of implementation, the system must handle disputes over alleged violations of the NPT and IAEA safeguards agreements. Negotiations, crucial to the functioning of the NPT dispute system, are undertaken in the shadow of the law and the shadow of violence. The NPT and any relevant agreement signed with the …
Collaborative Governance: Emerging Practices And The Incomplete Legal Framework For Citizen And Stakeholder Voice, Lisa Blomgren Bingham
Collaborative Governance: Emerging Practices And The Incomplete Legal Framework For Citizen And Stakeholder Voice, Lisa Blomgren Bingham
Lisa Blomgren Bingham
I argue here that we need a comprehensive model to understand emerging uses of collaboration across the policy continuum, and that we need to re-examine our legal framework for policy making, implementation, and enforcement to encompass this new collaborative governance. I take as my starting point the normative assumption that collaboration exists, and that it is useful and desirable in certain contexts if designed and implemented well. This article describes the broad range of processes through which citizens and stakeholders collaborate to make, implement, and enforce public policy, and then describes the incomplete legal framework for these processes. First, it …
Two Crises Of Confidence: Securing Non-Proliferation And The Rule Of Law Through Security Council Resolutions, Vik Kanwar
Vik Kanwar
This timely article describes the powers of the United Nations Security Council as they have developed in the field of non-proliferation, and demonstrated in recent resolutions, and goes on to propose a normative framework based on the model of reciprocal “confidence-building” measures to ensure the legality and legitimacy of these resolutions.
Recent proliferation crises (concerning Iran, North Korea, and non-state proliferation networks) have led the Council draw upon various sources-- express and implied powers under the UN Charter, powers granted by specific treaties, and an unusual degree of international consensus-- to expand its powers. This paper attempts to transcend false …
The Paradox Of Social Instability In China And The Role Of The Xinfang System, Matthew Adam Bruckner
The Paradox Of Social Instability In China And The Role Of The Xinfang System, Matthew Adam Bruckner
Matthew Adam Bruckner
No abstract provided.
The Holocaust, Museum Ethics, And Legalism, Jennifer Kreder
The Holocaust, Museum Ethics, And Legalism, Jennifer Kreder
Jennifer Kreder
The attached article is a provocative analysis of the “Holocaust art movement.” The movement has led to significant and controversial restitutions from museums. This article focuses on two emotionally driven claims refused by the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum: One to recover a suitcase stolen from a murdered man, and the other to recover watercolors a woman was forced to paint for Josef Mengele to document his pseudo-scientific theories of racial inferiority and his cruel medical experiments. These claims provide insightful case studies to examine the emotional and ethical aspects of such disputes uncomplicated by the monetary issues in many of the …
The Movement Toward Early Case Handling In Courts And Private Dispute Resolution, John Lande
The Movement Toward Early Case Handling In Courts And Private Dispute Resolution, John Lande
John Lande
This article identifies early case handling (ECH) as an important general phenomenon in dispute system design theory and practice, catalogs the major ECH processes, and urges practitioners and policymakers to encourage use of and experimentation with ECH processes when appropriate. The key element of ECH is that people intentionally exercise responsibility for handling the case from the outset. ECH processes in courts include early case management procedures, differentiated case management systems, early neutral evaluation, and other early alternative dispute resolution (ADR) processes. ECH in the private sector includes ADR pledges and contract clauses, early case assessment and ADR screening protocols, …
The Curious Appellate Judge: Ethical Limits On Independent Research, Beth Thornburg
The Curious Appellate Judge: Ethical Limits On Independent Research, Beth Thornburg
Beth Thornburg
Appellate judges in the twenty-first century find themselves in a world in which litigation – both civil and criminal -- involves a vast array of complex and technical factual disputes. These lawsuits, in turn, may cause judges to seek a greater level of expertise in order to deal competently with the evidence that will be relevant to the disputes. At the same time, advances in communication technology have brought the world’s library to the courthouse, requiring no onerous trips across town or index searches but only the click of a mouse. When judges feel the need for additional information, the …