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2009

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Articles 31 - 60 of 156

Full-Text Articles in Law

Lessons For Social Scientists And Politicians: An Analysis Of Welfare Reform, Jasmin Sethi Aug 2009

Lessons For Social Scientists And Politicians: An Analysis Of Welfare Reform, Jasmin Sethi

Jasmin Sethi

Despite soaring unemployment and the worst economic crisis in decades, 18 states cut their welfare rolls last year, and nationally the number of people receiving cash assistance remained at or near the lowest in more than 40 years. Escalating unemployment coupled with the impending expiration of Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) in 2010, will bring renewed attention to welfare reform. This Article examines the effects of President Clinton’s Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA) of 1996 and in particular, evaluates how social science interacted with politics to culminate in the enactment of the PRWORA. It explicates several …


Prioritizing Justice: Combating Corporate Crime From Task Force To Top Priority, Mary K. Ramirez Aug 2009

Prioritizing Justice: Combating Corporate Crime From Task Force To Top Priority, Mary K. Ramirez

mary k ramirez

Inadequate law enforcement against corporate criminals appears to have created perverse incentives leading to an economic crisis – this time in the context of the subprime mortgage crisis. Prioritizing Justice proposes institutional reform at the Department of Justice in pursuing corporate crime. Presently, corporate crime is pursued nationally primarily through the DOJ Corporate Fraud Task Force and other task forces, the DOJ Criminal Division Fraud Section, and the individual U.S. Attorney’s Offices. Rather than a collection of ad hoc task forces that seek to coordinate policy among a vast array of offices and agencies, the relentless waves of corporate criminality …


Re-Thinking Liability For Vaccine Injury, Jeffrey A. Van Detta, Joanna B. Apolinsky Aug 2009

Re-Thinking Liability For Vaccine Injury, Jeffrey A. Van Detta, Joanna B. Apolinsky

Jeffrey A. Van Detta

In April 2009, the first cases of the novel influenza A (H1N1) virus were detected in humans in the United States. To date, there have been 17,855 confirmed or probable cases of H1N1 infection and 45 deaths in the United States alone. More than 70 countries have now confirmed human infection with novel H1N1 flu. On June 11, 2009, the World Health Organization raised the worldwide pandemic alert level to Phase 6. At this time, as H1N1 is a new virus, there is little human immunity to it. Moreover, there is no vaccine to prevent the spread of the virus. …


Rethinking Liability For Vaccine Injury, Joanna B. Apolinsky, Jeffrey A. Van Detta Aug 2009

Rethinking Liability For Vaccine Injury, Joanna B. Apolinsky, Jeffrey A. Van Detta

Joanna B Apolinsky

In April 2009, the first cases of the novel influenza A (H1N1) virus were detected in humans in the United States. To date, there have been 17,855 confirmed or probable cases of H1N1 infection and 45 deaths in the United States alone. More than 70 countries have now confirmed human infection with novel H1N1 flu. On June 11, 2009, the World Health Organization raised the worldwide pandemic alert level to Phase 6. At this time, as H1N1 is a new virus, there is little human immunity to it. Moreover, there is no vaccine to prevent the spread of the virus. …


Sin Taxes: When The State Becomes The Sinner, Andrew J. Haile Aug 2009

Sin Taxes: When The State Becomes The Sinner, Andrew J. Haile

Andrew J. Haile

SIN TAXES: WHEN THE STATE BECOMES THE SINNER

ANDREW J. HAILE

To fill budget gaps, several state legislatures have proposed increasing existing taxes on tobacco and alcohol products. In addition, some states (as well as the federal government) are considering the enactment of new “sin taxes,” for example taxes on high-sugar drinks and internet pornography. This Article examines many of the traditional arguments for and against sin taxes. It then focuses on an argument that has previously received little attention – the conflict of interest created by a state’s dependence on sin tax revenues. When states become dependent on sin …


Fixing Foia: Pushing Congress To Amend Foia Section B(3) To Require Congress To Explicitly Indicate An Intent To Exempt Records From Foia In New Legislation, Catherine J. Cameron Aug 2009

Fixing Foia: Pushing Congress To Amend Foia Section B(3) To Require Congress To Explicitly Indicate An Intent To Exempt Records From Foia In New Legislation, Catherine J. Cameron

Catherine J Cameron

This article advocates for statutory reform to section b(3) of the federal Freedom of Information Act. Section b(3) is a broadly-written “catch all” provision that allows federal agencies to withhold records if there is some sort of “criteria” evident in another federal statute upon which the agency thinks Congress intended to close access to the records. An agency’s decision to withhold a record under a statute in which Congress was not clear or explicit -- either in the text of the statute or in the Congressional record -- that it’s intent was to close access to a particular type of …


Science, Public Bioethics, And The Problem Of Integration, Orlando Carter Snead Aug 2009

Science, Public Bioethics, And The Problem Of Integration, Orlando Carter Snead

O. Carter Snead

Public bioethics — the governance of science, medicine, and biotechnology in the name of ethical goods — is an emerging area of American law. The field uniquely combines scientific knowledge, moral reasoning, and prudential judgments about democratic decisionmaking. It has captured the attention of officials in every branch of government, as well as the American public. Public questions (such as those relating to the law of abortion, the federal funding of embryonic stem cell research, and the regulation of end-of-life decisionmaking) continue to roil the public square.

This article examines the question of how scientific methods and principles can and …


Science, Public Bioethics, And The Problem Of Integration, Orlando Carter Snead Aug 2009

Science, Public Bioethics, And The Problem Of Integration, Orlando Carter Snead

O. Carter Snead

Public bioethics — the governance of science, medicine, and biotechnology in the name of ethical goods — is an emerging area of American law. The field uniquely combines scientific knowledge, moral reasoning, and prudential judgments about democratic decisionmaking. It has captured the attention of officials in every branch of government, as well as the American public. Public questions (such as those relating to the law of abortion, the federal funding of embryonic stem cell research, and the regulation of end-of-life decisionmaking) continue to roil the public square.

This article examines the question of how scientific methods and principles can and …


Tailoring Deference To Variety With A Wink And A Nod To Chevron: The Roberts Court And The Amorphous Judicial Framework For Review Of Agency Interpretations Of Law, J. Lyn Entrikin Goering Aug 2009

Tailoring Deference To Variety With A Wink And A Nod To Chevron: The Roberts Court And The Amorphous Judicial Framework For Review Of Agency Interpretations Of Law, J. Lyn Entrikin Goering

J. Lyn Entrikin Goering

In the 25 years since the Court issued its venerable opinion in Chevron, the Supreme Court has all but disregarded the judicial review provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), first enacted in 1946. From 1984 to 2000, Chevron took center stage as the most-cited opinion in administrative law. Beginning in 2000, the Rehnquist Court issued a series of decisions limiting the reach of Chevron. At the same time, the Court revived common law deference frameworks that predate the APA. Yet the Rehnquist Court failed to fully reconcile Chevron with its previous common law deference doctrines and with the APA’s …


A "Pay Or Play" Experiment To Improve Children's Educational Television, Lili Levi Aug 2009

A "Pay Or Play" Experiment To Improve Children's Educational Television, Lili Levi

Lili Levi

This Article addresses both the constitutionality and the efficacy of the FCC’s current rules that require broadcasters to air children’s educational programming. It argues that, even though the rules would probably pass muster under the First Amendment, they should nevertheless be substantially revised. Empirical studies show mixed results, with substantial amounts of educationally insufficient programming. This is predictable – attributable to broadcaster incentives, limits on the FCC’s enforcement capacities, and audience factors. Instead, the Article advises a turn away from programming mandates. It proposes a “pay or play” approach that allows broadcasters to pay a fee to a fund for …


The New Sanctuary Movement: When Moral Mission Means Breaking The Law, And The Consequences For Churches And Illegal Immigrants, Kara L. Wild Aug 2009

The New Sanctuary Movement: When Moral Mission Means Breaking The Law, And The Consequences For Churches And Illegal Immigrants, Kara L. Wild

Kara L. Wild

Are the churches involved in the New Sanctuary Movement -- a movement that hides illegal immigrants in churches to prevent them from being deported -- acting legally? If not, is there a way that they could pursue their goals in a legal manner? The author explores the movement's goal, to win public sympathy and eventual legality for the nation's illegal immigrant population by using methods that were popular during the successful 1980s Sanctuary Movement. The author examines the differences between the 1980s Movement and the current one, the likelihood of success for the New Sanctuary Movement's legal arguments, and the …


Federal Demand Local Choice: Safeguarding The Notion Of Federalism In Education Law And Policy, Kamina A. Pinder Aug 2009

Federal Demand Local Choice: Safeguarding The Notion Of Federalism In Education Law And Policy, Kamina A. Pinder

Kamina A Pinder

As the ESEA undergoes its next transformation under a new presidential administration, this article explores the appropriate federal and state roles in promoting and enforcing laws related to academic achievement, and the appropriate judicial role in interpreting them. Part I of this article provides an overview of how the modern federal role in education law and policy was shaped through politics and litigation. Part II explores the drastic changes that No Child Left Behind brought to education federalism through the lens of cooperation, coercion (enforcement), and competition. It then analyzes the appropriate role of the executive branch in enforcing educational …


Can The 'Death Tax' Kill Charity Too? The Impact Of Legislation On Charitable Bequests, Kristine Knaplund Aug 2009

Can The 'Death Tax' Kill Charity Too? The Impact Of Legislation On Charitable Bequests, Kristine Knaplund

Kristine Knaplund

The national debate over the federal estate tax has caused fear in American charities over the past ten years, a fear that is likely to continue for the foreseeable future. Since Congress acted in 2001 to repeal the dreaded 'death tax' for one year, for those dying in 2010, charities and individuals have become increasingly concerned about the impact of a repeal on charitable donations. While only a small percentage of charitable gifts come in the form of gifts at death, these few but generous incidents in fact amount to billions of dollars, and are imperative to the operation of …


Killing Capital Punishment In New Jersey: The First State In Modern History To Repeal Its Death Penalty Statute, Robert Martin Aug 2009

Killing Capital Punishment In New Jersey: The First State In Modern History To Repeal Its Death Penalty Statute, Robert Martin

Robert J. Martin

This article examines how opponents of the death penalty were successful in lobbying and eventually achieving statutory repeal of New Jersey’s death penalty statute in December 2007. The primary goal of the article is to offer inspiration and guidance for similar efforts in the thirty-five states that still authorize capital punishment. In reviewing lessons learned from New Jersey, the article demonstrates that abolition proved both difficult and doubtful. Led by a small group of organizers and sympathetic legislators, the advocates of abolition faced multiple challenges. The article focuses special attention on their key strategic decisions: pursuit of both legislation and …


Eva And Her Baby (A Story Of Adolescent Sex, Pregnancy, Longing, Love, Loneliness, And Death), Michelle Oberman Aug 2009

Eva And Her Baby (A Story Of Adolescent Sex, Pregnancy, Longing, Love, Loneliness, And Death), Michelle Oberman

Duke Journal of Gender Law & Policy

[...] I took the bus to my uncle's house. [...] that wasn't the truth, or at least not all of it. Because in the end, there were a million reasons why it hadn't happened to me.


What’S The Constitution Got To Do With It? Regulating Marriage In Pakistan, Karin Carmit Yefet Aug 2009

What’S The Constitution Got To Do With It? Regulating Marriage In Pakistan, Karin Carmit Yefet

Duke Journal of Gender Law & Policy

[...] the supreme law of the land seems to embody a blatant contradiction. The Pakistani Constitution extends protection to an impressive catalog of fundamental rights, placing Pakistan in line with some of the most western-minded constitutional regimes in the world.3 At the same time, in contrast to the American-style constitutional commitment to separate church and state,4 the Pakistani regime is constitutionally committed to integrate the two, in the sense that all laws must conform to the injunctions of Islam as a condition of their constitutional validity.5 So the same Constitution that protects western fundamental rights also elevates Islamic law, a …


Legislating For The Provision Of Comprehensive Substance Abuse Treatment Programs For Pregnant And Mothering Women, Janet W. Steverson, Traci Rieckman Phd Aug 2009

Legislating For The Provision Of Comprehensive Substance Abuse Treatment Programs For Pregnant And Mothering Women, Janet W. Steverson, Traci Rieckman Phd

Duke Journal of Gender Law & Policy

Additionally, in writing this article it became clear that, although the data collection in this area has improved over the past twenty years, more specific data is needed in order to have a clearer picture of the exact nature of the unmet need so that the states can better address it. [...] although the authors were able to obtain enough information to provide some suggestions to the states for providing treatment programs for pregnant and mothering women, work in the area is severely limited by the lack of accessible data.


The Long Road To Self Determination, Sarah Chilim Ihn Jul 2009

The Long Road To Self Determination, Sarah Chilim Ihn

Sarah Chilim Ihn

East Los Angeles is widely considered as the heart of Southern California’s strong and vibrant Mexican American community – yet, it is also an unincorporated area whose only general purpose government is provided by Los Angeles County, the most populous county in the nation. Through the lens of East Los Angeles’ quest for cityhood, this paper explores and critiques the limited governance options that exist for low-income unincorporated communities.


How Can States Protect Their Policies In Federal Class Actions?, Lucas Watkins Jul 2009

How Can States Protect Their Policies In Federal Class Actions?, Lucas Watkins

Lucas Watkins

More than any other procedural device, class actions have substantive goals. By allowing negative-value suits and collective punishment for widespread wrongs, class actions allow plaintiffs and defendants to protect rights that would otherwise go unvindicated. States also use class actions to implement industrial and consumer protection policies. Despite their importance to state policy, however, many state class action rules do not survive the transition into the federal court system. Under the Erie doctrine, federal courts apply federal class action rules even when state rules are more permissive and even when the state rules are intended to serve important substantive policies. …


The Obstructionism Of Senator Paul Jabour, Donna M. Hughes Dr. Jul 2009

The Obstructionism Of Senator Paul Jabour, Donna M. Hughes Dr.

Donna M. Hughes

“I am disappointed in the last minute amendments [to the prostitution bill]. For Senator Jabour “to suggest that after all we have suffered through, with the way we are perceived as a state and the [lack of] tools we need in a court room; to suggest that [prostitution] is a violation, something like a traffic ticket, is a woeful decision. [Jabour’s amendments] are “what derailed [the prostitution bill] in the last week.” – Attorney General Patrick Lynch, on Channel 10 News Conference, July 12, 2009

Against all logic and political wisdom, in the closing weeks of the Assembly session last …


Protecting Foreign Investors From International Securities Fraud, Derek N. White Jul 2009

Protecting Foreign Investors From International Securities Fraud, Derek N. White

Derek N White

This article discusses the subject matter jurisdiction of national courts in a little-known type of international securities cause of action that has vexed courts of the developed world. The cause of action is labeled the “foreign-cubed class action”, which is brought when a dispute arises regarding purported improprieties in an international securities transaction that contains foreign investors who purchase securities of foreign issuers on foreign stock exchanges. Notice the three “foreign” elements of the transaction ("foreign" meaning foreign to the court presiding over the action).

The number of foreign-cubed class actions brought in U.S. courts has risen sharply over the …


Genetic Enhancements And Expectations, Kelly Sorensen Jul 2009

Genetic Enhancements And Expectations, Kelly Sorensen

Philosophy and Religious Studies Faculty Publications

Some argue that genetic enhancements and environmental enhancements are not importantly different: environmental enhancements such as private schools and chess lessons are simply the old-school way to have a designer baby. I argue that there is an important distinction between the two practices—a distinction that makes state restrictions on genetic enhancements more justifiable than state restrictions on environmental enhancements. The difference is that parents have no settled expectations about genetic enhancements.


Surrogacy And The Politics Of Commodification, Elizabeth S. Scott Jul 2009

Surrogacy And The Politics Of Commodification, Elizabeth S. Scott

Law and Contemporary Problems

Scott explores the history of surrogacy over the past twenty years. She also offers a historical account of the legal and social issues surrounding surrogacy over the past twenty years. She seeks to explain how and why the social and political meanings of surrogacy have changed over the past decade. Furthermore, she examines how surrogacy was framed as commodification in the Baby M context.


Sarbanes-Oxley & The Culture Of Bribery: Expanding The Territorial Scope Of Private Whistleblower Suits To Overseas Employees, Matt A. Vega Jul 2009

Sarbanes-Oxley & The Culture Of Bribery: Expanding The Territorial Scope Of Private Whistleblower Suits To Overseas Employees, Matt A. Vega

Matt A Vega

SARBANES-OXLEY & THE CULTURE OF BRIBERY: EXPANDING THE TERRITORIAL SCOPE OF PRIVATE WHISTLEBLOWER SUITS TO OVERSEAS EMPLOYEES, by Matt A. Vega

This article has been accepted for publication in Vol. 46, No. 2 Harvard J. on Legis. 425 (Summer 2009).

Abstract: This paper examines the use of private transnational litigation to enforce the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977 (FCPA). Small, but repetitive bribery of foreign officials by local employees is the Achilles heel of corporate ethics. In fact, it is what perpetuates the “culture of bribery” that makes major corruption possible. Unless overseas employees refuse to give in to …


State Legislative Update, Ashley Brittain, Sean Dolan, Alicia Hammond, Meghan Prideaux Jul 2009

State Legislative Update, Ashley Brittain, Sean Dolan, Alicia Hammond, Meghan Prideaux

Journal of Dispute Resolution

The purpose of this Bill is to provide notice to owners of residential real property owners that mediation with the mortgagee is an option at the onset of foreclosure proceedings. The Bill changes the mechanism by which borrowers are notified of foreclosures; instead of receiving a writ and summons, borrowers receive a notice of mediation, a foreclosure mediation certificate, and a blank appearance form. Borrowers still receive the writ, summons, and complaint, however. The lender must appear at the mediation with the authority to approve a proposed settlement in order to receive a remedy, and no attorney's fees will be …


Action Alert For Senate: Comments On Human Trafficking Bills, Donna M. Hughes Dr. Jun 2009

Action Alert For Senate: Comments On Human Trafficking Bills, Donna M. Hughes Dr.

Donna M. Hughes

Rhode Island Senate President Paiva-Weed has said that she is “confident that we will address the issue of prostitution and human trafficking” this session (, Sunday, June 21, 2009, p A6). The votes in the Senate are crucial to Rhode Island getting a prostitution law and improving our trafficking law! There are competing bills, so it can get confusing. Remember, there are two versions of the prostitution bill (a House and Senate version) and two versions of the trafficking bill (a House and Senate version). 


Mortgage Market Regulation And Moral Hazard: Equity Stripping Under Sanction Of Law, Vincent Di Lorenzo Jun 2009

Mortgage Market Regulation And Moral Hazard: Equity Stripping Under Sanction Of Law, Vincent Di Lorenzo

Vincent Di Lorenzo

No abstract provided.


Raising The Dead?: The Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, Charles A. Sullivan Jun 2009

Raising The Dead?: The Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, Charles A. Sullivan

Charles A. Sullivan

If applied literally, the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act has the potential to radically change the landscape for litigating claims under Title VII and other antidiscrimination laws. While limited to discrimination in compensation, as opposed to discrimination in other terms and conditions of employment, the FPA removes the statute of limitations not only for compensation decisions per se but for any “other practice” affecting compensation. Further, the new law is explicitly retroactive. Thus, a failure to promote plaintiff twenty years ago would seem to be actionable today, so long as the nonpromotion has an effect on current compensation. While the …


Testimony On Human Trafficking Bill, Rhode Island Senate Judiciary Committee, Donna M. Hughes Dr. Jun 2009

Testimony On Human Trafficking Bill, Rhode Island Senate Judiciary Committee, Donna M. Hughes Dr.

Donna M. Hughes

 In 2007, the Rhode Island General Assembly passed an anti-human trafficking law. To date, there have been no prosecutions. There are three serious problems with the present Rhode Island law that need to be remedied in order to effectively combat human trafficking. 


A Reappraisal Of Attorneys' Fees In Bankruptcy, Michelle A. Cecil Jun 2009

A Reappraisal Of Attorneys' Fees In Bankruptcy, Michelle A. Cecil

Michelle A. Cecil

The current mortgage foreclosure crisis, coupled with the country’s economic downturn and escalating consumer costs, have combined to place a crippling burden on the nation’s bankruptcy system. During difficult economic times such as this, it is imperative that the bankruptcy system operate efficiently, as it provides a social safety net for both consumers and businesses. Unfortunately, there are many issues of statutory interpretation left unanswered in the Bankruptcy Code, and these issues have placed an increased burden on the country’s bankruptcy courts. This Article seeks to resolve one thorny issue of statutory interpretation: the treatment of attorneys’ fees in bankruptcy. …