Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Criminal Law (7)
- Business Organizations Law (6)
- Constitutional Law (6)
- Health Law and Policy (6)
- International Trade Law (4)
-
- Other Law (4)
- Securities Law (4)
- Tax Law (4)
- Commercial Law (3)
- Criminal Procedure (3)
- Law and Economics (3)
- Legal Education (3)
- Taxation-Federal (3)
- Torts (3)
- Banking and Finance Law (2)
- Civil Rights and Discrimination (2)
- Courts (2)
- Evidence (2)
- International Law (2)
- Juvenile Law (2)
- Legal Ethics and Professional Responsibility (2)
- Legal Profession (2)
- Legislation (2)
- Natural Resources Law (2)
- Administrative Law (1)
- Antitrust and Trade Regulation (1)
- Arts and Humanities (1)
- Civil Procedure (1)
- Comparative and Foreign Law (1)
- Institution
-
- Columbia Law School (13)
- Duke Law (12)
- Boston University School of Law (11)
- Brooklyn Law School (8)
- Fordham Law School (5)
-
- UC Law SF (5)
- University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law (4)
- Mitchell Hamline School of Law (3)
- California Western School of Law (2)
- Texas A&M University School of Law (2)
- University of New Mexico (2)
- Brigham Young University Law School (1)
- Nova Southeastern University (1)
- University of Arkansas at Little Rock William H. Bowen School of Law (1)
- Keyword
-
- Civil rights (3)
- Appellate procedure (2)
- Columbia Law Review (2)
- Constitutional law (2)
- Criminal sanction (2)
-
- Health law (2)
- International trade (2)
- Negligence (2)
- Northern Illinois University Law Review (2)
- Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) (2)
- Strict liability (2)
- AJIL (1)
- Admissible evidence (1)
- Agency decisionmaking (1)
- Agins v. city of tiburon (1)
- Air transport (1)
- American Criminal Law Review (1)
- American Journal of International Law (1)
- Anti-communist movements (1)
- Appellate courts (1)
- Arbitral awards (1)
- Arbitral tribunal (1)
- Arbitration act (1)
- Art (1)
- Art collectors (1)
- Article 5 (1)
- Article review (1)
- Artificial insemination (1)
- Artists (1)
- Assistance of counsel (1)
Articles 61 - 70 of 70
Full-Text Articles in Law
Corporate Crime And Punishment: A Non-Chicago View Of The Economics Of Criminal Sanctions, John C. Coffee Jr.
Corporate Crime And Punishment: A Non-Chicago View Of The Economics Of Criminal Sanctions, John C. Coffee Jr.
Faculty Scholarship
In this article, Professor Coffee argues that fines are an inefficient means by which to deter organizational crimes. Instead, he urges a focus on the individual decision-maker and a system of competitive bids with respect to the choice of a fine as an alternative punishment.
Trade In Place Of Migration, Jagdish N. Bhagwati
Trade In Place Of Migration, Jagdish N. Bhagwati
Faculty Scholarship
This is a very useful and welcome study, sponsored by the World Employment Programme of the I.L.O., of the effects that increased trade flows could have on the level of employment in one “receiving country,” West Germany, and two sending countries, “Spain and Turkey,” and their implications for immigration policies.
Revenue Seeking: A Generalization Of The Theory Of Tariffs, Jagdish N. Bhagwati, T.N. Srinivasan
Revenue Seeking: A Generalization Of The Theory Of Tariffs, Jagdish N. Bhagwati, T.N. Srinivasan
Faculty Scholarship
The theory of commercial policy has recently addressed three phenomena: (i) tariff (quota) seeking or lobbying by potential beneficiaries for the imposition of a tariff (quota), (ii) tariff (quota) evasion, and (iii) rent seeking or lobbying for getting an allocation of the import quota to earn the rents generated. Revenue seeking or lobbying to secure a share in the disposition of the tariff revenues is analyzed here. It is shown that revenue seeking may, even for a small country, result in a reduction in importable output. Furthermore, revenue seeking may be welfare improving. Rent seeking may be welfare improving as …
Manifest Criminality, Criminal Intent, And The Metamorphosis Of Lloyd Weinreb, George P. Fletcher
Manifest Criminality, Criminal Intent, And The Metamorphosis Of Lloyd Weinreb, George P. Fletcher
Faculty Scholarship
My colleague has had a revelation. Professor Lloyd Weinreb's views about larceny have undergone a striking transformation in the last six months. As recently as May 1980, when he completed the preface to the third edition of his criminal law casebook, he held one set of views about The Carrier's Case and The King v. Pear. In the article published in this issue, he advances a different set of views about the two cases he regards as so important. He gives us no hint about how or why he underwent his change of heart. His transformation warrants our attention, …
Disqualifications Of Decisional Officials In Rulemaking, Peter L. Strauss
Disqualifications Of Decisional Officials In Rulemaking, Peter L. Strauss
Faculty Scholarship
What constraints on impartiality govern agency officials responsible for decisions in proceedings other than on-the-record adjudications? The past few years have witnessed the emergence of a striking body of professional debate, statute, and case law concerning ethics in government and the control of "special interest" influence on governmental decisions. Higher standards for conflict of interest, expanded constraints on ex parte communications, and enlarged concems about separation of functions within the agencies are parts of this development. Another strand, tangled with the others yet doctrinally distinct, concerns the disqualification of responsible government officials for their prior contacts with or expressions of …
Rebuttal: The Individual Or The Firm? Focusing The Threat Of Criminal Liability, John C. Coffee Jr.
Rebuttal: The Individual Or The Firm? Focusing The Threat Of Criminal Liability, John C. Coffee Jr.
Faculty Scholarship
I cannot disagree with much of what Mr. Crane has said in his very articulate presentation. One must be careful about trying to prove too much. I have not argued against individual criminal liability, but I do not believe we can rely on it exclusively. Let me therefore confine my reply to this question and to Mr. Crane's criticisms of my equity fine proposal.
Making The Punishment Fit The Corporation: The Problem Of Finding An Optimal Corporation Criminal Sanction, John C. Coffee Jr.
Making The Punishment Fit The Corporation: The Problem Of Finding An Optimal Corporation Criminal Sanction, John C. Coffee Jr.
Faculty Scholarship
To be "present at the creation," in Dean Acheson's felicitous phrase, is always an honor. In addition, to be present at the commencement of what I expect will be a sustained and fruitful tradition at this law school, namely, the Governor Thompson Lectureship, is a second honor. Finally, let me express my thanks to Dean Bainbridge for a third honor: the compliment implicit in the 2 to 1 odds he has arranged today. Both Norval Morris and Mark Crane are men with distinguished careers in quite different fields of the law. If I am confident of one thing today, it …
Constitutional Fate, Philip Chase Bobbitt
Constitutional Fate, Philip Chase Bobbitt
Faculty Scholarship
The Mary Ireland Graves Dougherty Lectures in Constitutional Law were established in 1979 at the University of Texas School of Law in the memory of Mrs. Dougherty by her family. Professor Bobbitt delivered the inaugural series of these lectures on three evenings in April 1979. Of those in attendance, only Professor Bobbitt's students, who had witnessed the evolution of his ideas during that year, and a few colleagues with whom he must have shared his thoughts, could have expected what followed on those spring evenings in Austin. His subject was "the question of judicial review." So stated, the subject hardly …
The Anatomy Of Products Liability In Minnesota: Principles Of Loss Allocation, Michael K. Steenson
The Anatomy Of Products Liability In Minnesota: Principles Of Loss Allocation, Michael K. Steenson
Faculty Scholarship
In this article, Professor Steenson continues the discussion that began in The Anatomy of Products Liability in Minnesota: The Theories of Recovery, appearing in the last Issue of the William Mitchell Law Review, by shifting the analytical focus to the problems involved in allocating awards among the parties in Minnesota products liability cases. Professor Steenson analyzes defenses, contribution and indemnity, and the impact of Minnesota's comparative fault act on products liability law.
Democracy And Distrust: A Theory Of Judicial Review, Gerard E. Lynch
Democracy And Distrust: A Theory Of Judicial Review, Gerard E. Lynch
Faculty Scholarship
John Hart Ely's Democracy and Distrust is an ambitious attempt to create a new theory of judicial review, breaking away from both "interpretivism" and "noninterpretivism" – a division Professor Ely regards as a "false dichotomy" (p. vii). The book is brilliant and provocative, so much so that one fears less that its faults will be obscured – there is little danger that polemic critics will fail to pounce on them – than that the flash of Professor Ely's reasoning and the controversy it generates will distract us from the genuine importance of the insight that powers his analysis.