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Full-Text Articles in Law

Standing For The Structural Constitution, Aziz Huq Dec 2013

Standing For The Structural Constitution, Aziz Huq

Public Law and Legal Theory Working Papers

No abstract provided.


Exactions Creep, Lee Anne Fennell, Eduardo Peñalver Dec 2013

Exactions Creep, Lee Anne Fennell, Eduardo Peñalver

Kreisman Working Paper Series in Housing Law and Policy

No abstract provided.


Becoming A Fifth Branch, M. Todd Henderson, William A. Birdthistle Nov 2013

Becoming A Fifth Branch, M. Todd Henderson, William A. Birdthistle

Articles

No abstract provided.


Patent Invalidity Versus Noninfringement, Roger Ford Nov 2013

Patent Invalidity Versus Noninfringement, Roger Ford

Articles

No abstract provided.


Standing For The Structural Constitution, Aziz Huq Nov 2013

Standing For The Structural Constitution, Aziz Huq

Articles

No abstract provided.


Beyond Insolvency, Vincent Buccola Oct 2013

Beyond Insolvency, Vincent Buccola

Articles

No abstract provided.


Is It Time To Abolish The Federal Circuit's Exclusive Jurisdiction In Patent Cases?, Diane P. Wood Oct 2013

Is It Time To Abolish The Federal Circuit's Exclusive Jurisdiction In Patent Cases?, Diane P. Wood

Articles

No abstract provided.


Just Enough, Lee Anne Fennell Oct 2013

Just Enough, Lee Anne Fennell

Kreisman Working Paper Series in Housing Law and Policy

No abstract provided.


The Boundaries Of The Moral (And Legal) Community, Brian Leiter Sep 2013

The Boundaries Of The Moral (And Legal) Community, Brian Leiter

Articles

No abstract provided.


Inside Or Outside The System?, Eric Posner, Adrian Vermeule Sep 2013

Inside Or Outside The System?, Eric Posner, Adrian Vermeule

University of Chicago Law Review

In a typical pattern in the literature on public law, the diagnostic sections of a paper draw upon political science, economics, or other disciplines to offer deeply pessimistic accounts of the motivations of relevant actors in the legal system. The prescriptive sections of the paper, however, then issue an optimistic proposal that the same actors should supply public-spirited solutions. Where the analyst makes inconsistent assumptions about the motivations of actors within the legal system, equivocating between external and internal perspectives, an inside/outside fallacy arises. We identify the fallacy, connect it to an economics literature on the "determinacy paradox," and elicit …


Advertisements Impact The Physiological Efficacy Of A Branded Drug, Emir Kamenica, Robert Naclerio, Anup Malani Aug 2013

Advertisements Impact The Physiological Efficacy Of A Branded Drug, Emir Kamenica, Robert Naclerio, Anup Malani

Articles

No abstract provided.


Mock Trials And Real Justices And Judges, Richard A. Posner Aug 2013

Mock Trials And Real Justices And Judges, Richard A. Posner

Articles

No abstract provided.


We The People, They The People, And The Puzzle Of Democratic Constitutionalism, David A. Strauss Jun 2013

We The People, They The People, And The Puzzle Of Democratic Constitutionalism, David A. Strauss

Articles

No abstract provided.


Happiness Institutions, Jennifer Nou Jun 2013

Happiness Institutions, Jennifer Nou

Articles

No abstract provided.


Navigating Conflicts In Cyberspace: Legal Lessons From The History Of War At Sea, Jeremy Rabkin, Ariel Rabkin Jun 2013

Navigating Conflicts In Cyberspace: Legal Lessons From The History Of War At Sea, Jeremy Rabkin, Ariel Rabkin

Chicago Journal of International Law

Despite mounting concern about cyber attacks, the United States has been hesitant to embrace retaliatory cyber strikes in its overall defense strategy. Part of the hesitation seems to reflect concerns about limits imposed by the law of armed conflict. But analysts who invoke today's law of armed conflict forget that war on the seas has always followed different rules. The historic practice of naval war is a much better guide to reasonable tactics and necessary limits for conflict in cyberspace. Cyber conflict should be open-as naval war has been-to hostile measures short of war, to attacks on enemy commerce, to …


Ersatz Normativity Or Public Law In Global Governance: The Hard Case Of International Prescriptions For National Infrastructure Regulation, Megan Donaldson, Benedict Kingsbury Jun 2013

Ersatz Normativity Or Public Law In Global Governance: The Hard Case Of International Prescriptions For National Infrastructure Regulation, Megan Donaldson, Benedict Kingsbury

Chicago Journal of International Law

Taking global prescriptions for national infrastructure regulation as a case study, this Article examines the nature and implications of the mingling of law, governance, and economic that is increasingly prevalent in global regulatory governance. It focuses on three sets of formally non-binding but influential instruments issued in the 2000s by the World Bank, the OECD, and UNCITRAL, each of which promotes far-reaching reforms to existing national public law and institutions. The Article excavates these instruments' unarticulated theories of the state and its roles, and their visions of the nature and preferred features of law. It explores the use by these …


Entrepreneurship, Hardship, And Gamesmanship: Modern Piracy As A Dry Endeavor, Selina Maclaren Jun 2013

Entrepreneurship, Hardship, And Gamesmanship: Modern Piracy As A Dry Endeavor, Selina Maclaren

Chicago Journal of International Law

Piracy has reemerged in the past decade, but international laws lag behind While modern-day piracy threatens lives and industries, antipiracy efforts are constrained by international legal definitions written centuries ago to address a crime that looked radically different from its twenty-first-century counterpart. Today, piracy networks are increasingly sophisticated and land-based, but piracy laws define the crime as one occurring on the high seas. Handcuffed by the high seas requirement, nations prosecute only junior pirates while pirate kingpins operate from the safety of land. In recent months, lower piracy rates have promised stability and masked the urgency of the threat. Although …


Toward A Positive Theory Of Privacy Law, Lior Strahilevitz May 2013

Toward A Positive Theory Of Privacy Law, Lior Strahilevitz

Articles

No abstract provided.


Well-Being Analysis Vs. Cost-Benefit Analysis, Jonathan Masur, John Bronsteen, Christopher Buccafusco May 2013

Well-Being Analysis Vs. Cost-Benefit Analysis, Jonathan Masur, John Bronsteen, Christopher Buccafusco

Articles

Cost-benefit analysis (CBA) is the primary tool used by policymakers to inform administrative decisionmaking. Yet its methodology of converting preferences (often hypothetical ones) into dollar figures, then using those dollar figures as proxies for quality of life, creates significant systemic errors. These problems have been lamented by many scholars, and recent calls have gone out from world leaders and prominent economists to find an alternative analytical device that would measure quality of life more directly. This Article proposes well-being analysis (WBA) as that alternative. Relying on data from studies in the field of hedonic psychology that track people's actual experience …


Agency Self-Insulation Under Presidential Review, Jennifer Nou May 2013

Agency Self-Insulation Under Presidential Review, Jennifer Nou

Articles

Agencies possess enormous regulatory discretion. This discretion allows executive branch agencies in particular to insulate their decisions from presidential review by raising the costs of such review. They can do so, for example, through variations in policymaking form, cost-benefit analysis quality, timing strategies, and institutional coalition-building. This Article seeks to help shift the literature's focus on courtcentered agency behavior to consider instead the role of the President under current executive orders. Specifically, the Article marshals public-choice insights to offer an analytic framework for what it calls agency self-insulation under presidential review, illustrates the phenomenon, and assesses some normative implications. The …


The Hidden Costs Of Terrorist Watch Lists, Anya Bernstein May 2013

The Hidden Costs Of Terrorist Watch Lists, Anya Bernstein

Articles

No abstract provided.


Tiers Of Scrutiny In Enumerated Powers Jurisprudence, Aziz Huq Apr 2013

Tiers Of Scrutiny In Enumerated Powers Jurisprudence, Aziz Huq

Articles

This Article identifies and analyzes the recent emergence of a "tiers of scrutiny" system in Supreme Court jurisprudence respecting the boundaries of Congress's enumerated powers. The inquiry is motivated by the Court's recent ruling on the federal healthcare law, which demonstrated that the national legislature's election among its diverse textual sources of authority in Article I can have large, outcome-determinative consequences in constitutional challenges to federal laws. This is so because the Court not only delineates each power's substantive boundaries differently but also applies distinct standards of review to the various legislative powers enumerated in Article I and elsewhere in …


Not Unwritten, After All? (Reviewing Akhil Reed Amar, America's Unwritten Constitution: The Precedents And Principles We Live By (2012)), David A. Strauss Apr 2013

Not Unwritten, After All? (Reviewing Akhil Reed Amar, America's Unwritten Constitution: The Precedents And Principles We Live By (2012)), David A. Strauss

Articles

No abstract provided.


The Problem Of Resource Access, Lee Anne Fennell Apr 2013

The Problem Of Resource Access, Lee Anne Fennell

Articles

The Coasean insight that transaction costs stand between the world as we know it and an ideal of perfect efficiency has provided generations of law and economics scholars with an analytic North Star But for legal scholars interested in the efficiency implications of property arrangements, transaction costs turn out to constitute an unhelpful category. Transaction costs are related to property rights in unstable and contested ways, and they comprise a heterogeneous set of impediments, not all of which are amenable to cost-effective reduction through law. Theating them as focal confuses the cause of our difficulties in structuring access to resources …


Foreign Affairs Federalism: A Revisionist Approach, Daniel Abebe, Aziz Huq Apr 2013

Foreign Affairs Federalism: A Revisionist Approach, Daniel Abebe, Aziz Huq

Articles

No abstract provided.


Property In Housing, Lee Anne Fennell Apr 2013

Property In Housing, Lee Anne Fennell

Kreisman Working Paper Series in Housing Law and Policy

No abstract provided.


Self-Regulation For The Mortgage Industry, M. Todd Henderson Mar 2013

Self-Regulation For The Mortgage Industry, M. Todd Henderson

Coase-Sandor Working Paper Series in Law and Economics

This Article proposes an alternative to direct government regulation of mortgage brokers: self-regulation of the mortgage industry that mimics the arguably successful self-regulation of the securities industry that has occurred over the past two centuries. Although not without its problems, self-regulation of securities brokers operates more efficiently than government regulation. For example, self-regulation allows for industry expertise to be deployed at low cost and is built on trust and reciprocity, which reduce enforcement costs. In addition, self-regulation locates power at its smallest point and encourages efficient resolution of disputes by ensuring commensurable regulatory intervention. Most crucially for the mortgage industry, …


Why Has Regional Income Convergence In The U.S. Declined?, Peter Ganong, Daniel Shoag Mar 2013

Why Has Regional Income Convergence In The U.S. Declined?, Peter Ganong, Daniel Shoag

Kreisman Working Paper Series in Housing Law and Policy

No abstract provided.


Inside Or Outside The System?, Eric A. Posner, Adrian Vermeule Mar 2013

Inside Or Outside The System?, Eric A. Posner, Adrian Vermeule

Public Law and Legal Theory Working Papers

In a typical pattern in the literature on public law, the diagnostic sections of a paper draw upon political science, economics or other disciplines to offer deeply pessimistic accounts of the motivations of relevant actors in the legal system. The prescriptive sections of the paper, however, then issue an optimistic proposal that the same actors should supply public-spirited solutions. Where the analyst makes inconsistent assumptions about the motivations of actors within the legal system, equivocating between external and internal perspectives, an inside/outside fallacy arises. We identify the fallacy, connect it to an economics literature on the "determinacy paradox," and elicit …


Raising The Stakes In Patent Cases, Anup Malani, Jonathan Masur Mar 2013

Raising The Stakes In Patent Cases, Anup Malani, Jonathan Masur

Articles

No abstract provided.