Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
- Keyword
-
- Behavior (1)
- Behavioral finance (1)
- Class and law (1)
- Consumers (1)
- Cruelty (1)
-
- Data (1)
- Decision-making (1)
- Family separation (1)
- Federal courts (1)
- Financial protection (1)
- Habeas corpus (1)
- Immigration (1)
- Income inequality (1)
- Innocence (1)
- Labor unions (1)
- Markets (1)
- Nudges (1)
- Postconviction challenges (1)
- Prisoners (1)
- Shklar (Judith) (1)
- Small businesses (1)
- State courts (1)
- Strikes (1)
- Trump Administration (1)
- US-Mexico border (1)
- University of Michigan Center on Finance Law and Policy (1)
- Workers (1)
Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Law
Litigating Federal Habeas Corpus Cases: One Equitable Gateway At A Time, Eve Brensike Primus
Litigating Federal Habeas Corpus Cases: One Equitable Gateway At A Time, Eve Brensike Primus
Other Publications
Habeas corpus, also known as the Great Writ, was meant to be a “bulwark against convictions that violate fundamental fairness,” according to the Supreme Court. Yet today, federal courts provide relief in fewer than half of one percent of cases in which a non-capital state prisoner seeks relief through habeas. The Great Writ, it would seem, is no longer so great. In Litigating Federal Habeas Corpus Cases: One Equitable Gateway at a Time, Eve Brensike Primus examines the various procedural and substantive hurdles that have been erected in the past half century that make it nearly impossible for state prisoners …
Family Separation And The Triumph Of Cruelty, Richard A. Primus
Family Separation And The Triumph Of Cruelty, Richard A. Primus
Other Publications
Sometime in 1940, an 11-year-old refugee named Yudita Nisse reached the United States on a boat from Japan. Her Latvian-Jewish family had fled Nazi Germany east across the Soviet Union; the trip to North America was to have completed their escape. But the family had no legal authorization to enter the United States, so on arrival in Seattle they were locked up as illegal immigrants. They were eventually released, and Yudita later Anglicized her first name, becoming Judith. A second name change when she married made her Judith Shklar, and by that name she became the first woman ever to …
Behavioral Finance Symposium Summary Paper, Michael S. Barr, Annabel Jouard, Andrew Norwich, Josh Wright, Katy Davis
Behavioral Finance Symposium Summary Paper, Michael S. Barr, Annabel Jouard, Andrew Norwich, Josh Wright, Katy Davis
Other Publications
On September 14-15, 2017, the University of Michigan’s Center on Finance, Law, and Policy and behavioral science research and design lab ideas42 brought together influential leaders from academia, government, nonprofits and the financial sector for a two-day symposium on behavioral finance. Behavioral finance is the study of how behavioral biases and tendencies affect financial decisions, and in turn how those impact financial markets.
Peril And Possibility: Strikes, Rights, And Legal Change In The Era Of Trump, Kate Andrias
Peril And Possibility: Strikes, Rights, And Legal Change In The Era Of Trump, Kate Andrias
Other Publications
Everyone in this audience is well aware of the problems plaguing reiterating. The wealthiest one percent of Americans takes home nearly a quarter of our national income and owns forty percent of the nation's wealth.