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The False Promise Of Custody In Domestic Violence Protection Orders, Laurie S. Kohn Jan 2016

The False Promise Of Custody In Domestic Violence Protection Orders, Laurie S. Kohn

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This Article reveals the disconnect between the power and the will to enforce the custody and parenting time provisions of protection orders through criminal mechanisms and explores the further infirmity of civil enforcement by illustrating the shortcomings of available relief. Together, these barriers to effective enforcement threaten to render this court-granted protection meaningless and dangerously misleading. The barriers also undermine the many years of advocacy invested to secure these protections in the first place - reforms aimed at protecting victims and children from abusive parents.

This Article explores ways to bring together the will and the power to enforce all …


Money Can’T Buy You Love: Valuing Contributions By Nonresidential Fathers, Laurie S. Kohn Jan 2016

Money Can’T Buy You Love: Valuing Contributions By Nonresidential Fathers, Laurie S. Kohn

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This article examines the roots of the disproportionate values the legal system assigns to paternal roles in the family law and child support system, looking to social norms, traditional family law, and the state's interests in the well-being of children. This hierarchy of values reveals itself in the current structure of child support laws and in the enforcement of parenting-time orders on the one hand and child support obligations on the other. The article considers how the allocation of disproportionate values impacts low-income fathers, mothers, children, and the state. The article envisions ways in which the family law system could …


Using The Student-Edited Law Review To Teach Critical Professional Skills, Karen Thornton Jan 2016

Using The Student-Edited Law Review To Teach Critical Professional Skills, Karen Thornton

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

At a time when law schools are being urged to add experiential learning opportunities to their curricula, law reviews may have been overlooked because the need is so obvious. Producing a journal is a professional endeavor requiring leadership by student editors who are in the process of forging their professional identity. Law schools have a responsibility to teach critical professional skills as part of the pedagogy to shape future lawyers. This article summarizes the need for law schools to provide experiential learning opportunities, unpacks the criticism faculty authors have heaped on student-led law reviews, and the describes a symposium-style training …


Zero Rating And The Holy Grail: Universal Standards For Net Neutrality, Arturo J. Carrillo Jan 2016

Zero Rating And The Holy Grail: Universal Standards For Net Neutrality, Arturo J. Carrillo

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This chapter challenges the prevailing consensus among most academics, activists and policymakers that uniform normative definitions and standards for net neutrality and zero-rating – the Holy Grail of policymaking - do not yet exist. But it turns out the Holy Grail does exist. Using examples drawn from ongoing experiences in Latin America, I demonstrate that the existing international human rights law framework is an appropriate and adequate source for uniform universal standards on net neutrality. Using case studies from Mexico, Colombia, and Chile, I show how the application of relevant human rights standards contributes to effectively implementing and protecting net …


Having Your Cake And Eating It Too? Zero-Rating, Net Neutrality And International Law, Arturo J. Carrillo Jan 2016

Having Your Cake And Eating It Too? Zero-Rating, Net Neutrality And International Law, Arturo J. Carrillo

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This Article analyzes the international law response to the zero-rating conundrum. National debates rage across the globe on whether to permit zero-rating, which violates net neutrality, as a means of increasing connectivity, especially in the developing world. As a rule, these highly contentious discussions lack rigor, objectivity, and impact. They are characterized by a clash of dogmas: the sanctity of net neutrality principles, on the one hand, versus the imperative to close the digital divide, on the other. This Article seeks to bridge that dichotomy by invoking the applicable international law framework to analyze zero-rating as a limitation on net …


Brief Of The Domestic Violence Legal Empowerment And Appeals Project, Aequitas: The Prosecutors' Resource On Violence Against Women, & Futures Without Violence As Amici Curiae In Support Of Respondent, Voisine V. United States, No. 14-10154 (U.S. Jan. 26, 2016)., Joan S. Meier Jan 2016

Brief Of The Domestic Violence Legal Empowerment And Appeals Project, Aequitas: The Prosecutors' Resource On Violence Against Women, & Futures Without Violence As Amici Curiae In Support Of Respondent, Voisine V. United States, No. 14-10154 (U.S. Jan. 26, 2016)., Joan S. Meier

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

No abstract provided.


Emerging Policy And Practice Issues (2016), Steven L. Schooner, Neal J. Couture Jan 2016

Emerging Policy And Practice Issues (2016), Steven L. Schooner, Neal J. Couture

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This paper, presented at the West Government Contracts Year in Review Conference (covering 2015), attempts to identify the key trends and issues in U.S. federal procurement. Consistent with prior practice, this chapter offers extensive coverage of the federal procurement, grant, and defense spending trends and attempts to predict what lies ahead, particularly with regard to legislative and executive activity. The paper discusses, in addition to the macro-level data, initiatives from OFPP and DoD, including the Better Buying Power 3.0's less-than-obvious focus on innovation, the need for investment in research and development, information technology and category management, acquisition performance measurement (or …


Spoe + Tlac = More Bailouts For Wall Street, Arthur E. Wilmarth Jr. Jan 2016

Spoe + Tlac = More Bailouts For Wall Street, Arthur E. Wilmarth Jr.

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

A primary goal of the Dodd-Frank Act is to end “too big to fail” (TBTF) bailouts for systemically important financial institutions (SIFIs) and their creditors. Title II of Dodd-Frank establishes the Orderly Liquidation Authority (OLA), which empowers the Secretary of the Treasury to appoint the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) as receiver for failed SIFIs. Title II requires the FDIC to liquidate failed SIFIs and to impose any resulting losses on their shareholders and creditors. Title II establishes a liquidation-only mandate because Congress did not want a failed megabank to emerge from an OLA receivership as a “rehabilitated” SIFI.

The …


International Procurement Developments In 2015: Structural Reforms To International Procurement Laws, Christopher R. Yukins Jan 2016

International Procurement Developments In 2015: Structural Reforms To International Procurement Laws, Christopher R. Yukins

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

The year 2015 saw major structural changes to international procurement rules -- including (1) a proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade agreement which will impact procurement, and important shifts in Canada’s laws regarding contractor debarment and exclusion (discussed here by Brenda Swick), (2) European procurement laws which favor open, multilateral negotiations (Hans-Joachim Priess), and (2) new, more liberal procurement policies at the World Bank (Christopher Yukins) -- all of which are likely to help open procurement markets around the world. This article, prepared for presentation at the February 2016 Thomson-Reuters Year in Review conference in Washington, D.C., surveys these developments and …


"Bitch," Go Directly To Jail: Student Speech And Entry Into The School-To-Prison Pipeline, Catherine J. Ross Jan 2016

"Bitch," Go Directly To Jail: Student Speech And Entry Into The School-To-Prison Pipeline, Catherine J. Ross

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This article demonstrates the close connection between student speech that the First Amendment protects (even for students in grades K-12) and penalties school authorities impose on speech they find controversial or offensive. The penalties include deprivation of instructional time—suspension, expulsion and assignment to alternative school for troubled and disruptive youth. The link between the exercise of First Amendment rights and school discipline that starts young people on the school-to-prison pipeline is even more dramatic when on-site police officers arrest students or schools refer them to the juvenile justice system for violating a school speech code – rules imposed by the …


Taming The Wild West: Online Excesses, Reactions And Overreactions, Catherine J. Ross Jan 2016

Taming The Wild West: Online Excesses, Reactions And Overreactions, Catherine J. Ross

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

A review essay discussing Danielle Keats Citron’s Hate Crimes in Cyberspace (Harvard University Press 2014) and Amy Adele Hasinoff’s, Sexting Panic: Rethinking Criminalization, Privacy and Consent (University of Illinois Press 2015). Both books consider the risks and harms in cyberspace, blaming of victims, and the interaction between law and online expression. Citron documents widespread hate speech, cyberstalking, revenge porn, and other speech that especially targets women online. Hasinoff, grounded in feminist and cultural studies, emphasizes the positive aspects of the agency girls who sext voluntarily display in exploring and displaying their sexuality, arguing that advising girls that control of their …


Placing The Government In Fragile Democracies, David Fontana Jan 2016

Placing The Government In Fragile Democracies, David Fontana

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

No abstract provided.


Adversary Breakdown And Judicial Role Confusion In “Small Case” Civil Justice, Jessica K. Steinberg Jan 2016

Adversary Breakdown And Judicial Role Confusion In “Small Case” Civil Justice, Jessica K. Steinberg

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This Article calls attention to the breakdown of adversary procedure in a largely unexplored area of the civil justice system: the ordinary, two-party case. The twenty-first century judge confronts an entirely new state of affairs in presiding over the average civil matter. In place of the adversarial party contest, engineered and staged by attorneys, judges now face the rise of an unrepresented majority unable to propel claims, facts, and evidence into the courtroom. The adversary ideal favors a passive judge, but the unrealistic demands of such a paradigm in today’s “small case” civil justice system have sparked role confusion among …


Statistical Inequality And Intentional (Not Implicit) Discrimination, Michael Selmi Jan 2016

Statistical Inequality And Intentional (Not Implicit) Discrimination, Michael Selmi

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Racial disparities remain a disturbing fact of American life but whether those disparities are the product of discrimination remains deeply contested. This is an important question because as a society we are committed to remedying discrimination but are significantly more conflicted over addressing racial disparities that are not tied to discrimination. This essay explores the question of how we can determine when statistical disparities are the product of discrimination, and relies on two areas where the presence of racial disparities are incontrovertible – police automobile stops and school discipline. Based on a large number of studies, there is little question …


The Ultimate Unifying Approach To Complying With All Laws And Regulations, Daniel J. Solove, Woodrow Hartzog Jan 2016

The Ultimate Unifying Approach To Complying With All Laws And Regulations, Daniel J. Solove, Woodrow Hartzog

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

There are countless laws and regulations that must be complied with, and the task of figuring out what to do to satisfy all of them seems nearly impossible. In this article, Professors Daniel Solove and Woodrow Hartzog develop a unified approach to doing so. This approach (patent pending) was developed over the course of several decades of extensive analysis of every relevant law and regulation.


Individual Sanctions For Competition Law Infringements: Pros, Cons And Challenges, William E. Kovacic, Florian Wagner-Von Paap, Autorite De La Concurrence, Daniel Zimmer, Andreas Stephan Jan 2016

Individual Sanctions For Competition Law Infringements: Pros, Cons And Challenges, William E. Kovacic, Florian Wagner-Von Paap, Autorite De La Concurrence, Daniel Zimmer, Andreas Stephan

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Following the substantive harmonization in Regulation (EC) no. 1/2003, the European Commission has started more recently to focus on the harmonization of procedure and sanctions, and in January 2016, the European Parliament called for penalties against natural persons. This special issue looks at the current state of individual sanctions on the EU Member State level, examines from a comparative perspective the institutional challenges which these individual sanctions present, especially for leniency programmes, and discusses the pros and cons of introducing further individual, in particular criminal sanctions in Europe. It examines the experience with criminal sanctions in France, Germany, the United …


Why Black Homeowners Are More Likely To Be Caribbean-American Than African-American In New York: A Theory Of How Early West Indian Migrants Broke Racial Cartels In Housing, Eleanor Marie Brown Jan 2016

Why Black Homeowners Are More Likely To Be Caribbean-American Than African-American In New York: A Theory Of How Early West Indian Migrants Broke Racial Cartels In Housing, Eleanor Marie Brown

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Why are the black brownstone owners in Harlem and Brooklyn disproportionately West Indian? The landlords, West Indian-American? The tenants African-American? These are tough questions. For students of housing discrimination, West Indian Americans have long presented a quandary. If it is reasonable to assume that racial exclusions are being consistently applied to persons who are dark-skinned, one would expect to find that housing discrimination has had similar effects on West Indian-Americans and African-Americans. Yet this is not the case: West Indian-Americans generally own and rent higher quality housing than African-Americans.

Moreover, these advantages began long ago. For example, when racial covenants, …


On The Evolution Of Property Ownership Among Former Slaves, Newly Freedmen, Eleanor Marie Brown Jan 2016

On The Evolution Of Property Ownership Among Former Slaves, Newly Freedmen, Eleanor Marie Brown

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

One might think of the slave property system of provision grounds (or “provisioning”) in the West Indies as a happy coalition of interests between planters (who wanted to provide slaves incentives to feed themselves), Westminster (who wanted well-fed slaves to ensure the productivity of the sugar sector, a hefty tax contributor to the Exchequer), and slaves (who saw the advantages of a system which ensured that they were fed and encouraged private enterprise). Yet while this was generally true, notably, not all members of the plantocracy viewed these developments as positive. An outspoken minority feared that the roots of the …


Berkshire's Blemishes: Lessons For Buffett's Successors, Peers, And Policy, Lawrence A. Cunningham Jan 2016

Berkshire's Blemishes: Lessons For Buffett's Successors, Peers, And Policy, Lawrence A. Cunningham

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Berkshire Hathaway’s unique managerial model is lauded for its great value; this article highlights its costs. Most costs stem from the same features that yield such great value, which boil down, ironically, to Berkshire trying to be something it isn’t: it is a massive industrial conglomerate run as an old-fashioned investment partnership. An advisory board gives unchecked power to a single manager (Warren Buffett); Buffett makes huge capital allocations and pivotal executive hiring-and-firing decisions with modest investigation and scant oversight; Berkshire’s autonomous and decentralized structure grants operating managers enormous discretion with limited second-guessing; its trust-based culture relies on a cultivated …


Just The Facts Ma’Am": How Military Appellate Courts Rely On Factual Sufficiency Review To Overturn Sexual Assault Cases When Victims Are "Incapacitated", Lisa M. Schenck Jan 2016

Just The Facts Ma’Am": How Military Appellate Courts Rely On Factual Sufficiency Review To Overturn Sexual Assault Cases When Victims Are "Incapacitated", Lisa M. Schenck

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This article contends that since sufficient protections are now in place in the military justice system, the military courts of criminal appeals no longer require factual sufficiency review authority to protect an accused tried by courts-martial, and furthermore, military criminal courts of appeals should have the same standard of review as other federal criminal courts, that is, a conviction should be tested for legal sufficiency.


Fall 2016 Supplement To Brauneis & Schechter, Copyright: A Contemporary Approach, Robert Brauneis, Roger E. Schechter Jan 2016

Fall 2016 Supplement To Brauneis & Schechter, Copyright: A Contemporary Approach, Robert Brauneis, Roger E. Schechter

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This cumulative supplement contains additional materials for Brauneis and Schechter, Copyright: A Contemporary Approach (1st ed. 2012) that make it current through July 2016. Special features include a hyperlinked table of references to 19 recent cases decided since July 2015, which may be helpful in getting an overview of developments over this past year; a hyperlinked table of contents to all inserts; and a chapter-by-chapter guide to using the supplement, intended for professors who are creating or updating syllabi. The supplement contains nine principal cases with notes, as well as dozens of other updates.


Incomplete Dispositions, Naomi R. Cahn Jan 2016

Incomplete Dispositions, Naomi R. Cahn

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

In Irresolute Testators, Professor Jane Baron provocatively suggests the existence of two distinct types of testators: the rational, autonomous testator who has made deliberate choices about the contents of her will and whose errors, if any, are minor; and the more vulnerable, less resolute testator who may not have actually made the final decisions enshrined in a formal will. To illustrate how these testators appear in wills law, she analyzes how courts apply the doctrines of harmless error and mistake reformation. While the two doctrines appear to be intended to help the resolute testator, courts instead, she suggests, also apply …


Prelude To Glass-Steagall: Abusive Securities Practices By National City Bank And Chase National Bank During The “Roaring Twenties”, Arthur E. Wilmarth Jr. Jan 2016

Prelude To Glass-Steagall: Abusive Securities Practices By National City Bank And Chase National Bank During The “Roaring Twenties”, Arthur E. Wilmarth Jr.

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

From the late 1990s through 2008, the United States experienced the largest boom-and- bust cycle in its securities and housing markets since the “Roaring Twenties” and the Great Depression. Scholars have studied the events that led to the recent financial crisis and have compared those events to the causes of the Great Depression. In particular, analysts have considered whether “universal banks” – financial conglomerates that control deposit-taking banks as well as securities broker-dealers – played central roles in both crises.

Congress responded to the Great Depression by adopting the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933, which outlawed first-generation universal banks and established …


Regulatory Leveraging: Problem Or Solution?, William E. Kovacic, David A. Hyman Jan 2016

Regulatory Leveraging: Problem Or Solution?, William E. Kovacic, David A. Hyman

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Worldwide, there are approximately 130 jurisdictions with competition laws. The governmental entities charged with enforcing these laws are typically called “competition agencies,” but many of these entities do things other than competition law. Of the 36 agencies listed in the Global Competition Review’s 2015 annual review, half have responsibilities beyond their competition portfolio. Assume a competition agency that has significant regulatory power, such as the right to review certain mergers before they are consummated. Pursuant to this authority, the agency determines how quickly mergers are cleared, or whether they can proceed at all. This regulatory power is the functional equivalent …


Technological Innovation, Data Analytics, And Environmental Enforcement, Robert L. Glicksman Jan 2016

Technological Innovation, Data Analytics, And Environmental Enforcement, Robert L. Glicksman

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Technical innovation is ubiquitous in contemporary society and contributes to its extraordinarily dynamic character. Sometimes these innovations have significant effects on the state of the environment or on human health and they have stimulated efforts to develop second order technologies to ameliorate those effects. The development of the automobile and its impact on life in the United States and throughout the world is an example. The story of modern environmental regulation more generally includes chapters filled with examples of similar efforts to respond to an enormous array of technological advances.

This Article uses a different lens to consider the role …


Introduction. A New Field: Comparative Law And Regulation, Francesca Bignami Jan 2016

Introduction. A New Field: Comparative Law And Regulation, Francesca Bignami

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

The contemporary regulatory process is global. Markets and the problems they generate—consumer privacy, chemicals safety, and many others—cross borders and so too do regulatory efforts to address those problems. The process, however, by which national and international jurisdictions decide common regulatory problems defies the traditional mold of hierarchical state law. There is no world government with the power to impose a single set of principles and procedures on the multiple jurisdictions, and therefore the global regulatory process is characterized as much by diversity and discord as it is by coordination and convergence.

The new field of comparative law and regulation …


Introductory Chapter To Elgar Encyclopedia Of Environmental Law: Decisionmaking In Environmental Law, Robert L. Glicksman, Lee C. Paddock Jan 2016

Introductory Chapter To Elgar Encyclopedia Of Environmental Law: Decisionmaking In Environmental Law, Robert L. Glicksman, Lee C. Paddock

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This introductory chapter provides an overview of the growth of environmental law and the decision making structures that governments have developed to adopt, administer, and enforce it. It traces the manner in which cooperative federalism and public participation have affected decision making structures in environmental law, primarily in the United States. It summarizes key challenges that policymakers continue to face in designing environmental laws, including choices on the allocation of authority among different levels of government, the appropriate mix of regulatory and non-regulatory tools to use in environmental protection initiatives, efforts to accommodate environmental protection and economic growth objectives, techniques …


The Case For Symmetry In Antidiscrimination Law, Naomi Schoenbaum Jan 2016

The Case For Symmetry In Antidiscrimination Law, Naomi Schoenbaum

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Antidiscrimination law faces a fundamental design question: the choice between symmetry and asymmetry. A symmetrical law prohibits discrimination on the basis of a trait for a universal class of persons, and for both “sides” of the trait. An asymmetrical law prohibits discrimination on the basis of one “side” of the trait, and for a limited class of persons. Current law is inconsistent in its design. For example, employment discrimination law prohibits race discrimination symmetrically (everyone is protected, and on the basis of any race), but prohibits disability discrimination asymmetrically (only the disabled are protected, and only on the basis of …


Towards A Law Of Coworkers, Naomi Schoenbaum Jan 2016

Towards A Law Of Coworkers, Naomi Schoenbaum

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

A growing body of research reveals what most Americans already know from experience: that our coworkers play a central role in our lives. The significance of coworker relationships is only magnified in an era of expanding work hours in the twenty-four-seven economy. But the law does not reflect this reality, and instead relegates coworkers to the status of legal strangers. This Article argues that the law’s failure to recognize coworker relationships undermines not only these relationships, but also the goals of work law, and makes the case for a law of coworker relationships that would promote the equal, fair, and …


Gender And The Sharing Economy, Naomi Schoenbaum Jan 2016

Gender And The Sharing Economy, Naomi Schoenbaum

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

While the sharing economy has been celebrated as a flexible alternative to traditional employment for those with family responsibilities, especially women, it presents challenges for gender equality. Many of the services that are “shared” take place in the context of intimacy, which can have substantial consequences for transacting, particularly by enhancing the importance of identity of both the worker and the customer. Expanding on previous research on intimate work — a critical area that exists largely in limbo between the law of the market and the law of the family — this Article, written for the Cooper-Walsh Colloquium, explores the …