Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Constitutional Law (133)
- Social and Behavioral Sciences (117)
- Courts (90)
- Environmental Law (87)
- Legal Education (80)
-
- Legislation (80)
- State and Local Government Law (79)
- Administrative Law (78)
- Criminal Law (64)
- International Law (64)
- Natural Resources Law (63)
- Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration (62)
- Civil Rights and Discrimination (57)
- Health Law and Policy (52)
- Property Law and Real Estate (52)
- Physical Sciences and Mathematics (49)
- Land Use Law (48)
- Legal Profession (47)
- Business Organizations Law (46)
- Law and Society (46)
- Legal History (46)
- Litigation (46)
- Environmental Sciences (44)
- Natural Resources Management and Policy (44)
- Jurisprudence (41)
- Environmental Policy (40)
- Criminal Procedure (39)
- Oil, Gas, and Mineral Law (38)
- Family Law (37)
- Institution
-
- Brigham Young University Law School (644)
- University of Minnesota Law School (87)
- Golden Gate University School of Law (75)
- William & Mary Law School (70)
- University of Michigan Law School (61)
-
- University of Colorado Law School (59)
- Columbia Law School (58)
- Chicago-Kent College of Law (54)
- Maurer School of Law: Indiana University (54)
- Notre Dame Law School (51)
- Duke Law (50)
- University of Chicago Law School (50)
- Case Western Reserve University School of Law (35)
- Boston University School of Law (34)
- Cornell University Law School (30)
- University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law (30)
- UC Law SF (26)
- University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School (25)
- New York Law School (24)
- University of Richmond (24)
- The Catholic University of America, Columbus School of Law (23)
- University of Georgia School of Law (21)
- University of New Mexico (19)
- Valparaiso University (19)
- American University Washington College of Law (18)
- Cleveland State University (18)
- University of Miami Law School (18)
- Vanderbilt University Law School (18)
- Brooklyn Law School (16)
- Fordham Law School (16)
- Keyword
-
- 1994 (31)
- Chicago-Kent College of Law (30)
- The Law School Record (30)
- The Record (30)
- United States (30)
-
- Law (26)
- Ohio (26)
- State law; State administrative decision (21)
- Supreme Court (18)
- Ethics (16)
- Constitutional law (15)
- History (15)
- United States Supreme Court (15)
- Women (15)
- Law students (14)
- Law professors (13)
- Law schools (13)
- Liability (13)
- University of Michigan Law School (13)
- Book review (12)
- Courts (12)
- Curriculum (12)
- Jurisprudence (12)
- Constitutional Law (11)
- Discrimination (11)
- Litigation (11)
- California (10)
- Constitution (10)
- Environmental Law (10)
- Fifth Amendment (10)
- Publication
-
- Utah Court of Appeals Briefs (through 1995) (643)
- Faculty Scholarship (251)
- Articles (128)
- Faculty Publications (108)
- All Faculty Scholarship (68)
-
- Journal Articles (57)
- Scholarly Works (51)
- Minnesota Law Review (36)
- Articles by Maurer Faculty (35)
- Cornell Law Faculty Publications (30)
- The Record (30)
- Constitutional Commentary (29)
- Faculty Articles (29)
- Law Faculty Publications (29)
- Publications (28)
- Scholarly Articles (26)
- Ohio Oil & Gas Commission Decisions (25)
- Regulatory Takings and Resources: What Are the Constitutional Limits? (Summer Conference, June 13-15) (24)
- Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications (18)
- Articles & Chapters (17)
- Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals (17)
- Who Governs the Public Lands: Washington? The West? The Community? (September 28-30) (16)
- William & Mary Annual Tax Conference (16)
- Law Faculty Articles and Essays (15)
- California Assembly (14)
- Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works (14)
- Press Releases (14)
- Other Publications (13)
- Faculty Articles and Papers (11)
- LLM Theses and Essays (11)
- File Type
Articles 2161 - 2190 of 2215
Full-Text Articles in Law
Controversial Science In The Courtroom: Daubert And The Law's Hubris, Paul S. Milich
Controversial Science In The Courtroom: Daubert And The Law's Hubris, Paul S. Milich
Faculty Publications By Year
No abstract provided.
Thinking To Be Paid Versus Being Paid To Think, Merritt B. Fox
Thinking To Be Paid Versus Being Paid To Think, Merritt B. Fox
Faculty Scholarship
In the first chapter of The Economic Structure of Corporate Law, Frank Easterbrook and Daniel Fischel make an arresting statement:
... [P]eople who are backing their beliefs with cash are correct; they have every reason to avoid mistakes, while critics (be they academics or regulators) are rewarded for novel rather than accurate beliefs. Market professionals who estimate these things wrongly suffer directly; academics and regulators who estimate wrongly do not pay a similar penalty. Persons who wager with their own money may be wrong, but they are less likely to be wrong than are academics and regulators, who are wagering …
Property Rights: A View From The Trenches, Michael A. Heller
Property Rights: A View From The Trenches, Michael A. Heller
Faculty Scholarship
How do governments create – or in some countries recreate - basic property rights that citizens demand in the transition to a market economy? My first comment, quite briefly, is on the debate within this Symposium on the relationship between constitutional reforms and the emergence of new property regimes. Second, I will comment on the counterintuitive property rights regime that is emerging from the "big bang" – the post-1989 collapse of the old socialist legal order in Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union and its replacement with a new, market-oriented system of property rights.
Toward A New Deal Legal History, Eben Moglen
Toward A New Deal Legal History, Eben Moglen
Faculty Scholarship
With this article, Barry Cushman continues the project begun in earlier writings, leading ultimately to a thoroughgoing reconsideration of the legal history of the New Deal. The present work, perhaps the most important to appear so far, brings Cushman's evolving argument up against the most stable – if not altogether the most convincing – element of the traditional history of the New Deal Court. The "Constitutional Revolution of 1937" is now open for reconsideration or, more precisely, the famous "switch in time" that realigned the Supreme Court with the demands of the Roosevelt administration. Cushman argues powerfully – by and …
Contract Renegotiation, Mechanism Design, And The Liquidated Damages Rule, Eric L. Talley
Contract Renegotiation, Mechanism Design, And The Liquidated Damages Rule, Eric L. Talley
Faculty Scholarship
The common law practice of refusing to enforce contractual penalties has long mystified law and economics scholars. After critiquing the prevailing law and economics analyses of the common law rule, Eric L. Talley reevaluates the penalty doctrine using the game theoretic technique of mechanism design, which facilitates the analysis of multiparty bargaining situations under various assumptions. Using this technique to model the allocational consequences of various enforcement regimes that courts might adopt with respect to stipulated damages clauses, Mr. Talley finds that penalty nonenforcement can increase economic efficiency by discouraging strategic behavior by the parties, thereby inducing more efficient contract …
Multiple Litigants With A Public Good Remedy, Robert Marshall, Michael J. Meurer, Jean-Francois Richard
Multiple Litigants With A Public Good Remedy, Robert Marshall, Michael J. Meurer, Jean-Francois Richard
Faculty Scholarship
Potential bidders are frequently excluded from participation in a federal procurement by the mandatory specifications or evaluation criteria in the bid solicitation. For certain procurements aggrieved bidders can protest inappropriate exclusions to a quasi-judicial board. We present a model where there are multiple potential litigants and the remedy is a public good. Equilibrium litigation can arise without decision errors by the court or information asymmetries. We show that protests can deter inappropriate exclusions but can also lead to undesirable settlement agreements. The free-rider problem created by the public good remedy can also cause voluntary revisions of an excessively restrictive bid …
Environmental "Remediation" Expenses And A Natural Interpretation Of The Capitalization Requirement, Theodore S. Sims
Environmental "Remediation" Expenses And A Natural Interpretation Of The Capitalization Requirement, Theodore S. Sims
Faculty Scholarship
The income taxation of outlays for envi- ronmental restoration (or "remediation'') has become a hot topic once again. It elicited extensive consideration a decade ago, when the focus was on the treat- ment of expenses of surface mining re- clamation and nuclear power plant de- commissioning, now explicitly covered by Sections 468 and 468A of the Internal Revenue Code. As a formal matter, those specific matters are just examples, conspicuous by their size, of the more general question of how an income tax should account for "future costs." Al- though not currently controversial, sur- face mining affords a simple illustration. …
Outcomes Assessment In Health Care Reform: Promise And Limitations, Wendy K. Mariner
Outcomes Assessment In Health Care Reform: Promise And Limitations, Wendy K. Mariner
Faculty Scholarship
If the fundamental goals of the health care reform effort are to ensure universal access to an acceptable quality of health care at an affordable cost, then the threshold question for reform is: What health care services should be provided in an efficient, equitable system?
Answering this question requires weighing a complex mix of medical and social policy factors, a process not attempted in this article. But the starting point for that process should be determining what health care services “work” and what they cost. Outcomes assessment holds considerable promise in finding answers to these subsidiary questions, because it is …
Bankruptcy Judges, United States Trustees, And Family Farmer Bankruptcy Act Of 1986, Moussa Ismael Abojhanim
Bankruptcy Judges, United States Trustees, And Family Farmer Bankruptcy Act Of 1986, Moussa Ismael Abojhanim
LLM Theses and Essays
The Bankruptcy Judges, United States Trustees, and Family Farmer Bankruptcy Act of 1986, enacted as Public Law No. 99-554, introduced Chapter 12 to the Bankruptcy Code specifically aimed at providing debt relief to family farmers. This thesis explores providing debt relief to family farmers. It also explores the background leading to the enactment of Chapter 12, including the economic challenges faced by American family farmers in 1970s and 1980s. Additionally, it discusses the legislative history, congressional response, and the provisions of Chapter 12, noting its advantages over chapter 11 and 13 for family farmers in reorganizing their finances and maintaining …
Brent Cotter Resigns From Dal Law Faculty, Innis Christie
Brent Cotter Resigns From Dal Law Faculty, Innis Christie
Innis Christie Collection
Brent and Sandra Cotter have decided to make permanent, or at least long-term, their move back to their native Saskatchewan. After two years on leave from Dal Law School, the former Associate Dean, Dal Legal Aid Director and long-time Chair of the Admissions Committee has resigned, to continue to serve as Deputy Attorney General of Saskatchewan, a post he has held for the last two years.
Hail Britannia?: Institutional Investor Behavior Under Limited Regulation, John C. Coffee Jr., Bernard S. Black
Hail Britannia?: Institutional Investor Behavior Under Limited Regulation, John C. Coffee Jr., Bernard S. Black
Faculty Scholarship
A central puzzle in understanding the governance of large American public firms is why most institutional shareholders are passive. Why would they rather sell than fight? Until recently, the Berle-Means paradigm – the belief that separation of ownership and control naturally characterizes the modern corporation – reigned supreme. Shareholder passivity was seen as an inevitable result of the scale of modern industrial enterprise and of the collective action problems that face shareholders, each of whom owns only a small fraction of a large firm's shares.
A paradigm shift may be in the making, however. Rival hypotheses have recently been offered …
Judicial Review, Equal Protection, And The Problem With Plebiscites, Robin Charlow
Judicial Review, Equal Protection, And The Problem With Plebiscites, Robin Charlow
Hofstra Law Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Nationalism And Internationalism: The Wilsonian Legacy, Lori Fisler Damrosch
Nationalism And Internationalism: The Wilsonian Legacy, Lori Fisler Damrosch
Faculty Scholarship
No twentieth-century leader has had greater influence on the parallel development of both nationalism and internationalism than Woodrow Wilson. Wilson gave expression to the nationalist aspirations of peoples around the world, through is endorsement of the principle of self-determination. He also initiated the first institution that had as its objective the organization of the international community to apply concerted power in support of universal values. My task is to examine one contemporary problem – intervention – in the light of some of the themes implicit in the Wilsonian legacy. Among these themes will be the establishment (and now the invigoration) …
The Sentencing Guidelines As A Not-So-Model Penal Code, Gerard E. Lynch
The Sentencing Guidelines As A Not-So-Model Penal Code, Gerard E. Lynch
Faculty Scholarship
We are accustomed to thinking about the criminal law, and the procedures for enforcing it, as divided into two separate stages. The first stage – the subject of penal codes and jury trials – concerns the definition of culpable conduct and the adjudication of guilt. The second stage – sentencing – concerns the consequences of conviction for the offender. Only rarely do we acknowledge that the conventional separation of these stages into compartments is highly misleading.
The articles in this Issue of FSR address, in one way or another, the extent to which the concerns of the substantive criminal law …
Insider Trading Deterrence Versus Managerial Incentives: A Unified Theory Of Section 16(B), Merritt B. Fox
Insider Trading Deterrence Versus Managerial Incentives: A Unified Theory Of Section 16(B), Merritt B. Fox
Faculty Scholarship
Part I of this article assesses the social costs of a crude rule of thumb. Because section 16(b) applies to a given class of paired transactions, it deters both transactions based on inside information and transactions not so based. Each time section 16(b) is stretched to include a class of paired transactions, it deters some additional innocent transactions. This side effect will take the form of officers' and directors' purchasing fewer shares in their own companies and refusing to accept as large a portion of their compensation in a form based on share price. There are strong theoretical and empirical …
On Public Reason, Kent Greenawalt
On Public Reason, Kent Greenawalt
Faculty Scholarship
Since the publication of A Theory of Justice in 1971, John Rawls has refined, qualified, and enriched his political philosophy, responding generously and with patient analytical care to difficulties posed by critics. Political Liberalism embodies the major developments in Rawls's thought during those two decades. Rawls continues to be a strong defender of political liberalism, but in various respects his philosophical claims are more modest than those he offered in 1971, and the political life he recommends involves more accommodation to the diverse perspectives and ways of life one expects to find in liberal democracies. In most of the chapters …
Sameness And Subordination: The Dangers Of A Universal Solution, Susan P. Sturm
Sameness And Subordination: The Dangers Of A Universal Solution, Susan P. Sturm
Faculty Scholarship
Judges, Behavioral Scientists, and the Demands of Humanity grapples with one of the most pressing and difficult challenges of our time – how to overcome deep and enduring conflicts that currently divide our community. Professor Burt offers insights into the importance of empathy and identification in breaking down the categories that we use to distance ourselves from the humanity of others and to justify oppression of those we define as outsiders. His solution is hopeful, almost noble. He exhorts judges, social scientists, and by implication, all of us to be our best selves, to focus on how we are part …
The World Trading System, Jagdish N. Bhagwati
The World Trading System, Jagdish N. Bhagwati
Faculty Scholarship
The Uruguay Round is closing this week after a marathon of negotiations stretching well over seven years; so the timing of this panel is exquisite, from my viewpoint. The ceremony, besides, is in Marrakech, an exotic place that sets our minds racing with thoughts of "Casablanca," Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman. Indeed, one can imagine a movie being made of this historic occasion that will transform the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GAIT) into the World Trade Organization (WTO), with Peter Ustinov cast as Peter Sutherland, the brilliant and portly new director general of the GAIT who finally brought …
Recovery For Economic Loss Following The Exxon Valdez Oil Spill, Victor P. Goldberg
Recovery For Economic Loss Following The Exxon Valdez Oil Spill, Victor P. Goldberg
Faculty Scholarship
The physical cleanup following one of the worst oil spills in history, that of the Exxon Valdez, is done. The legal cleanup, however, has barely begun. Over 100 law firms participating in over 200 suits in federal and state courts involving more than 30,000 claims are presently engaged in litigation. Fishermen, cannery workers, fishing lodges, tour boat operators, oil companies whose shipments were delayed, and even California motorists facing higher gasoline prices have filed claims against Exxon and its fellow defendants.
Most claimants face a formidable roadblock, the so-called Robins doctrine. Under Robins Dry Dock & Repair Co. v. Flint …
A Process Theory Of Torts, Jay Tidmarsh
A Process Theory Of Torts, Jay Tidmarsh
Journal Articles
This article is meant to reconcile two schools of intellectual thought regarding tort law, the conceptualist and the anti-conceptualist. It argues that torts must be understood as a system in perpetual process--forever indefinite and infinitely malleable in its precise theoretical, doctrinal and practical manifestations--yet ultimately bounded in its possibilities. It then defines the limits of torts law as a process that constantly regenerates the old face of tort theory, doctrine and practice into the new.
The Copyrightability Of Nonliteral Elements Of Computer Programs, Julian Velasco
The Copyrightability Of Nonliteral Elements Of Computer Programs, Julian Velasco
Journal Articles
The goal of copyright law is "[t]o promote the Progress of Science and Useful Arts." It is premised on the assumption that "encourag[ing] . . . individual effort by personal gain is the best way to advance public welfare through the talents of authors . . ." In order to "promote progress," however, copyright law must respond to changes in technology.
One issue that has been problematic for the courts is whether and to what extent the nonliteral elements of computer programs are copyrightable. Nonliteral elements are aspects of the computer program other than the written code itself. Although it …
Over Forty Years In The On-Deck Circle: Congress And The Baseball Antitrust Exemption, Ed Edmonds
Over Forty Years In The On-Deck Circle: Congress And The Baseball Antitrust Exemption, Ed Edmonds
Journal Articles
"Congressional discussion of baseball's antitrust exemption stretches over forty years involving a significant number of legislative initiatives. Although the exemption is a judicial aberration without justification, the 103d Congress will probably be no more successful than its predecessors in altering its long-standing existence. The three bills under consideration are not specifically crafted to resolve the problems of the changes in the commissioner's office or the lack of an expansion franchise or the relocation of an existing franchise to the Tampa-St. Petersburg area. Much of the history of Congressional concern over baseball's antitrust status suggests that broad-based attempts to completely remove …
Listening For The Future In The Voices Of The Past: John T. Noonan, Jr. On Love And Power In Human History, M. Cathleen Kaveny
Listening For The Future In The Voices Of The Past: John T. Noonan, Jr. On Love And Power In Human History, M. Cathleen Kaveny
Journal Articles
A discussion of works on moral theology and canon law by Judge John T. Noonan Jr. (1926-2017) from the 1950s to the 1980s, which deal with the subjects of usury, contraception, marriage, slavery, bribery and religious liberty. Its focus is on Noonan’s normative commitments regarding epistemology, theological anthropology and the relation of love, justice and law. The article argues that Noonan was influenced by three core ideas, an epistemological view that moral knowledge is sought after and articulated in particular times and places, an anthropological view that argues the study of ethics, law, and theology must sensitively discern the core …
The Constitutional Law Of Abortion In Germany: Should Americans Pay Attention?, Donald P. Kommers
The Constitutional Law Of Abortion In Germany: Should Americans Pay Attention?, Donald P. Kommers
Journal Articles
What I plan to do here is to tell you the story of Germany's legal approach to abortion and offer some tentative conclusions about what we Americans might learn from the German experience. My story centers mainly on the constitutionality of efforts in Germany to remove legal restrictions on abortion. In the United States, the story has a different twist, for there it centers on the constitutionality of efforts to impose legal restrictions on abortion. Both stories are fascinating accounts of constitutional decisionmaking, revealing as much about the values of the two societies as about the role of judicial review …
Democracy And Domination In The Law Of Workplace Cooperation: From Bureaucratic To Flexible Production, Mark Barenberg
Democracy And Domination In The Law Of Workplace Cooperation: From Bureaucratic To Flexible Production, Mark Barenberg
Faculty Scholarship
In May of 1993, President Clinton's Commission for the Future of Worker-Management Relations began its investigation of whether a major overhaul of United States labor law is necessary to encourage high-performance workplaces and labor-management cooperation. Even if its recommendations, due in November 1994, do not yield immediate congressional fruit, the Commission's work is likely to influence the study and politics of labor law reform for some time to come. The Commission is chaired by John Dunlop, the eminent labor-relations specialist and former Secretary of Labor. Its membership includes some of the nation's foremost academic and political proponents of far-reaching labor …
The Victims Of Nimby, Michael B. Gerrard
The Victims Of Nimby, Michael B. Gerrard
Faculty Scholarship
It is a syndrome, a pejorative, and an acronym of our times: NIMBY, or Not In My Back Yard. It has a political arm, NIMTOO (Not In My Term Of Office), an object of attack, LULUs (Locally Undesired Land Uses), and an extreme form, BANANA (Build Absolutely Nothing Anywhere Near Anyone). Acronyms aside, however, the question remains as to whether or not NIMBY has victims. Is anyone hurt by NIMBY?
Many leading voices in the environmental justice movement believe that minority communities are victims of NIMBY. For example, Professor Robert D. Bullard has written that "[t]he cumulative effect of not-in-my-backyard …
Foreword To Tributes, Robert E. Scott
Foreword To Tributes, Robert E. Scott
Faculty Scholarship
Seldom does an institution experience the jolt of four revered and beloved members of the faculty choosing to retire at the same time. When it does occur, as it has this year at the University of Virginia, the sense of loss can be overwhelming. John Hetheringon, John McCoid, Dan Meador and Cal Woodard have been members of this Law Faculty for a combined period of 123 years.T hey embody a collective source of talent, energy, wisdom, and skill as teachers and scholars that is, quite literally, irreplaceable.
Textualism And The Future Of The Chevron Doctrine, Thomas W. Merrill
Textualism And The Future Of The Chevron Doctrine, Thomas W. Merrill
Faculty Scholarship
The last decade has been a remarkable one for statutory interpretation. For most of our history, American judges have been pragmatists when it comes to interpreting statutes. They have drawn on various conventions – the plain meaning rule, legislative history, considerations of statutory purpose, canons of construction – "much as a golfer selects the proper club when he gauges the distance to the pin and the contours of the course." The arrival of Justice Scalia on the Supreme Court has changed this. Justice Scalia is a foundationalist, insisting that certain interpretational tools should be permanently banned from judicial use. What …
Panel Iii: International Law, Global Environmentalism, And The Future Of American Environmental Policy, Thomas W. Merrill
Panel Iii: International Law, Global Environmentalism, And The Future Of American Environmental Policy, Thomas W. Merrill
Faculty Scholarship
From an American perspective, environmental law has undergone two bouts of centralization in the past three decades. Round one occurred in the 1970's, as Congress federalized vast areas of environmental law that had previously been the province of state and local governments. Round two, which is still in an incipient phase, represents the effort to internationalize environmental law.
The question I would like to address is what can we learn from round one about what is likely to happen in round two. My answer, in a nutshell, is that the primary driving force behind the federalization of environmental law in …
Trivial Rights, Philip A. Hamburger
Trivial Rights, Philip A. Hamburger
Faculty Scholarship
In the summer of 1789, when the House of Representatives was formulating the amendments that became the Bill of Rights, Theodore Sedgwick of Massachusetts argued against enumerating the right of assembly. The House, he urged, "might have gone into a very lengthy enumeration of rights; they might have declared that a man should have a right to wear his hat if he pleased, that he might get up when he pleased, and go to bed when he thought proper ... [Was] it necessary to list these trifles in a declaration of rights, under a Government where none of them were …