Browsing HLS Scholarly Articles by Title
Now showing items 452-471 of 1913
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Do VCs use inside rounds to dilute founders? Some evidence from Silicon Valley
(Elsevier BV, 2012)In the bank-borrower setting, a firm’s existing lender may exploit its positional advantage to extract rents from the firm in subsequent financings. Analogously, a startup’s existing venture capital investors (VCs) may ... -
Docket Capture at the High Court
(Yale Law School, 2009)The declining number of cases on the Supreme Court’s plenary docket may or may not be a problem. After all, there are many good reasons that such a decline could be happening, including the obvious possibility that the ... -
Documenting the Deal: How Quality Control and Candor Can Improve Boardroom Decision-Making and Reduce the Litigation Target Zone
(Harvard John M. Olin Center for Law, Economics, and Business, 2014)This article addresses what legal and financial advisors can do to conduct an M&A process in a manner that: i) promotes making better decisions; ii) reduces conflicts of interests and addresses those that exist more ... -
Does Commerce Clause Review Have Perverse Effects
(Villanova University School of Law Digital Repository, 2001) -
Does More Speech Correct Falsehoods?
(2015-01-09)According to a standard principle in free speech law, the remedy for falsehoods is "more speech," not enforced silence. But empirical research demonstrates that corrections of falsehoods can actually backfire, by increasing ... -
Does Red Lion Still Roar?
(American Bar Association, 2008) -
Does Separation of Powers Promote Stability and Moderation?
(University of Chicago Press, 2013)It is often asserted that separation of legislative powers tends to make legislation both more moderate (because concessions to all veto players are needed to secure enactment) and less frequent (because sufficient concessions ... -
Does the Evidence Favor State Competition in Corporate Law
(California Law Review Inc., 2002) -
Dollars and Death
(University of Chicago Press, 2005)Administrative regulations and tort law both impose controls on activities that cause mortality risks, but they do so in puzzlingly different ways. Under a relatively new and still-controversial procedure, administrative ... -
Don’t Force Google to ‘Forget’
(2014) -
Double Bind: Indian Nations v. the Supreme Court
(Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2005)This comment responds to Professor Philip Frickey's excellent article, (Native) American Exceptionalism in Federal Public Law, - Harv. L. Rev. - (2005), in which Frickey reacts to the Supreme Court's increasing discomfort ... -
Due Process Traditionalism
(Michigan Law Review, 2008)In many cases, the Supreme Court has limited the scope of “substantive due process” by reference to tradition. Due process traditionalism might be defended in several distinctive ways. The most ambitious defense draws on ... -
Dynamic Investigative Practice at the International Criminal Court
(Duke University School of Law, 2014) -
Dynamic remodeling of in-group bias during the 2008 Presidential election
(National Academy of Sciences, 2009)People often favor members of their own group, while discriminating against members of other groups. Such in-group favoritism has been shown to play an important role in human cooperation. However, in the face of changing ... -
Dynamism, Not Just Diversity
(Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2007) -
Dynamism, Not Just Diversity
(Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2007) -
The Earth Turned to Bring Us Closer
(Cardozo Law Review, 2008)This paper is part of a symposium issue entitled "Law and Event," whose subject is the work of the contemporary French philosopher Alain Badiou. The paper offers a reading of "21 Grams," a film that treats in narrative ... -
An Economic Analysis of Civil versus Common Law Property
(2012)The article presents an analysis of civil law property and common law property. It mentions that the civil law system emphasizes on ownership and affects leaseholds whereas common law emphasizes on the estate system. The ...