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Full-Text Articles in Law
Systems Of Preferential Tax Treatment In The Eu: A Case Study Of Apple, Inc., Constanza Ortiz
Systems Of Preferential Tax Treatment In The Eu: A Case Study Of Apple, Inc., Constanza Ortiz
UC Law SF International Law Review
Transfer pricing allows corporations to shift profits from high-tax jurisdictions to low-tax jurisdictions. When employed by multinational corporations, which produce up to 70% of the wordl’s trade, many can shelter billions of dollars in tax havens. This paper explores how this is possible by analyzing the ise of Base Erosion and Profit Shifting Tools in Ireland.
Should The Proud Dragon Repent? A Relative Theory For China’S State Capitalist Banking Sector Based On East Asia’S Experience, Yueh-Ping (Alex) Yang
Should The Proud Dragon Repent? A Relative Theory For China’S State Capitalist Banking Sector Based On East Asia’S Experience, Yueh-Ping (Alex) Yang
UC Law SF International Law Review
Amidst the U.S.-China trade war, China’s banking sector, the backbone of China’s economy, plays a key role in this battle. China’s banking sector, however, poses a puzzle to contemporary studies of state-owned banks (“SBs”). According to the property right theory, the mainstream SB theory, SBs are negative for the financial and economic development of an economy because it is susceptible to more serious agency problems, excessive political intervention, and conflict of interest between state regulators and state owners. That said, the economic success of China, whose banks are mostly owned and controlled by the Chinese party-state supports the development theory, …
The Antitrust Impact Of Venture Capital Firms On Concentration In The Technology Sector, Bushra Samimi
The Antitrust Impact Of Venture Capital Firms On Concentration In The Technology Sector, Bushra Samimi
UC Law Science and Technology Journal
Technology plays a significant and crucial role in the current global economy. It impacts consumer welfare, the job market, economic progress, and the emergence of innovative technology. Due to the fact that the technology sector provides necessary and critical services, technology companies exercise immense power over consumers who rely on their products. The rising concentration in the technology sector magnifies the potential anticompetitive forces at play. This article argues that venture capital financing leads to anticompetitive effects in the technology industry. Although most startups intend to eventually go public through an initial public offering (“IPO”), the liquidity pressures from venture …
Binding Effects Of The European General Data Protection Regulation (Gdpr) On U.S. Companies, Manuel Klar
Binding Effects Of The European General Data Protection Regulation (Gdpr) On U.S. Companies, Manuel Klar
UC Law Science and Technology Journal
No abstract provided.
Going “All In” After Murphy V. Ncaa: An Approach For California To Legalize Sports Gambling, Kailey J. Walsh
Going “All In” After Murphy V. Ncaa: An Approach For California To Legalize Sports Gambling, Kailey J. Walsh
UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal
When people think of sports gambling, they think of Las Vegas. Until recently, Nevada was the only state where one could legally place bets on sporting events. However, since the recent Supreme Court decision, Murphy v. NCAA, states are now in control when it comes to deciding whether or not to legalize sports gambling. As a result of the Murphy v. NCAA decision, some states have started to pass legislation to allow its citizens to legally place bets on certain sporting events. The driving force to legalize sports gambling stems from states’ desires to increase revenue through the taxation of …
Editors’ Foreword, Tatiana Herschlikowicz, Christopher Johnson
Editors’ Foreword, Tatiana Herschlikowicz, Christopher Johnson
Hastings Journal of Crime and Punishment
No abstract provided.
Regressive Prosecutors: Law And Order Politics And Practices In Trump’S Doj, Mona Lynch
Regressive Prosecutors: Law And Order Politics And Practices In Trump’S Doj, Mona Lynch
Hastings Journal of Crime and Punishment
No abstract provided.
Editor In Chief: Foreword, Virginia Millacci
Editor In Chief: Foreword, Virginia Millacci
UC Law Journal of Race and Economic Justice
No abstract provided.
Muslims And Islam In U.S. Public Schools: Cases, Controversies And Curricula, Engy Abdelkader
Muslims And Islam In U.S. Public Schools: Cases, Controversies And Curricula, Engy Abdelkader
UC Law Journal of Race and Economic Justice
In recent years, controversies surrounding curriculum and instruction about Muslims and Islam in U.S. public schools have become more common. In some instances, Muslim American parents and students have challenged representations that spread and reinforce denigrating stereotypes and misconceptions about their faith and co-religionists. In a seemingly growing trend, however, some non-Muslim students and parents are objecting to courses and programs due to perceived favorable or neutral treatment of the Islamic faith. Such cases, controversies and curricula illustrate how popular anxieties surrounding the integration of immigrant populations, particularly Muslims, are increasingly infecting classrooms, school districts and communities. They also provide …
Mistreating Central American Refugees: Repeating History In Response To Humanitarian Challenges, Bill Ong Hing
Mistreating Central American Refugees: Repeating History In Response To Humanitarian Challenges, Bill Ong Hing
UC Law Journal of Race and Economic Justice
In the 1980s, tens of thousands of Central Americans fled to the United States seeking refuge from civil unrest that ravaged their countries. In a largely geopolitical response, the Reagan administration labeled those fleeing Guatemala and El Salvador as “economic migrants,” detained them, and largely denied their asylum claims. The illegal discrimination against these refugees was exposed in a series of lawsuits and through congressional investigations. This led to the reconsideration of thousands of cases, the enlistment of a corps of asylum officers, and an agreement on the conditions under which migrant children could be detained.
Unfortunately, the lessons of …
Korean Americans, The Protestant Christian Church, And The Future Of Asian American Lgbtq Rights, Josiah Pak
Korean Americans, The Protestant Christian Church, And The Future Of Asian American Lgbtq Rights, Josiah Pak
UC Law Journal of Race and Economic Justice
This paper focuses on the Korean American Protestant Christian church and their past, present, and future support for LGBTQ rights. It explores both first-generation Korean American immigrants and their children, native-born second-generation Korean Americans. Specifically, it recounts the process of emigration for many first-generation Korean American immigrants and how it carried over the conservative, traditionalist, and religious frameworks that contribute to stonewalling future LGBTQ equality rights. Additionally, this paper addresses second- generation Korean Americans swinging between ideologies and social underpinnings of the older generation and a new “American” identity. By recounting Korean immigration to the United States, the role of …
Teaching Professional Responsibility Through Theater, Michael Millemann, Elliott Rauh, Robert Bowie Jr.
Teaching Professional Responsibility Through Theater, Michael Millemann, Elliott Rauh, Robert Bowie Jr.
UC Law Journal of Race and Economic Justice
This article is about ethics-focused, law school courses, co-taught with a theater director, in which students wrote, produced and performed in plays. The plays were about four men who, separately, were wrongfully convicted, spent decades in prison, and finally were released and exonerated, formally (two) or informally (two).
The common themes in these miscarriages of justice were that 1) unethical conduct of prosecutors (especially failures to disclose exculpatory evidence) and of defense counsel (especially incompetent representation) undermined the Rule of Law and produced wrongful convictions, and 2) conversely, that the ethical conduct of post-conviction lawyers and law students helped to …
United States V. Stevens At 10: Adding A “Prurient Intent” Element To Resolve Constitutional Overbreadth In The Federal Anti-Animal Cruelty Statute, 18 U.S.C. § 48, Dale Radford
Hastings Journal of Crime and Punishment
Ten years ago, in United States v. Stevens, the United States Supreme Court overturned the federal anti-animal cruelty statute 18 U.S.C. § 48 for the first time. The statute was specifically drafted to target the clandestine underground production of so-called “crush videos,” adult entertainment videos depicting animals being purposefully tortured to death by scantily clad women.
The Court overturned the statute for potentially criminalizing portrayals of legal activity with redeeming socio-cultural value, such as hunting. While the Court relied heavily on analyzing speech as it relates to child pornography, it did not address whether depictions of animal torture constitute “obscenity” …
Should Consistency Be Part Of The Reform Prosecutor’S Playbook?, Kay Levine
Should Consistency Be Part Of The Reform Prosecutor’S Playbook?, Kay Levine
Hastings Journal of Crime and Punishment
In this piece, I explore the value of consistency in a prosecutor’s office that is committed to racial justice, fiscal responsibility, and strategies to reduce the size of the carceral state. I argue that consistency of process, rather than consistency of outcome, is the principal value that leadership ought to embrace in furtherance of its reformist goals. In prioritizing consistency of process, the office would design a “prosecutorial calculus” to guide line prosecutors’ case management decisions (i.e., it would identify the factors that should influence whether and what to file, how to handle pre-trial release, and what to offer as …
An Introduction To Joint Powers Authorities, Their Funding Mechanisms, And Why California Should Utilize One In Order To Create An Effective Forest Management System To Prevent Wildfires, Anna Bernstein
UC Law Business Journal
In the wake of ever-increasing incidences of wildfires across California, cost-effective, practical, and functional forest management has become a priority in order to keep California’s land and residents safe. From 2018 to 2020, six out of ten of California’s worst fires, coined ”megafires” by the United States Forest Service, have rampaged through the state. These megafires often behave in unstoppable ways. Most recently, in 2018, they killed more than a hundred people and destroyed seventeen thousand homes, all while burning hundreds of thousands of acres across California. Although the end of the recent drought has brought some relief, record- breaking …
From The Editor, Anushri Mehta
From The Editor, Anushri Mehta
UC Law SF International Law Review
No abstract provided.
Building Social And Human Capital In The Black Community By Increasing Strategic Relationships, Cooperative Economics, The Black Marriage Rate, And The Level Of Educational Attainment And Targeted Occupational Training, W. Sherman Rogers
UC Law Journal of Race and Economic Justice
This is a multi-disciplinary article that focuses on the power of strategic relationships and cooperative economics in strengthening the human and social capital of the black1 community. It involves studies emanating primarily from the fields of law, economics, history, political science, and sociology. The recommendations set-forth in this article, however, are relevant to all people in America. The central thesis that underlies the entirety of this article can be found in the simple exhortation of the African Proverb—“If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together .”
African Americans can significantly expand the …
The Case For A Federal Statute Authorizing Compensation For Legally Imposed Segregation, Thomas B. Stoel Jr.
The Case For A Federal Statute Authorizing Compensation For Legally Imposed Segregation, Thomas B. Stoel Jr.
UC Law Journal of Race and Economic Justice
This article, “The Case for a Federal Statute Authorizing Compensation for Legally Imposed Segregation,” proposes enactment of a law to provide reparations to the African Americans who suffered economic, physical, and psychological harm because they were victims of legally imposed racial segregation.
In 1973, Yale Law School Professor Boris Bittker published The Case for Black Reparations, a perceptive, legally rigorous analysis of the issue. Bittker concluded that a focus on reparations for slavery was likely to prove unproductive, and concentrated instead on the prospect for achieving broad- scale reparations for legally imposed segregation. Bittker reached no definitive conclusions; he ended …
The Legal Needs Of Nonprofits: An Empirical Study Of Tax-Exempt Organizations And Their Access To Legal Services, Raymond H. Brescia, Bahareh Ansari, Hannah Hage
The Legal Needs Of Nonprofits: An Empirical Study Of Tax-Exempt Organizations And Their Access To Legal Services, Raymond H. Brescia, Bahareh Ansari, Hannah Hage
UC Law Journal of Race and Economic Justice
This empirical study, using quantitative and qualitative techniques, attempts to assess the state of the legal needs of nonprofit organizations, with an emphasis on the ways in which nonprofit organizations are or are not accessing assistance addressing their legal services needs. While most research into the extent to which Americans may or may not be accessing legal services focuses on the legal needs of individuals and families, this study focuses on the legal needs of nonprofit groups. Our goal with this research project is to contribute to the growing literature on the scope of unmet legal needs in the United …
Law, Race, And The Epistemology Of Ignorance, George A. MartíNez
Law, Race, And The Epistemology Of Ignorance, George A. MartíNez
UC Law Journal of Race and Economic Justice
Philosophers and other theorists have developed the field of epistemology which is the study of human knowledge. Critical race theorists have begun to explore how epistemological theory and insights may illuminate the study of race, including the analysis of race and the law. Such use of epistemology is appropriate because theoretical work on knowledge can be used to advance one of the key goals of critical race theory which is to understand how a regime of white supremacy and its subordination of people of color have been created and maintained in America. In this regard, philosophers and other theorists have …
Eu-China Fta: Enhanced Enforcement And Umbrella Coverage Of Anticorruption, Ron Brown
Eu-China Fta: Enhanced Enforcement And Umbrella Coverage Of Anticorruption, Ron Brown
UC Law SF International Law Review
No abstract provided.
California And The European Union Take The Lead In Data Protection, Dyann Heward-Mills, Helga Turku
California And The European Union Take The Lead In Data Protection, Dyann Heward-Mills, Helga Turku
UC Law SF International Law Review
No abstract provided.
Foreword, Kya Rose Coletta
The Ethics Of Governance, Justice Gordon Goodman
The Ethics Of Governance, Justice Gordon Goodman
UC Law Business Journal
This Article discusses the need for a board of last resort to set financial values during periods of extreme economic stress, i.e., the “liquidity black hole” events. The purpose of this proposed board, the “Independent Treasury Board,” would be to address valuation uncertainty during bust periods immediately following major financial crises.
If an Independent Treasury Board existed prior to 2008, it could have helped rein in some valuations that were among the causes for the Great Recession. More importantly, it could have quickened recovery from the Great Recession during the period immediately following the financial crisis by shortening the period …
Women And (In)Justice: The Effects Of Employer Implicit Bias And Judicial Discretion On Title Vii Plaintiffs, Kya Rose Coletta
Women And (In)Justice: The Effects Of Employer Implicit Bias And Judicial Discretion On Title Vii Plaintiffs, Kya Rose Coletta
UC Law Business Journal
Current disparate treatment jurisprudence requires a plaintiff to prove that her employer intentionally discriminated based on sex, ignoring the social cognitive view that emphasizes the role of unconscious, unintentional mental processes. Women are unable to reach the top- tiers of the legal profession, like partnership, due to employers’ deeply engrained biases that emerge during assignment distribution and performance evaluations. This Note challenges that dominant approach, arguing that disparate treatment liability should turn on proof of actuation rather than evidence of intentionality. This Note presents a prescriptive discussion of how employers can implement compliance measures to prevent implicit bias in decision-making …
Federal Right To Try Act: Heightened Informed Consent And Price Regulation Measures Will Improve Quality, Autonomy, And Exploitation Issues, Brenda Lin
UC Law Business Journal
This Note will examine the federal Right to Try Act, which was enacted on May 30, 2018. The federal statute followed the passage of Right to Try legislation in thirty-eight states, including California. Much controversy has surrounded “Right to Try” as an alternative to preexisting pathways to investigational drug treatments, such as traditional clinical trials and the FDA-regulated Expanded Access program, also commonly known as “Compassionate Use.”
This Note will examine those criticisms, evaluate the federal Right to Try Act, and propose amendments through the lenses of health care quality, patient autonomy, and long-term scientific innovation. Some controversy stems from …