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Articles 1 - 30 of 89
Full-Text Articles in Law
Psychological Impact Of Scrutiny On Contingent Fee Attorney Effort, Robert E. Thomas
Psychological Impact Of Scrutiny On Contingent Fee Attorney Effort, Robert E. Thomas
West Virginia Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Political Economy Of Statutory Reach: U.S. Disclosure Rules In A Globalizing Market For Securities, Merritt B. Fox
The Political Economy Of Statutory Reach: U.S. Disclosure Rules In A Globalizing Market For Securities, Merritt B. Fox
Michigan Law Review
This Article addresses the appropriate reach of the U.S. mandatory securities disclosure regime. While disclosure obligations are imposed on issuers, they are triggered by transactions:- the public offering of, or public trading in, the issuers' shares. Share transactions are taking o n an increasingly transnational character. The barriers to a truly global market for equities continue to lessen: financial information is becoming increasingly globalized and it is becoming increasingly inexpensive and easy to effect share transactions abroad. There are approximately 41,000 issuers of publicly traded shares in the world. For an ever larger portion of these issuers, there will be …
Lochner In Cyberspace: The New Economic Orthodoxy Of "Rights Management", Julie E. Cohen
Lochner In Cyberspace: The New Economic Orthodoxy Of "Rights Management", Julie E. Cohen
Michigan Law Review
Ninety-three years ago, in Lochner v. New York, the Supreme Court struck down a maximum-working-hours law for bakers as an impermissible invasion of employer-employee liberty of contract and, by implication, of the employer's property rights in his business. Lochner came to symbolize, and was vilified for, a vision of state power as rigidly circumscribed by the operation of judicially-determined laws of social ordering. By the late 1930s, the Court had changed course and accepted that the states' police power - or, in the case of Congress, the commerce power - encompassed even protective regulation of the parameters of the private …
The Growing Pains Of Behavioral Law And Economics, Thomas S. Ulen
The Growing Pains Of Behavioral Law And Economics, Thomas S. Ulen
Vanderbilt Law Review
We are at the beginning of behavioral law and economics. We now see only dimly the outlines of the elaborate theory of decision making that is to come. We are like the independent scholars who examined the various parts of a very large animal and then tried to put together their reports to describe that animal; we each have bits and pieces of the elephant but no clear image of the entire beast. But we should not despair. We must remember that this behavioralist discipline is, as scholarly developments go, young. Indeed, the conventional law and economics model, to which …
Putting Rational Actors In Their Place: Economics And Phenomenology, Edward L. Rubin
Putting Rational Actors In Their Place: Economics And Phenomenology, Edward L. Rubin
Vanderbilt Law Review
The model of human behavior that is used in microeconomics is both normative and descriptive. As a normative model, it is an historical successor to the medieval concept of grace and the Renaissance concept of virtue. As a descriptive model, it is a theory of human psychology. Economists tend to deemphasize this point be- cause psychology is a notoriously "soft" science, and economists aspire to the "hard" sciences' precision. Nonetheless, any model that states the way human beings behave under specified circumstances is necessarily a theory of the way the human mind functions, and thus be- longs in the category …
Can There Be A Behavioral Law And Economics?, Samuel Issacharoff
Can There Be A Behavioral Law And Economics?, Samuel Issacharoff
Vanderbilt Law Review
The emergence of the modern law and economics analysis generally is dated to the early 1960s with the publication of seminal work by Ronald Coase' and subsequently by Guido Calabresi and Douglas Melamed. These articles laid the foundation for the relation between legal rules, wealth maximization, and transaction costs, which provided the pivotal application of economic analysis to legal problems. However, the current sweep of law and economics would have been inconceivable without Gary Becker's insight into the application of neoclassical comparisons of marginal utility to the stuff of everyday life. Becker's analysis of routine decision making in terms of …
Comment: The Future Of Behavioral Economic Analysis Of Law, Jennifer Arlen
Comment: The Future Of Behavioral Economic Analysis Of Law, Jennifer Arlen
Vanderbilt Law Review
Behavioral economic analysis of law presents an important challenge to conventional law and economics, strengthened in part by the fact that conventional law and economics is itself a behavioral approach to law. Indeed, conventional law and economics can be viewed as the first widely-adopted behavioral approach to law. A central contribution of Ronald Coase's pathbreaking article was the claim that one cannot determine the effect of a law by simply looking at the law itself--at the conduct the law requires. Instead, one must determine how people will respond to the law.' Legal rules, he argued, do not dictate behavior-they simply …
Remedies And The Psychology Of Ownership, Jeffrey J. Rachlinski, Forest Jourden
Remedies And The Psychology Of Ownership, Jeffrey J. Rachlinski, Forest Jourden
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
Competition And Cooperation, Saul Levmore
Competition And Cooperation, Saul Levmore
Michigan Law Review
When do competitors share assets and other opportunities for mutual gain? Conversely, when do they prefer to distinguish themselves by establishing firm boundaries that produce a minimum of sharing or cooperation despite potential gains from trade? Why, for example, do competing law schools in a single city cooperate so little in offering joint programs and economizing on certain costs even as they use the same casebooks in their courses and borrow from one another's libraries? Why do two competing auto makers rarely sell one another components or use the same expert advertising agency or law firm but then quite often …
Social Rights And Economic Development: Converging Discourses?, Henry J. Steiner
Social Rights And Economic Development: Converging Discourses?, Henry J. Steiner
Buffalo Human Rights Law Review
No abstract provided.
Beyond Justiciability: Challenges Of Implementing/Enforcing Socio-Economic Rights In South Africa, Shadrack B. O. Gutto
Beyond Justiciability: Challenges Of Implementing/Enforcing Socio-Economic Rights In South Africa, Shadrack B. O. Gutto
Buffalo Human Rights Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Effect Of Free Trade, Privatization And Democracy On The Human Rights Conditions For Minorities In Eastern Europe: A Case Study Of The Gypsies In The Czech Republic And Hungary, Marc W. Brown
Buffalo Human Rights Law Review
No abstract provided.
Truth Or Consequences: If A Company Lies, Employees Should Be Able To Sue, Kent Greenfield
Truth Or Consequences: If A Company Lies, Employees Should Be Able To Sue, Kent Greenfield
Kent Greenfield
Reprinted as "Workers Should Be Able to Sue Over Lies," Salt Lake City Tribune, July 5, 1998;
"It's Illegal to Lie to Stockholders, But Not to Employees," Sacramento Bee, July 6, 1998 ;
"If Company Lies, Allow Workers to Sue," Des Moines Register, July 7, 1998.
Public Choice Revisited, Daniel A. Farber, Philip P. Frickey
Public Choice Revisited, Daniel A. Farber, Philip P. Frickey
Michigan Law Review
Although not the first book on public choice_ for a legal audience, Max Stearns's Public Choice and Public Law is the first full-scale textbook for law school use. An ambitious undertaking by a rising young scholar, the book provides law students with a comprehensive introduction to public choice. Public choice - essentially, the application of economic reasoning to political institutions - has become a significant aspect of public law scholarship. Indeed, in his Foreword, Saul Levmore hails public choice as "[t]he most exciting intellectual development in law schools in the last decade" (p. xi). Be that as it may, the …
Public Choice Theory And The Fragmented Web Of The Contemporary Administrative State, Jim Rossi
Public Choice Theory And The Fragmented Web Of The Contemporary Administrative State, Jim Rossi
Michigan Law Review
Since World War II, public choice theory - defined broadly as the application of the assumptions and methodology of microeconomics to describe or predict the way public officials exercise power - has grown from a fledgling movement, gaining mainstream acceptance and respect for its insights into voting behavior, judicial decisionmaking, and other public actions. Although a theory first explored by economists and political scientists, public choice's normative insights have earned credibility in recent years in academic legal literature. Public choice's acceptance in the law school curriculum is demonstrated by the recent publication of course material on the topic. However, despite …
The Future Of Enterprise Organizations, Eric W. Orts
The Future Of Enterprise Organizations, Eric W. Orts
Michigan Law Review
Both the law and business schools at the University of Michigan offer a basic course in Enterprise Organization. This tradition owes to the influence of Professor Alfred Conard, one of the leading scholars of his generation, who taught during most of his career at the University of Michigan Law School. The tradition persists in part because Enterprise Organization suggests an appropriately broad view of its topic, unlike more common course titles such as Corporations or Business Associations. We live in a world populated not only by people but also the organized legal entities we create. Business firms and nonprofit organizations …
Focus On Fairness, Efficiency, And The Law: Response. Efficiency And Equity: What Else Can Be Gained By Combining Coase And Rawls, Russell B. Korobkin, Thomas S. Ulen
Focus On Fairness, Efficiency, And The Law: Response. Efficiency And Equity: What Else Can Be Gained By Combining Coase And Rawls, Russell B. Korobkin, Thomas S. Ulen
Washington Law Review
Professors Swygert and Yanes seek to bring efficiency and equity to bear explicitly on the economic analysis of law by merging Rawlsean social contract philosophy into law and economics' basic premise, the Coase Theorem. We are in complete agreement with Swygert and Yanes that good legal policy should be concerned with both efficiency and equity, and we welcome their attempt to merge the two as a useful step in an important debate. Ultimately, though, we are unconvinced by their argument as it currently stands for two reasons. First, by focusing only on the way in which their approach might affect …
Focus On Fairness, Efficiency, And The Law: Response. An Integration Of Equity And Efficiency, Richard O. Zerbe Jr.
Focus On Fairness, Efficiency, And The Law: Response. An Integration Of Equity And Efficiency, Richard O. Zerbe Jr.
Washington Law Review
Swygert and Yanes, in an article in this issue of the Washington Law Review, suggest a means to achieve this integration. In this Article, I first discuss the shortcomings of the approach suggested by Swygert and Yanes. Next, I suggest a more practical approach for integrating efficiency and equity that relies on benefit cost analysis. Finally, I consider some of the cases to which Swygert and Yanes apply their analysis. The fundamental shortcoming of the Swygert and Yanes approach is that it offers little for deciding practical cases. The authors combine two abstract and heuristic proposals and quite naturally …
Focus On Fairness, Efficiency, And The Law. A Unified Theory Of Justice: The Integration Of Fairness Into Efficiency, Michael I. Swygert, Katherine Earle Yanes
Focus On Fairness, Efficiency, And The Law. A Unified Theory Of Justice: The Integration Of Fairness Into Efficiency, Michael I. Swygert, Katherine Earle Yanes
Washington Law Review
An idea generally shared by both economists and philosophers is that a legal rule may either achieve distributive fairness or bring about an efficient outcome, but not both. In this Article, the authors argue that justice requires that legal rules consider both fairness and efficiency. The Article discusses the Coase Theorem, as a tool for determining the most efficient allocation of rights and duties, and the ideas of John Rawls for deriving a fair social contract. The authors then combine aspects of these two hypothetical consensus models into a unified theory of justice that considers the question of what agreements …
Coping With "Loss": A Re-Examination Of Sentencing Federal Economic Crimes Under The Guidelines, Frank O. Bowman Iii
Coping With "Loss": A Re-Examination Of Sentencing Federal Economic Crimes Under The Guidelines, Frank O. Bowman Iii
Faculty Publications
This Article has three objectives. First, it attempts to rethink the sentencing of federal economic criminals in light of the basic purposes of sentencing and of the Guidelines' particular structure and objectives. Second, it examines the deficiencies in the current sentencing guidelines regarding theft, fraud, and other economic crimes, and the problem areas in the case law construing those guidelines. Third, it proposes and analyzes a consolidated guideline, together with accompanying application notes, for sentencing virtually all theft and fraud cases (a draft of which follows the text of this Article as Appendix A).
The United States' Approach To International Civil Litigation: Recent Developments In Forum Selection, Stephen B. Burbank
The United States' Approach To International Civil Litigation: Recent Developments In Forum Selection, Stephen B. Burbank
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Measuring Market Power When The Firm Has Power In The Input And Output Markets, Keith N. Hylton, Mark Lasser
Measuring Market Power When The Firm Has Power In The Input And Output Markets, Keith N. Hylton, Mark Lasser
Faculty Scholarship
We examine the problem of measuring market power when the firm has monopoly power in the output market and monopsony power in the input market - a case we refer to as 'dual-market' power. We show how the Lerner index, which measures the mark-up over the marginal cost, can be modified to reflect the firm's ability to set price above the competitive level.
The Political Economy Of Cooperative Federalism: Why State Autonomy Makes Sense And "Dual Sovereignty" Doesn't, Roderick M. Hills Jr.
The Political Economy Of Cooperative Federalism: Why State Autonomy Makes Sense And "Dual Sovereignty" Doesn't, Roderick M. Hills Jr.
Michigan Law Review
It is commonplace to observe that "dual federalism" is dead, replaced by something variously called "cooperative federalism," "intergovernmental relations," or "marble-cake federalism." According to this conventional wisdom, state and local officials do not enforce merely their own laws in their distinct policymaking sphere. Rather, as analyzed in a voluminous literature, state and local governments also cooperate with the federal government in many policymaking areas, ranging from unemployment insurance to historic preservation. These nonfederal governments help implement federal policy in a variety of ways: by submitting implementation plans to federal agencies, by promulgating regulations, and by bringing administrative actions to enforce …
Crisis En La Corte Suprema, Horacio M. Lynch
Crisis En La Corte Suprema, Horacio M. Lynch
Horacio M. LYNCH
Presentación en la conferencia dictada en la ciudad de Córdoba, con motivo de la reunión de la Federación de Colegios de Abogados de la Provincia de Córdoba.
Domestic Partnership And Same-Sex Relationships: A Marketplace Innovation And A Less Than Perfect Institutional Choice, Nancy J. Knauer
Domestic Partnership And Same-Sex Relationships: A Marketplace Innovation And A Less Than Perfect Institutional Choice, Nancy J. Knauer
Nancy J. Knauer
The struggle for the recognition and protection of same-sex relationships is at the forefront of the contemporary gay and lesbian civil rights agenda. Whereas the push for same-sex marriage and parenting rights has met with mixed results in the courts and the legislatures, an impressive array of organizations, including Fortune 500 companies, colleges, nonprofit corporations, and municipalities, now extend benefits to the same-sex partners of their employees. This level of success raises a provocative question regarding the potential role of institutional employers in the larger on the agenda for progressive social change. Domestic partnership benefits are a creature of the …
Alternativas De Financiación De La Empresa (Ii), Martin Paolantonio
Alternativas De Financiación De La Empresa (Ii), Martin Paolantonio
Martin Paolantonio
Segunda parte del análisis de las alternativas legales para la implementación de decisiones financieras
Alternativas De Financiación De La Empresa (I), Martin Paolantonio
Alternativas De Financiación De La Empresa (I), Martin Paolantonio
Martin Paolantonio
Primera parte del análisis de estructuras legales y decisiones financieras de la empresa
Abuso De Derecho Y Abuso De Posición Dominante, Martin Paolantonio, Salvador Bergel
Abuso De Derecho Y Abuso De Posición Dominante, Martin Paolantonio, Salvador Bergel
Martin Paolantonio
Análisis de la relación entre el concepto genérico de abuso de derecho y el de abuso de posición dominante del derecho de defensa de la competencia
Consideraciones Sobre El Contrato De Factoring En La Argentina, Martin Paolantonio
Consideraciones Sobre El Contrato De Factoring En La Argentina, Martin Paolantonio
Martin Paolantonio
Análisis de las principales cuestiones sobre el contrato de factoring considerando su carácter de contrato atípico, la integración con las normas sobre cesión de derechos y la Convención Unidroit. Conveniencia y límites de una regulación expresa del contrato de factoring.
Covenants Y Responsabilidad Civil De Las Entidades Financieras, Martin Paolantonio
Covenants Y Responsabilidad Civil De Las Entidades Financieras, Martin Paolantonio
Martin Paolantonio
Un análisis de la función de los covenants en la contratación financiera, con referencia a algunos supuestos particulares susceptibles de generar responsabilidad civil para las entidades financieras