Browsing HLS Scholarly Articles by Title
Now showing items 50-69 of 1913
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All (Food) Politics is Local: Increasing Food Access through Local Government Action
(Harvard Law School, 2013)Our national and international food system has implications for a wide range of issues that are important across the political spectrum and include improving health outcomes, reducing environmental impacts, increasing ... -
Allocating Power within Agencies
(Yale Law School, 2013-07-17)Standard questions in the theory of administrative law involve the allocation of power among legislatures, courts, the President, and various types of agencies. These questions are often heavily informed by normative ... -
Allocating Risk Through Contract: Evidence from M&A and Policy Implications
(John M. Olin Center for Law, Economics, and Business. Harvard Law School., 2012)In a hand-coded sample of M&A contracts from 2007-08, risk allocation provisions exhibit wide variation. Earn-outs are the least common means to allocate risk, indemnities are most common, followed by price adjustment ... -
Allocating the Burden of Proof
(1997) -
America's Schizophrenic Immigration Policy Race, Class, and Reason
(The Boston College Law School, 2000)The historical purpose of American immigration policy was to provide a haven for those fleeing persecution and those seeking prosperity, as well as to satisfy workforce and frontier-expansion needs. However, a survey of ... -
Animal Rights Without Controversy
(School of Law, Duke University, 2007)Many consumers would be willing to pay something to reduce the suffering of animals used as food. Unfortunately, they do not and cannot, because existing markets do not disclose the relevant treatment of animals, even ... -
Answering Impossible Questions: Content Governance in an Age of Disinformation
(Shorenstein Center for Media, Politics, and Public Policy, 2020-01-14)The governance of online platforms has unfolded across three eras – the era of Rights (which stretched from the early 1990s to about 2010), the era of Public Health (from 2010 through the present), and the era of Process ... -
Anti-Competitive Exclusion and Market Division Through Loyalty Discounts
(John M. Olin Center for Law, Economics, and Business. Harvard Law School., 2011)We show that loyalty discounts create an externality among buyers even without economies of scale or downstream competition, and whether or not buyers make any commitment. Each buyer who signs a loyalty discount contract ... -
Anti-Competitive Market Division Through Loyalty Discounts Without Buyer Commitment
(John M. Olin Center for Law, Economics, and Business. Harvard Law School, 2012)We show that loyalty discounts without buyer commitment create an externality among buyers because each buyer who signs a loyalty discount contract softens competition and raises prices for all buyers. This externality can ... -
The Anti-Democratic Major Questions Doctrine
(University of Chicago Press, 2023-06-01)West Virginia v. Environmental Protection Agency is the Supreme Court’s most important administrative law decision in decades. The opinion’s significance is due principally to the Court’s embrace of an aggressive version ... -
The 'Antidirector Rights Index' Revisited
(Oxford University Press (OUP), 2010)The “antidirector rights index” has been used as a measure of shareholder protection in over a hundred articles since it was introduced by La Porta et al. (“Law and Finance.” 1998, Journal of Political Economy 106:1113–55). ... -
Antidumping and Strategic Industrial Policy: Tit-for-Tat Trade Remedies and the China–X-Ray Equipment Dispute
(Cambridge University Press, 2015)This article examines the relationship between antidumping duties and strategic industrial policy. We argue that the dynamic between the two instruments is more complex and elaborate than that offered by the conventional ... -
Antidumping in Asia's Emerging Giants
(Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2012)Over the past decade, China and India have rapidly increased their use of antidumping laws, the world’s most dominant form of trade protectionism, against their trading partners. Yet, this behavior has triggered little ... -
Antitrust, Law & Economics, and the Courts
(Duke University School of Law, 1987)No abstract provided. -
Any Non-welfarist Method of Policy Assessment Violates the Pareto Principle
(University of Chicago Press, 2001)The public at large, many policymakers, and a number of economists hold views of social welfare that are non‐welfarist. That is, they attach some importance to factors other than the effects of policies on individuals’ ... -
Any Non‐welfarist Method of Policy Assessment Violates the Pareto Principle: Reply
(University of Chicago Press, 2004)No abstract provided.