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2021

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Articles 421 - 440 of 440

Full-Text Articles in Law

North Carolina Cafos: An Example Of Why The United States Needs To Recognize The Right To Safe, Clean Drinking Water, Maggie Horstman Jan 2021

North Carolina Cafos: An Example Of Why The United States Needs To Recognize The Right To Safe, Clean Drinking Water, Maggie Horstman

Human Rights Brief

No abstract provided.


Legislative Review Of "The Transgender Persons (Protection Of Rights) Act, 2019", Aastha Khanna, Divesh Sawhney Jan 2021

Legislative Review Of "The Transgender Persons (Protection Of Rights) Act, 2019", Aastha Khanna, Divesh Sawhney

Human Rights Brief

No abstract provided.


People’S Electric: Engaged Legal Education At Rutgers-Newark Law School In The 1960s And 1970s, George W. Conk Jan 2021

People’S Electric: Engaged Legal Education At Rutgers-Newark Law School In The 1960s And 1970s, George W. Conk

Fordham Urban Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Finding Parity Through Preclusion: Novel Mental Health Parity Solutions At The State Level, Ryan D. Kingshill Jan 2021

Finding Parity Through Preclusion: Novel Mental Health Parity Solutions At The State Level, Ryan D. Kingshill

Dickinson Law Review (2017-Present)

Recently, the federal government has taken numerous steps to promote the equal treatment (also known as parity) of mental and physical health issues. The two most impactful actions are the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Act of 2008 and the Affordable Care Act. These acts focus on the traditional avenue for parity change—insurance regulation. While these acts have improved parity, major gaps in coverage and treatment between mental health/substance use disorder treatment and medical/surgical treatment persist. ERISA Preemption, evasive insurer behavior, lack of enforcement, and lack of consumer education continue to plague patients and healthcare professionals. On its own, federal …


Achieving Better Care In Pennsylvania By Allowing Pharmacists To Practice Pharmacy, Travis Murray Jan 2021

Achieving Better Care In Pennsylvania By Allowing Pharmacists To Practice Pharmacy, Travis Murray

Dickinson Law Review (2017-Present)

Traditionally, state legislatures implemented Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs (“PDMPs”) to assist prescribers, pharmacists, and law enforcement in identifying patients likely to misuse, abuse, or divert controlled substances. PDMP databases contain a catalog of a patient’s recent controlled substances that pharmacies have filled, including the date, location, the quantity of medication filled, and the prescribing health care provider. Prescribers in Pennsylvania have a duty to query the PDMP before prescribing controlled substances in most clinical settings. Pharmacists have a similar duty in Pennsylvania to dispense safe and effective medication therapy to patients and to screen patients for potential signs of misuse, …


Religious Roots Of Corporate Organization, Amanda Porterfield Jan 2021

Religious Roots Of Corporate Organization, Amanda Porterfield

Seattle University Law Review

Religion and corporate organization have developed side-by-side in Western culture, from antiquity to the present day. This Essay begins with the realignment of religion and secularity in seventeenth-century America, then looks to the religious antecedents of corporate organization in ancient Rome and medieval Europe, and then looks forward to the modern history of corporate organization. This Essay describes the long history behind the entanglement of business and religion in the United States today. It also shows how an understanding of both religion and business can be expanded by looking at the economic aspects of religion and the religious aspects of …


Masthead Jan 2021

Masthead

University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change

No abstract provided.


More Than Just Dope: Advocating For Ethical Marijuana Policies In Long-Term Facilities, Kent Steinberg Jan 2021

More Than Just Dope: Advocating For Ethical Marijuana Policies In Long-Term Facilities, Kent Steinberg

University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change

No abstract provided.


Hawai'i '78: Collective Memory And The Untold Legal History Of The Reparative Action For Kānaka Maoli, Troy H.J. Andrade Jan 2021

Hawai'i '78: Collective Memory And The Untold Legal History Of The Reparative Action For Kānaka Maoli, Troy H.J. Andrade

University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change

No abstract provided.


Free-Market Feminism: Re-Reconsidering Surrogacy, Alexandra Holmstrom-Smith Jan 2021

Free-Market Feminism: Re-Reconsidering Surrogacy, Alexandra Holmstrom-Smith

University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change

No abstract provided.


Hair Rules: Race, Gender, And Stigmatization In Schools, Patricia A. Banks Jan 2021

Hair Rules: Race, Gender, And Stigmatization In Schools, Patricia A. Banks

University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change

No abstract provided.


When Harassment At Work Is Harassment At Church: Hostile Work Environments And The Ministerial Exception, Rachel Casper Jan 2021

When Harassment At Work Is Harassment At Church: Hostile Work Environments And The Ministerial Exception, Rachel Casper

University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change

No abstract provided.


Fewer Of Whom? Climate-Based Population Policies Infringe Marginalized People's Reproductive Autonomy, Rachel L. Zacharias Jan 2021

Fewer Of Whom? Climate-Based Population Policies Infringe Marginalized People's Reproductive Autonomy, Rachel L. Zacharias

University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change

No abstract provided.


Regulating The Reluctant: Policies That Benefit Vulnerable People In Multi-Level Marketing, Annie Blackman Jan 2021

Regulating The Reluctant: Policies That Benefit Vulnerable People In Multi-Level Marketing, Annie Blackman

University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change

No abstract provided.


Acid Attacks In India: A Socio-Legal Report, Vidhik Kumar Jan 2021

Acid Attacks In India: A Socio-Legal Report, Vidhik Kumar

Dignity: A Journal of Analysis of Exploitation and Violence

India has the highest number of acid attacks globally every year, and despite the actions taken by the Indian Government and the Supreme Court of India, the crime is on the rise. This increase can be attributed to the patriarchal ideology that is prevalent in India and to India’s inadequate legal system, which does not deliver efficient remedies to the victims. This article will discuss the prevalence of acid attacks in India, motives behind the attacks, consequences on victims, and shortcomings in measures adopted to prevent the crime and provide justice to victims.


L X A=W On The Weight Of Legal Norms, Peter Gabel Jan 2021

L X A=W On The Weight Of Legal Norms, Peter Gabel

University of Colorado Law Review

No abstract provided.


The People's Court: On The Intellectual Origins Of American Judicial Power, Ian C. Bartrum Jan 2021

The People's Court: On The Intellectual Origins Of American Judicial Power, Ian C. Bartrum

Dickinson Law Review (2017-Present)

This article enters into the modern debate between “consti- tutional departmentalists”—who contend that the executive and legislative branches share constitutional interpretive authority with the courts—and what are sometimes called “judicial supremacists.” After exploring the relevant history of political ideas, I join the modern minority of voices in the latter camp.

This is an intellectual history of two evolving political ideas—popular sovereignty and the separation of powers—which merged in the making of American judicial power, and I argue we can only understand the structural function of judicial review by bringing these ideas together into an integrated whole. Or, put another way, …


The Carbon Price Equivalent: A Metric For Comparing Climate Change Mitigation Efforts Across Jurisdictions, Gabriel Weil Jan 2021

The Carbon Price Equivalent: A Metric For Comparing Climate Change Mitigation Efforts Across Jurisdictions, Gabriel Weil

Dickinson Law Review (2017-Present)

Climate change presents a global commons problem: Emissions reductions on the scale needed to meet global targets do not pass a domestic cost-benefit test in most countries. To give national governments ample incentive to pursue deep decarbonization, mutual interstate coercion will be necessary. Many proposed tools of coercive climate diplomacy would require a onedimensional metric for comparing the stringency of climate change mitigation policy packages across jurisdictions. This article proposes and defends such a metric: the carbon price equivalent. There is substantial variation in the set of climate change mitigation policy instruments implemented by different countries. Nonetheless, the consequences of …


Don't Change The Subject: How State Election Laws Can Nullify Ballot Questions, Cole Gordner Jan 2021

Don't Change The Subject: How State Election Laws Can Nullify Ballot Questions, Cole Gordner

Dickinson Law Review (2017-Present)

Procedural election laws regulate the conduct of state elections and provide for greater transparency and fairness in statewide ballots. These laws ensure that the public votes separately on incongruous bills and protects the electorate from uncertainties contained in omnibus packages. As demonstrated by a slew of recent court cases, however, interest groups that are opposed to the objective of a ballot question are utilizing these election laws with greater frequency either to prevent a state electorate from voting on an initiative or to overturn a ballot question that was already decided in the initiative’s favor. This practice is subverting the …


The Expressiveness Of Regulatory Trade-Offs, Benjamin M. Chen Jan 2021

The Expressiveness Of Regulatory Trade-Offs, Benjamin M. Chen

Georgia Law Review

Trade-offs between a sacred value—like human life—
against a secular one—like money—are considered taboo.
People are supposed to be offended by such trade-offs and to
punish those who contemplate them. Yet the last decades in the
United States have witnessed the rise of the cost-benefit state.
Most major rules promulgated today undergo a regulatory
impact analysis, and agencies monetize risks as grave as those
to human life and values as abstract as human dignity.
Prominent academics and lawmakers advocate the weighing of
costs and benefits as an element of rational regulation. The
cost-benefit revolution is a technocratic coup, however, if …