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Articles 1 - 7 of 7

Full-Text Articles in Law

Employer’S New Age Training Program Fail To Alter The Consciousness Of The Eeoc, Thomas D. Brierton Jul 1992

Employer’S New Age Training Program Fail To Alter The Consciousness Of The Eeoc, Thomas D. Brierton

Eberhardt School of Business Faculty Articles

No abstract provided.


Review Of The Supreme Court's 1991-92 Term And Preview Of The 1992-93 Term For The Transnational Practitioner, J. Clark Kelso Jan 1992

Review Of The Supreme Court's 1991-92 Term And Preview Of The 1992-93 Term For The Transnational Practitioner, J. Clark Kelso

McGeorge School of Law Scholarly Articles

No abstract provided.


The Victims' Bill Of Rights: Where Did It Come From And How Much Did It Do?, J. Clark Kelso, Brigitte A. Bass Jan 1992

The Victims' Bill Of Rights: Where Did It Come From And How Much Did It Do?, J. Clark Kelso, Brigitte A. Bass

McGeorge School of Law Scholarly Articles

No abstract provided.


Significant Cases Interpreting Proposition 8, J. Clark Kelso, Brigitte A. Bass Jan 1992

Significant Cases Interpreting Proposition 8, J. Clark Kelso, Brigitte A. Bass

McGeorge School of Law Scholarly Articles

No abstract provided.


Moving Toward Equal Treatment Of Homosexuals, John Cary Sims Jan 1992

Moving Toward Equal Treatment Of Homosexuals, John Cary Sims

McGeorge School of Law Scholarly Articles

No abstract provided.


Race And The Rehnquist Court, Brian K. Landsberg Jan 1992

Race And The Rehnquist Court, Brian K. Landsberg

McGeorge School of Law Scholarly Articles

No abstract provided.


Bumper Cars: Themes Of Convergence In International Regulation, Michael P. Malloy Jan 1992

Bumper Cars: Themes Of Convergence In International Regulation, Michael P. Malloy

McGeorge School of Law Scholarly Articles

In this Article, Professor Malloy examines the convergence of regulatory standards among international regulators, suggesting that the dynamic of financial services regulation can best be understood as a conceptualized version of the bumper cars ride at an amusement park. While Professor Malloy suggests that a certain degree of convergence has already occurred in international regulation, thus decreasing the number of “bumps” in the ride, he also recognizes that much of this convergence remains prospective rather than actual, and currently is dominated by a pattern of regionalized regulation. Professor Malloy argues that, unless a converged pattern of regulation continues to develop, …