Now showing items 1480-1499 of 2408

    • The Obama Phenomenon: How Past and Present Resonate 

      Mack, Kenneth W. (Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, 2004)
    • Obamacare and the Theory of the Firm 

      Elhauge, Einer Richard (University of Chicago Press, 2015)
      Health care fragmentation today raises costs and worsens health outcomes. The theory of the firm indicates that cost and quality problems could be addressed by permitting greater vertical integration among complementary ...
    • The Obesity Epidemic: Why and How the Government Must Act 

      Wolf, Emily (2004)
      This paper calls for the United States government – including, but not limited to, the Food and Drug Administration, the Federal Trade Commission, and Health and Human Services – to ...
    • An Ode to St. Peter: Professor Peter M. Cicchino 

      Ogletree, Charles J. (2001)
    • Of Arsenic and Old Laws: Looking Anew at Criminal Justice in Late Imperial China 

      Alford, William P. (California Law Review Inc., 1984)
    • Of Artificial Intelligence and Legal Reasoning 

      Sunstein, Cass Robert (2014-09-08)
      Can computers, or artificial intelligence, reason by analogy? This essay urges that they cannot, because they are unable to engage in the crucial task of identifying the normative principle that links or separates cases. ...
    • Of Gentlemen and Role Models 

      Guinier, C. Lani (1990)
    • Of Montreal and Kyoto: A Tale of Two Protocols 

      Sunstein, Cass Robert (Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2007)
      Over the last thirty years, climate change and depletion of the ozone layer have been widely believed to be the world's largest environmental problems. The two problems have many similarities. Both involve global risks ...
    • Of Snakes and Butterflies: A Reply 

      Sunstein, Cass Robert (Columbia Law Review Association, Inc., 2006)
      This brief essay, a reply to a forthcoming essay "Radicals in Robes" by Saikrishna Prakash in the Columbia Law Review, makes two points. The first is that the abstract idea of interpretation cannot support originalism or ...
    • Of State Remedies and Federal Rights 

      Koenig, Thomas; Moore, Christopher D. (Elsevier BV, 2023)
      The Supreme Court has repudiated Bivens on the grounds that it arrogated legislative power to the federal judiciary. As the Court steps back, Congress is free to undo what remains of Bivens or strengthen it. So can the ...
    • Off at College 

      Glendon, Mary Ann Ann (2005)
    • The Off-Label Use of Acepromazine Maleate 

      Bartholomew, Jamie L. (2006)
      In this paper, I offer an evaluation of the off-label use of Acepromazine Maleate by foxhunters. In Chapter One, I provide readers with an explanation of the most important elements of the topic, including what Acepromazine ...
    • Off-Label Use of Prescription Drugs should be Regulated by the FDA 

      Tiwary, A Devesh (2003)
      The FDA does not subject all uses of drugs to a rigorous approval process. There are many justifications given for this. I lay out a system that divides drug-indication sets into four categories: (1) FDA approved; (2) ...
    • OFF-LABEL USES OF APPROVED DRUGS A New Compromise is Needed 

      Pritchard, Robert H. (1995)
      Washington, D.C. is teeming with speculation regarding the likely effects of a new political scenery and the Republican Contract With America. As the new Congress is taking form and adjusting to a new reality, one voice ...
    • The Office of Combination Products: Its Roots, Its Creation, and Its Role 

      Schillinger, Danielle C. (2005)
      The Office of Combination Products (OCP), within the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), was created formally by statute in December, 2002. Upon its creation, the Office became broadly responsible for overseeing the ...
    • The Ohio State University Dispute Resolution in Special Education Symposium Panel 

      Archerd, Erin; Canty-Barnes, Esther; Colker, Ruth; Dinerstein, Robert; Gregory, Michael John; Skidmore, Cathy; Weber, Mark Alan; Rivkin, Dean (2014)
    • Old Drugs, New Uses: Solving a Hatch-Waxman Patent Predicament 

      McPhie, David C. (2003)
      In early 2003, two panels of the Federal Circuit clashed in a pair of cases (Warner-Lambert v. Apotex and Allergan v. Alcon) dealing with the question of whether an action for inducement of infringement could be leveled ...
    • Old Statutes, New Problems 

      Freeman, Jody; Spence, David B. (University of Pennsylvania, 2014)
      Congress is more ideologically polarized than at any time in the modern regulatory era, which makes legislation ever harder to pass. As a result, Congress is increasingly absent from the policymaking process, and fails to ...
    • On a Differential Law of War 

      Blum, Gabriella (Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2011)
      Should the United States, as the strongest military power in the world, be bound by stricter humanitarian constraints than its weaker adversaries? Would holding the U.S. to higher standards than the Taliban, Iraqi insurgents, ...