Browsing HLS Scholarly Articles by Title
Now showing items 538-557 of 1913
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Exit from Contract
(Oxford University Press (OUP), 2014)Exit from contract is one of the most powerful consumer protection devices, freeing consumers from bad deals and keeping businesses honest. Yet consumers often choose transactions with lock-in provisions, trading off exit ... -
Exit Polling and Racial Bloc Voting: Combining Individual-Level and R x C Ecological Data
(Institute of Mathematical Statistics, 2010)Despite its shortcomings, cross-level or ecological inference remains a necessary part of many areas of quantitative inference, including in United States voting rights litigation. Ecological inference suffers from a lack ... -
Experimental analysis of the effect of standards on compliance and performance
(Wiley-Blackwell, 2017)Laws can be written along a spectrum of specificity, ranging from vague standards to more detailed rules with particular examples. Behavioral and legal scholarship each present conflicting views about the optimal degree ... -
Explaining Variation in Takeover: Defenses Blame the Lawyers
(California Law Review Inc., 2001) -
Exploiting Plaintiffs Through Settlement: Divide and Conquer
(Mohr, 2008)This paper considers settlement negotiations between a single defendant and N plaintiffs when there are Fixed costs of litigation. When making simultaneous take-it-or-leave-it offers to the plaintiffs, the defendant adopts ... -
Exporting the 'Pursuit of Happiness'
(2000)reviewing Thomas Carothers, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Aiding Democracy Abroad: The Learning Curve (1999) -
The Expressive Effect of the Athenian Prostitution Laws
(University of California Press, 2010)This article argues that attention to the expressive function of law suggests that the Athenian laws prohibiting former prostitutes from active political participation may have had a much broader practical impact than ... -
Extension of Monopoly Power through Leverage
(Columbia Law Review Association, Inc., 1985)No abstract provided. -
Extraterritorial Rights and Constitutional Methodology After Rasul v. Bush
(University of Pennsylvania, 2005) -
Extremism and Social Learning
(2007)When members of deliberating groups speak with one another, their predeliberation tendencies often become exacerbated as their views become more extreme. The resulting phenomenon—group polarization—has been observed in ... -
Fable of Land Reform: Expropriation and Redistribution in Occupied Japan
(John M. Olin Center for Law, Economics, and Business. Harvard Law School., 2012)Land reform will not just reduce rural poverty, write development officials. It can raise productivity. It can promote civic engagement. Scholars routinely concur. Land reform may not always raise productivity and civic ... -
Fact and Fiction About Facial Challenges
(California Law Review Inc., 2011)The Justices of the U.S. Supreme Court have frequently insisted that “facial challenges” to the validity of statutes are and ought to be rare. Based partly on an empirical survey of all cases decided by the Court during ... -
The Facts About Unwritten Constitutionalism: A Response to Professor Rubenfeld
(Duke University School of Law, 2001) -
Failed Resurrection of the Single Monopoly Profit Theory
(Competition Policy International, 2010)Various arguments attempting to resurrect the single monopoly profit theory of tying have been made, but none are successful. The Seabright claim that it is supported by a lack of empirical proof fails because the single ... -
Fair Use
(Fordham Law Review, 1999) -
Fair Value As An Avoidable Rule of Corporate Law: Minority Discounts in Conflict Transactions
(University of Pennsylvania, 1999) -
Fairness For All Students Under Title IX
(2017)Four feminist law professors at Harvard Law School have called on the U.S. Department of Education to revise the previous Administration’s policies on sexual harassment and sexual assault on campus. In a memo submitted to ... -
Fairness in International Taxation: The Ability-to-Pay Case for Taxing Worldwide Income
(Tax Analysts, 2001)Although the ability-to-pay fairness principle is a foundational element of American income tax policy, it has played a surprisingly small role in evaluating the U.S. international income tax regime. Perhaps this is because ...