Browsing Harvard Law School by Title
Now showing items 2058-2077 of 2408
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Statically Detecting Likely Buffer Overflow Vulnerabilities
(2001)Buffer overflow attacks may be today’s single most important security threat. This paper presents a new approach to mitigating buffer overflow vulnerabilities by detecting likely vulnerabilities through an analysis of the ... -
Statistics, Not Experts
(Duke University School of Law, 2001) -
Statistics, Not Memories: What Was the Standard of Care for Administering Antenatal Steroids to Women in Preterm Labor between 1985 and 2000?
(2003)We determined the frequency of antenatal corticosteroid use for mothers with threatened premature delivery in 1985, 1990, 1995, and 2000. We next compared published data to the surveyed recollections of 302 obstetricians ... -
Statutory Pragmatism and Constitutional Structure
(Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2007) -
Stopping Traffic: An In-depth Analysis of the Controversial New Film and What It Says about the United States' War on Drugs
(2001)The purpose of this paper is, rather, to examine the issues the film raises and to highlight the truths in the story lines that are used to create those issues. In doing so, this paper seeks to enrich the stories already ... -
A Story about a Taiwanese Culinary Practice and Law
(2001)A story about dog meat eating and regulations in Taiwan. -
The Story of RU-486 in the United States
(2001)In this paper, I will navigate you through the fascinating odyssey of RU-486 from its initial development in France to its official entry into the U.S. pharmaceutical market to the post-approval strife in which it is now ... -
Storytelling and Political Resistance: Remembering Derrick Bell (with a story about Dalton Trumbo)
(Harvard Law School, 2012) -
Strategic Judgment Proofing
(RAND, 2008)A liquidity-constrained entrepreneur raises capital to finance a business activity that may harm bystanders. The entrepreneur raises senior (secured) debt to shield assets from the tort victims in bankruptcy. For a fixed ... -
Strategies of Influence: How Corporate Power Directs and Constrains the FDA
(2001)This paper is about the Food and Drug Administration, and the tactics that regulated – and sometimes unregulated – industries use to influence that agency’s ... -
Strict Judicial Scrutiny
(University of California, 2007)The history and practice of strict judicial scrutiny are widely misunderstood. Historically, the modern strict scrutiny formula did not emerge until the 1960s, when it took root simultaneously in a number of doctrinal ... -
A Structure That Does Not Function: An Examination of the History and Current Regulatory Status of Dietary Supplements and Their Label Claims
(2001)After years of ad hoc regulation of dietary supplements, attempting to strictly curtail access to and claims attributed to these products, the DSHEA was a positive step. Both Congress and the FDA were hopeful that it would ... -
Struggling to Meditate: Contextualising Integrated Treatment of Traumatised Tibetan Refugee Monks
(2009)As a result of the recent resurgence of violence in the Tibetan Autonomous Region, the Boston Center for Refugee Health and Human Rights has an increased patient demographic: Tibetan refugee monks. Diagnosed by their ... -
Submajority Rules: Forcing Accountability upon Majorities
(Wiley-Blackwell, 2005)Legal and political theory have paid a great deal of attention to supermajority rules, which require a fraction of votes greater than 1/2+1 to reach a decision, and thus empower a minority to block change. In this paper I ...