Browsing HLS Scholarly Articles by Title
Now showing items 707-726 of 1913
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Homosexuality and the Constitution
(Indiana University School of Law, 1994) -
Horizontal Shareholding As An Antitrust Violation
(2015)Horizontal shareholdings exist when a common set of investors own significant shares in corporations that are horizontal competitors in a product market. Economic models show that such horizontal shareholdings are likely ... -
How and Why More Secure Technologies Succeed in Legacy Markets: Lessons from the Success of SSH
(2003)Secure shell (SSH) can safely be called one of the rare successes in which a more secure technology has largely replaced a less secure but entrenched tool: telnet. We perform a market analysis to determine how and why SSH ... -
How Courts Implement Social Policy
(University of Tulsa College of Law, 2010) -
How Cyber Changes the Laws of War
(2013)Michael Walzer’s Just and Unjust Wars anticipated many problems and developments in the laws of war, but it understandably did not anticipate how the Internet and associated computer and telecommunications revolutions would ... -
How Different are Waldron's and Fallon's Core Cases for and Against Judicial Review?
(Oxford University Press, 2010)Recently Jeremy Waldron offered the ‘core of the case against judicial review’. Richard Fallon responded with the ‘core of an uneasy case for judicial review.’ The core case for judicial review rested on a number of important ... -
How Do Constitutions Constitute Constitutional Identity?
(Oxford University Press (OUP), 2010) -
How Italian Colors Guts Private Antitrust Enforcement by Replacing It With Ineffective Forms Of Arbitration
(Fordham University School of Law, 2015)The recent US Supreme Court decision in American Express v. Italian Colors Restaurant threatens to gut private antitrust enforcement in the United States by replacing it with ineffective forms of arbitration. The Court's ... -
How Nations Behave
(Harvard Law School, 1980) -
How people decide what they want to know
(Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020-01)Immense amounts of information are now accessible to people, including information that bears on their past, present and future. An important research challenge is to determine how people decide to seek or avoid information. ... -
How Should Competition Law Be Taught?
(eSapience, 2008)In a recent review of Global Competition Law and Economics, a book I co-wrote with Damien Geradin, John Kallaugher raises some interesting questions about the very premises of the book. These questions seem worth addressing ... -
How Should We Determine Who Should Regulate Lawyers--Managing Conflict and Context in Professional Regulation
(Fordham Law Review, 1996) -
How Star Wars Illuminates Constitutional Law
(2015)Human beings often see coherence and planned design when neither exists. This is so in movies, literature, history, economics, and psychoanalysis – and constitutional law. Contrary to the repeated claims of George Lucas, ... -
How the Chrysler Reorganization Differed From Prior Practice
(Oxford University Press (OUP), 2013)Chrysler, a failing auto manufacturer, was reorganized in a controversial chapter 11 in 2009. Financial creditors were paid a quarter of the amount owed them, while other creditors were paid more. The reorganization’s ... -
How the Founders Failed
(2008) -
How to Choose a Constitutional Theory
(California Law Review Inc., 1999) -
How to End the Copyright Wars
(Nature Publishing Group, 2009) -
How to Exercise the Power You Didn’t Ask For
(Harvard Business Publishing, 2018-09-19) -
How to fix bankers' pay
(MIT Press: Arts & Humanities Titles, 2010)This essay – written for a special issue of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences’ Daedalus journal on lessons from the financial crisis – discusses how bankers’ pay should be fixed. I describe two distinct sources of ...