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Articles 1 - 30 of 75
Full-Text Articles in Law
Our Global Commons, Brigham Daniels, James Salzman
Our Global Commons, Brigham Daniels, James Salzman
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Surprising Commons, Carol M. Rose
The Tragicomedy Of The Commons, Brigham Daniels
The Tragicomedy Of The Commons, Brigham Daniels
BYU Law Review
Scholarship on the commons focuses on a diverse set of problems, ranging from crashing fisheries to crowded court dockets. Because we find commons resources throughout our natural and cultural environments, understanding old lessons and learning new ones about the commons gives us leverage to address a wide range of problems. Because the list of resources identified as commons resources continues to grow, the importance of gleaning lessons about the commons will also continue to grow.
That being said, while the resources that make up the commons are certainly diverse, so too are the ways scholars depict it and the challenges …
Texas Groundwater And Tragically Stable “Crossovers”, Zachary Bray
Texas Groundwater And Tragically Stable “Crossovers”, Zachary Bray
BYU Law Review
One recurring question in the academic literature on common-pool resources relates to the persistence of “tragic” commons regimes—systems that encourage, or at least tolerate, the inefficient, wasteful, hazardous, or unfair exploitation of a resource that is easily accessed for and diminished by individual use and consumption. Of course, not all commons are tragic: some common-pool resources invite individual access in efficient, fair, and durable ways. Yet many commonly held resources do lie under systems of governance that are not just tragic but persistently and stubbornly so. Often the tragic aspects of such commons regimes are well known; indeed, for some …
Agglomerama, Lee Anne Fennell
Naming The Tragedy, Eric T. Freyfogle
Isolated Wetland Commons And The Constitution, Blake Hudson, Mike Hardig
Isolated Wetland Commons And The Constitution, Blake Hudson, Mike Hardig
BYU Law Review
Isolated wetlands provide great ecological and economic value to the United States. While some states provide protection for isolated wetlands, a great many do not. These wetlands are also left outside the ambit of federal wetland regulatory protections under the Clean Water Act, with its murky jurisdictional reach. Notwithstanding jurisdictional questions under current federal statutes, the U.S. Supreme Court has gone so far as to call into question the constitutionality of federal isolated wetland regulation. This Article makes a normative argument that, in the absence of state or local programs providing holistic isolated wetland protection, federal action is needed. The …
Local Governments And Global Commons, Jonathan Rosenbloom
Local Governments And Global Commons, Jonathan Rosenbloom
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Coordinating The Oil And Gas Commons, Hannah J. Wiseman
Coordinating The Oil And Gas Commons, Hannah J. Wiseman
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Shareholder Activism As A Corrective Mechanism In Corporate Governance, Paul Rose, Bernard S. Sharfman
Shareholder Activism As A Corrective Mechanism In Corporate Governance, Paul Rose, Bernard S. Sharfman
BYU Law Review
Under an Arrowian framework, centralized authority and management provides for optimal decision making in large organizations. However, Kenneth Arrow also recognized that other elements within the organization, beyond the central authority, occasionally may have superior information or decision-making skills. In such cases, such elements may act as a corrective mechanism within the organization. In the context of public companies, this Article finds that such a corrective mechanism comes in the form of hedge fund activism, or, more accurately, offensive shareholder activism.
Offensive shareholder activism operates in the market for corporate influence, not control. Consistent with a theoretical framework that protects …
Teaching “Thinking Like A Lawyer”: Metacognition And Law Students, Cheryl B. Preston, Penée Wood Stewart, Louise R. Moulding
Teaching “Thinking Like A Lawyer”: Metacognition And Law Students, Cheryl B. Preston, Penée Wood Stewart, Louise R. Moulding
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Patent Claim Interpretation Review: Deference Or Correction Driven?, Christopher A. Cotropia
Patent Claim Interpretation Review: Deference Or Correction Driven?, Christopher A. Cotropia
BYU Law Review
This Article examines the Federal Circuit’s review of claim constructions by lower tribunals to determine whether the Federal Circuit defers to lower court constructions or is making its own, independent determination as to the “correct” construction and ultimate result in the case.
The data collected from 2010 to 2013 indicates that the Federal Circuit affirms about 75% of lower court claim interpretations. While this finding is itself surprising, even more surprising is that these reviews do not appear to be driven by deference. Instead, the Federal Circuit is less likely to correct constructions that resulted in a patentee loss below, …
Surveillant And Counselor: A Reorientation In Compliance For Broker-Dealers, James A. Fanto
Surveillant And Counselor: A Reorientation In Compliance For Broker-Dealers, James A. Fanto
BYU Law Review
This Article argues that the compliance officer should play a major role in the ongoing reform of broker-dealers and other financial firms. This role is facilitated by the fact that compliance is now well established and accepted and compliance officers are close to decision making at all levels of a firm. The contention is that the role of compliance must be rethought and reoriented if it is to contribute fully to the reform. Compliance officers now ensure that the firms and their employees comply with the numerous laws and regulations governing them and their activities, primarily by producing and then …
When Conditions Go Bad: An Examination Of The Problems Inherent In The Conditional Use Permitting System, Jacob Green
When Conditions Go Bad: An Examination Of The Problems Inherent In The Conditional Use Permitting System, Jacob Green
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Creation Of Hipaa Culture: Prioritizing Privacy Paranoia Over Patient Care, Jessica Jardine Wilkes
The Creation Of Hipaa Culture: Prioritizing Privacy Paranoia Over Patient Care, Jessica Jardine Wilkes
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Folly Of Expecting Evil: Reconsidering The Bar’S Character And Fitness Requirement, Leslie C. Levin
The Folly Of Expecting Evil: Reconsidering The Bar’S Character And Fitness Requirement, Leslie C. Levin
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Original Understanding Of Constitutional Legitimacy, Ilan Wurman
The Original Understanding Of Constitutional Legitimacy, Ilan Wurman
BYU Law Review
This Article argues that three influential schools of originalism, which we might label libertarian, progressive, and conservative, adhere to particular understandings of constitutional legitimacy, which then inform their particular constitutional hermeneutics. The Article demonstrates that as originally understood by the Founders, however, constitutional legitimacy depended on all three conceptions advocated by these schools of thought—that is, the Constitution had to protect natural rights, it had to enable self-government, and it had to be ratified by popular sovereignty. Further, the Article gives considerable treatment—remarkably for the first time in the law review literature— to James Madison’s letter in response to Thomas …
Originalism Talk: A Legal History, Mary Ziegler
Originalism Talk: A Legal History, Mary Ziegler
BYU Law Review
Progressives have long recognized the tremendous political appeal of originalism. For many scholars, originalism appears to have succeeded because it achieves results consistent with conservative values but promises judicial neutrality to the public. By drawing on new historical research on anti-abortion constitutionalism, this Article argues for a radically different understanding of the originalist ascendancy. Contrary to what we often think, conservative social movements at times made significant sacrifices in joining an originalist coalition. These costs were built in to what this Article calls originalism talk—the use of arguments, terms, and objectives associated with conservative originalism.
Scholars have documented the costs …
Swearing By New Technology: Strengthening The Fourth Amendment By Utilizing Modern Warrant Technology While Satisfying The Oath Or Affirmation Clause, Andrew H. Bean
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Reviving The Civil Jury Trial: Implementing Short, Summary, And Expedited Trial Programs, Robert A. Patterson
Reviving The Civil Jury Trial: Implementing Short, Summary, And Expedited Trial Programs, Robert A. Patterson
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Think Of The Children: How The Role Of Students In The Classroom Informs Future Applications Of Garcetti V. Ceballos In Academic Contexts, Aaron Worthen
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Can Retributivism Be Saved?, Chad Flanders
Can Retributivism Be Saved?, Chad Flanders
BYU Law Review
Retributive theory has long held pride of place among theories of criminal punishment in both philosophy and in law. It has seemed, at various times, either much more intuitive, or rationally persuasive, or simply more normatively right than other theories. But retributive theory is limited, both in theory and practice, and in many of its versions is best conceived not as a theory of punishment in its own right, but instead as shorthand for a set of constraints on the exercise of punishment. Whether some version of retributive theory is a live possibility in the contemporary world remains very much …
Aligning Corporate And Community Interests: From Abominable To Symbiotic, Barnali Choudhury
Aligning Corporate And Community Interests: From Abominable To Symbiotic, Barnali Choudhury
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Disincentivizing Elder Abuse Through Disinheritance: Revamping California Probate Code § 259 And Using It As A Model, Travis Hunt
Disincentivizing Elder Abuse Through Disinheritance: Revamping California Probate Code § 259 And Using It As A Model, Travis Hunt
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Institutional Religious Exemptions: A Balancing Approach, Leilani N. Fisher
Institutional Religious Exemptions: A Balancing Approach, Leilani N. Fisher
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Innovations In The War On Tax Evasion, Tracy A. Kaye
Innovations In The War On Tax Evasion, Tracy A. Kaye
BYU Law Review
Offshore tax evasion is a global problem that requires a global solution. Nevertheless, the United States unilaterally responded to the offshore tax evasion problem by enacting the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act. FATCA requires foreign banks to report information about financial accounts held by U.S. taxpayers directly to the Internal Revenue Service and imposes a thirty percent withholding tax on certain U.S. payments to any bank that will not cooperate. Yet, U.S. banks were not required to report any information on nonresident account holders (except for Canadians) to anyone. FATCA garnered worldwide attention. The European Union expressed its concerns to …
Domestic Asset Protection Trusts: A Threat To Child Support?, Trent Maxwell
Domestic Asset Protection Trusts: A Threat To Child Support?, Trent Maxwell
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
A Home With Dignity: Domestic Violence And Property Rights, Margaret E. Johnson
A Home With Dignity: Domestic Violence And Property Rights, Margaret E. Johnson
BYU Law Review
This Article argues that the legal system should do more to address intimate partner violence and each party’s need for a home for several reasons. First, domestic violence is a leading cause of individual and family homelessness. Second, the struggle over rights to a shared home can increase the violence to which the woman is subjected. And third, a woman who decides to continue to live with the person who abused her receives little or no legal support, despite the evidence that this decision could most effectively reduce the violence. The legal system’s current failings result from its limited goals—achieving …