Browsing Harvard Law School by Title
Now showing items 1227-1246 of 2411
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The Law, Economics and Psychology of Subprime Mortgage Contracts
(Cornell Law Review, 2009) -
Law, Innovation and Collaboration in Networked Economy and Society
(Annual Reviews, 2017)Over the past 25 years, social science research in diverse fields has shifted its best explanations of innovation from (a) atomistic invention and development by individuals, corporate or natural, to networked learning; ... -
Law, Society, Identity and the Making of the Jim Crow South: Travel and Segregation on Tennessee Railroads, 1875-1905
(1999)This article reexamines the well-known debate over the origins of de jure segregation in the American South, which began in 1955 with the publication of C. Vann Woodward's The Strange Career of Jim Crow. Arguing that the ... -
Lawfare from the Bench
(2011) -
Lawmaking Made Easy
(Boston Book Co., 2007) -
The Laws of Fear
(2015-01-28)Cognitive and social psychologists have uncovered a number of features of ordinary thinking about risk. Giving particular attention to the work of Paul Slovic, this review-essay explores how an understanding of human ... -
The Laws of War and the Lesser Evil
(American Society of International Law, 2009)One of the fundamental principles of international humanitarian law (IHL) is that it recognizes no lesser-evil justification for breaking its rules. Those violating the laws of war will thus be viewed as war criminals even ... -
The Laws of War and the Lesser Evil
(Yale Law School, 2010)One of the fundamental principles of international humanitarian law (IHL) is that it recognizes no lesser-evil justification for breaking its rules. Those violating the laws of war will thus be viewed as war criminals even ... -
The Laws of War in Ancient Greece
(University of Illinois Press, 2008)One of the earliest and the most famous statements of realism in international law comes from ancient Greece: the Melian dialogue in history of the Peloponnesian War. In 416 B.C.E., the Athenians invaded Melos, a small ... -
The Laws on Religious Liberty and the Rise of American Power
(2013)This dissertation is a constitutional history of the previously unexamined American origins of our contemporary international legal regime on religious freedom. The absence of the United States and the role it played in ... -
The Lawyer as Friend: The Moral Foundations of the Lawyer-Client Relation
(Yale Law School, 1976)Can a good lawyer be a good person? The question troubles lawyers and law students alike. They are troubled by the demands of loyalty to one's client and by the fact that one can win approval as a good, maybe even great, ... -
Lawyering for Human Dignity
(2002) -
A Layered Model for AI Governance
(Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), 2017)AI-based systems are “black boxes,” resulting in massive information asymmetries between the developers of such systems and consumers and policymakers. In order to bridge this information gap, this article proposes a ... -
Leading from the Boardroom
(Harvard Business School Publishing, 2008) -
Learning and the Disappearing Association Between Governance and Returns
(Elsevier, 2013)During the period 1991-1999, stock returns were correlated with the G-Index based on twenty-four governance provisions (Gompers, Ishii, and Metrick (2003)) and the E-Index based on the six provisions that matter most ... -
Learning from Experience: The Impact of Research About Family Support Programs on Public Policy
(University of Pennsylvania, 2014-09-24) -
Learning from Prozac: A Case Study on Reforming the FDA Drug Approval Process
(1997)The law, focused as it is on making final determinations and settling issues one way or another, continually lags behind science, which concentrates on an evolving understanding of various phenomena through constant ... -
Learning to Live With the Dilemma of Difference: Bilingual and Special Education
(Duke University School of Law, 1985) -
Lee v. Kemna: Federal Habeas Corpus and State Procedure
(Harvard Law School, 2013) -
Legal Academic Backlash: The Response of Legal Theorists to Situationist Insights
(2008)This article is the third of a multipart series. The first part, "The Great Attributional Divide," argues that a major rift runs across many of our major policy debates based on our attributional tendencies: the less ...