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Articles 1 - 8 of 8
Full-Text Articles in Law
Slides: Water Leasing In The Lower Arkansas Valley: The "Super Ditch Company", Peter Nichols
Slides: Water Leasing In The Lower Arkansas Valley: The "Super Ditch Company", Peter Nichols
Western Water Law, Policy and Management: Ripples, Currents, and New Channels for Inquiry (Martz Summer Conference, June 3-5)
Presenter: Peter NIchols, Trout, Raley, Montano, Witwer & Freeman, Denver, CO
28 slides
Rationing The Infinite, Leonard M. Niehoff
Rationing The Infinite, Leonard M. Niehoff
Michigan Law Review
This Review raises a number of objections to Baker's arguments and proposals. Furthermore, this Review raises the fundamental question of whether Baker's central operating assumption-that media is a scarce resource that should be fairly distributed-remains timely in light of the far-reaching and fast-paced changes wrought by the internet. Nevertheless, this Review also recognizes that, as with Baker's prior works, Media Concentration and Democracy makes a serious contribution to the discussion of the political, social, and economic dynamics that challenge the existence of a strong and independent media. Media Concentration and Democracy does a better job of raising questions than of …
The Concept Of Private Property And The Limits Of The Environmental Imagination
The Concept Of Private Property And The Limits Of The Environmental Imagination
John Meyer
Where Will You Go When The Well Runs Dry? Local Government Ownership And Water Allocation In North Carolina, Daniel F. Mclawhorn
Where Will You Go When The Well Runs Dry? Local Government Ownership And Water Allocation In North Carolina, Daniel F. Mclawhorn
Campbell Law Review
It is no simple task to determine who owns-or rather who does not own-the water in North Carolina's lakes, streams, and ponds. Those seeking to resolve conflicts involving water use invariably risk entanglement in a web of common law riparian rights and public trust assets loosely bound together by centuries-old court decisions and complex state and federal laws. The question of who owns water, particularly with regard to local governments, is clearly an area of increasing importance as North Carolina now sees an end to what once seemed its inexhaustible water bounty.
Jiminy Cricket For The Corporation: Understanding The Corporate 'Conscience', Colin P. Marks
Jiminy Cricket For The Corporation: Understanding The Corporate 'Conscience', Colin P. Marks
Faculty Articles
Historically, the corporation has evolved since the late eighteenth century from a relative few, specially chartered associations, generally organized to complete projects for the public good to the modern profit-making behemoths of modern America. Along the way, corporations have been subjected to regulation, often in response to public outcry against perceived abuses of power. This corporate evolution has also resulted in a general separation of ownership and control, though that is not to say that corporate managers act completely free from external pressures such as to make a profit. With regard to the corporate "conscience," though corporations do not have …
Amoco Production Company V. Southern Ute Indian Tribe: A Final Resolution To The Battle Over Ownership Of Coalbed Methane Gas?, Laura D. Windsor
Amoco Production Company V. Southern Ute Indian Tribe: A Final Resolution To The Battle Over Ownership Of Coalbed Methane Gas?, Laura D. Windsor
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Reconsidering The Taxation Of Foreign Income, James R. Hines Jr.
Reconsidering The Taxation Of Foreign Income, James R. Hines Jr.
Articles
The purpose of this Article is to analyze the consequences of taxing active foreign business income,1 and in particular, to compare a regime in which a home country taxes foreign income to a regime in which it does not. In practice, countries typically do not adopt such extreme policy positions. For example, a country such as France, which largely exempts foreign business income from taxation, nevertheless taxes small pieces of foreign income;2 and a country such as the United States, which attempts to tax the foreign incomes of U.S. corporations, permits taxpayers to defer home country taxation in some circumstances, …
Evolutionary Theory And The Origin Of Property Rights, James E. Krier
Evolutionary Theory And The Origin Of Property Rights, James E. Krier
Articles
For legal scholars, the evolution of property rights has been a topic in search of a theory. My aim here is to draw together various accounts (some of them largely neglected in the legal literature), from dated to modern, and suggest a way they can be melded into a plausible explanation of property's genesis and early development. What results hardly amounts to a theory, but it does suggest an outline for one. Moreover, it provides a primer on the subject, a reasonably solid foundation for thinking and talking about the evolution of property rights.