Browsing Harvard Law School by Title
Now showing items 593-612 of 2411
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Education or Promotion?: Industry-Sponsored Continuing Medical Education (CME) as a Center for the Core/Commercial Speech Debate
(2003)Because of its importance to determining drug usage, information has always been an important part of the regulation of prescription drugs. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the pharmaceutical industry are in a ... -
The Effect of Cost Suppression Under Universal Health Insurance on the Allocation of Talent and the Development of Expertise: Cosmetic Surgery in Japan
(University of Chicago Press, 2009)Japanese national health insurance provides universal coverage. This system necessarily entails a subsidy that dramatically raises the demand for medical services. In the face of the increased demand, the government ... -
The Effect of Delaware Doctrine on Freezeout Structure & Outcomes: Evidence on the Unified Approach
(Harvard Law School, 2015)Historically, Delaware corporate law provided different standards of judicial review for buyouts by controlling shareholders (also known as “freezeouts”). The standards were based on what transactional form was used: ... -
The Effect of Delaware Doctrine on Freezeout Structure and Outcomes: Evidence on the Unified Approach
(Harvard Law School, 2015)Historically, Delaware corporate law provided different standards of judicial review for buyouts by controlling shareholders (also known as “freezeouts”). The standards were based on what transactional form was used: ... -
THE EFFECT OF FDA'S POLICIES ON THE DECREASING EFFECTIVENESS OF ANTIBIOTICS
(1995)This paper will evaluate the effect that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has had on the drug resistance problem and will consider how the FDA could tailor its regulatory policies to better safeguard the effectiveness ... -
The Effect of Globalization on Domestic Legal Services
(2000)Globalization, in the context of this panel, refers to international, trans-border processes which are not regulated by the international legal framework, either private law or public international law. These processes, ... -
The Effect of Managed Care on the Pharmaceutical Industry
(1997)The pharmaceutical industry has transformed itself in response to the growth of managed care, which developed as a method to contain the costs of health care. Under the traditional fee-for-service system of practicing ... -
The Effect of Universal Health Insurance on Malpractice Claims: The Japanese Experience
(Oxford University Press (OUP), 2010)Japanese patients file relatively few medical malpractice claims. To date, scholars have tried to explain this phenomenon by identifying "faults" in the Japanese judicial system. They look in the wrong place. Largely, the ... -
The Effective Enjoyment of Rights
(German Law Journal, 2011) -
The Effects of False Claims Act Whistleblowers on the Pharmaceutical Industry
(2006)The whistleblower (or “qui tamâ€) provisions of the False Claims Act allow private citizens to bring suit on behalf of the government against individuals or corporations who have submitted ... -
Election Timing and Public Policy
(Now Publishers, 2011)There are nearly half a million elected officials in American local governments, and the timing of local elections varies enormously even within the same state. Some local elections are held simultaneously with major federal ... -
Eleventh Amendment and Other Sovereign Immunity Doctrines: Congressional Imposition of Suit Upon the States
(University of Pennsylvania, 1978) -
Eleventh Amendment and Other Sovereign Immunity Doctrines: Part One
(University of Pennsylvania, 1978) -
Eliminating Earmarks: Why the Congressional Line Item Vote Can Succeed Where the Presidential Line Item Veto Failed
(2009-12-05)Congressional earmarking is an issue of growing concern in the United States. Although it currently accounts for a small percentage of federal expenditures, recent trends indicate that such pork-barrel spending will soon ... -
Ellickson's Extraordinary Look at the Ordinary
(William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal, 2009)It is often said that the mark of great work, and a great theory in particular, is that it seems obvious in retrospect. And among such theories, some of the most impressive are those that aim to explain not just the problems ... -
The Elusive Quest for Global Governance Standards
(2009)Researchers and shareholder advisers have devoted much attention to developing metrics for assessing the governance of public companies around the world. These important and influential efforts, we argue, suffer from a ... -
The Elusive Silver Bullet: FDA Failures, Rejected New Drug Applications, and the Search for an Obesity Cure
(2011)Over the past forty-five years, America has fallen victim to an obesity epidemic, affecting more than thirty percent of American adults. If the incidence of obesity continues at current rates, an estimated forty-percent ... -
Emergencies and Democratic Failure
(Virginia Law Review Association, 2006)Critics of emergency measures such as the U.S. government’s response to 9/11 invoke the Carolene Products framework, which directs courts to apply strict scrutiny to laws and executive actions that target political or ... -
The Emerging Field of Race-Based Genetic Research: Can We Trust It?
(2006)In June of 2005, the Food and Drug Administration approved a heart disease drug named BiDil exclusively for African Americans, provoking a fiery debate among medical researchers, sociologists, and legal scholars. On the ...