Browsing Harvard Law School by Title
Now showing items 1657-1676 of 2411
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Predicting Court Outcomes through Political Preferences: The Japanese Supreme Court and the Chaos of 1993
(Duke University School of Law, 2009)Empiricists routinely explain politically sensitive decisions of the U.S. federal courts through the party of the executive or legislature appointing the judge. That they can do so reflects the fundamental independence of ... -
Predicting the Genetic Makeup of FDA
(2000)Genetic testing holds promise as the either the most beneficial or the most destructive creation of the new millennium. The consequences of genetic testing research are far-reaching, with the potential for finding cures ... -
Preemption and Textualism
(Michigan Law Review, 2013)In the critically important area of preemption, the Supreme Court's approach to statutory interpretation differs from the approach it follows elsewhere. Whether in politically salient matters, like challenges to Arizona's ... -
Preface to Responses: Dynamism, Not Just Diversity
(2007)Remaking institutions of higher education so that women succeed and lead is an example of the kind of aspiration that requires new thinking as well as motivation and hard work. Generated by the innovative scholarship of ... -
Preface: Meaningful Reciprocity -- In Honor of Clare Dalton
(Brooklyn Law School, 2012) -
Pregnancy and AIDS
(University of Maryland, 1993) -
Preparing for a Twenty-Four-Month Sprint: A Primer for Prospective and New Elected Members of the United Nations Security Council,
(Harvard Law School Program on International Law and Armed Conflict, 2020-12)Under the United Nations Charter, the U.N. Security Council has several important functions and powers, not least with regard to taking binding actions to maintain international peace and security. The ten elected members ... -
PRESCRIPTION DRUG PRICING: HOW MUCH IS TOO MUCH?
(2000)There are numerous proposals for controlling the increasing cost of prescription drugs. Some of these rely on more market-based approaches; some of them resemble traditional command and control. Many of the arguments that ... -
The Prescription Drug User Fee Act: A Solution to Drug Lag?
(2003)For decades, scholars criticized the United States Food and Drug Administration for delaying consumers’ access to vital new drug therapies. They argued that the FDA regulated system of drug development ... -
Presentation
(2011) -
The President's Completion Power
(Yale Law School, 2006)This Essay identifies and analyzes the President's completion power: the President's authority to prescribe incidental details needed to carry into execution a legislative scheme, even in the absence of congressional ... -
The President's Completion Power
(Yale Law School, 2006)This Essay identifies and analyzes the President's completion power: the President's authority to prescribe incidental details needed to carry into execution a legislative scheme, even in the absence of congressional ... -
Presidential Combat Against Climate Change
(Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2013) -
The Presidential FDA: Politics Meet Science
(2001)This paper proceeds in four parts. Part I. maps the powers of the various branches over the FDA. Part II. describes the Clinton administration’s tobacco regulation. Part III. analyzes the repercussions ... -
Pretrial Bargaining and the Design of Fee-Shifting Rules
(RAND, 1994)Legal rules for allocating the private costs of civil litigation, or ''fee-shifting'' rules, provide powerful incentives for settlement. Within the context of a direct-revelation mechanism, the fee-shifting rule that ... -
Preventing the next Public Health Crisis: New Drug Approval after Vioxx
(2005)The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) drug approval system has sought to strike a balance between two goals: ensuring that new drugs are safe enough for human use, while getting therapeutically important medications ... -
Price Caps in Multi-Price Markets
(2015)Many consumer markets feature a multi-dimensional price. A policymaker – a legislator, a regulator or a court – concerned about the level of one price dimension may decide to cap this price. How will such a price cap affect ... -
The Price of Public Action: Constitutional Doctrine and the Judicial Manipulation of Legislative Enactment Costs
(Yale Law School, 2008)This Article argues that courts can, and often should, implement constitutional guarantees by crafting doctrines that raise the costs to government decisionmakers of enacting constitutionally problematic policies. This ...