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Full-Text Articles in Law
Aids And Access To Care: Lessons For Health Care Reformers, Michael T. Isbell
Aids And Access To Care: Lessons For Health Care Reformers, Michael T. Isbell
Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy
No abstract provided.
Employers And Aids: Meeting The Health Benefit Needs Of People With Hiv Disease, Judith K. Barr, Robert A. Padgug
Employers And Aids: Meeting The Health Benefit Needs Of People With Hiv Disease, Judith K. Barr, Robert A. Padgug
Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy
No abstract provided.
Aids And Private Health Insurance: A Crisis Of Risk Sharing, Robert A. Padgug, Gerald M. Oppenheimer, Jon Eisenhandler
Aids And Private Health Insurance: A Crisis Of Risk Sharing, Robert A. Padgug, Gerald M. Oppenheimer, Jon Eisenhandler
Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy
No abstract provided.
Revising Section 402a: The Limits Of Tort As Social Insurance, James A. Henderson Jr.
Revising Section 402a: The Limits Of Tort As Social Insurance, James A. Henderson Jr.
Touro Law Review
No abstract provided.
Apres Le Deluge: National Flood Insurance, Marilyn Cane, Paul A. Caldarelli
Apres Le Deluge: National Flood Insurance, Marilyn Cane, Paul A. Caldarelli
Nova Law Review
On August 24, 1992, Hurricane Andrew slammed into the South Florida coast, continued across the peninsula of Florida into the Gulf of Mexico and eventually into Louisiana.
Reflections On The Historical Context Of Section 402a, Oscar S. Gray
Reflections On The Historical Context Of Section 402a, Oscar S. Gray
Touro Law Review
No abstract provided.
Arbitration - Sure, But Only On Our Terms: Escape Clauses In Uninsured Motorist Policies - Schaefer V. Allstate Ins. Co., Steven R. Leppard
Arbitration - Sure, But Only On Our Terms: Escape Clauses In Uninsured Motorist Policies - Schaefer V. Allstate Ins. Co., Steven R. Leppard
Journal of Dispute Resolution
Historically, the insurance industry has widely used arbitration to resolve disputes.2 Insurance companies have increasingly included "escape clauses" in their policies.' These clauses allow an insurance company to ignore an arbitrator's award and have a claim directly heard in a trial court if the award exceeds a pre-determined amount.' The Ohio Supreme Court in Schaefer v. Allstate Insurance Co. addressed this issue and decided that the escape clause was unenforceable due to public policy.'