Browsing Harvard Law School by Title
Now showing items 1452-1471 of 2411
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New Urbanist Design and Economic Growth: Lessons from Formalizing Smart Development in Miami (2012).
(2012)This work suggests that the keystone in beginning to improve the greatest ailments facing America’s cities lies in the design of the very form of those cities. This paper argues that providing smarter, more flexible options ... -
The Next Big Thing: Radiofrequency Identification Technology in Industries Regulated by the Food and Drug Administration
(2005)Radio-frequency identification (RFID) is an emerging technology that could have the most significant transformative effect on the world of commerce since the Internet became available to the masses Currently, RFID has ... -
The Next Frontier in Food: FDA Regulation of Genetically Engineered Animals
(2011)Genetically engineered (GE) animals designed for human use, whether to be eaten as food, to produce drugs, or to be enjoyed as pets, carry the potential for enormous benefits and enormous harm. Currently, the Food and Drug ... -
No
(2014)Philip Hamburger has had a vision, a dark vision of lawless and unchecked power. He wants us to see that American administrative law is “unlawful” root-and-branch, indeed that it is tyrannous -- that we have recreated, in ... -
No Cranberries for Thanksgiving: The Impact of FDA Adverse Publicity
(2005)As the primary federal agency responsible for regulating the safety of food, drugs, medical devices, and cosmetics, The Food and Drug Administration (“FDAâ€) has enormous responsibility. With ... -
No Humans Have Been Injured in the Testing of this Drug: The New Animal Efficacy Rule
(2004)This paper examines the “Animal Efficacy Rule,†a regulation that provides for the approval of products by the FDA when efficacy testing on humans is ethically impossible. It gives a summary ... -
'No' Review of Philip Hamburger, 'Is Administrative Law Unlawful?'
(The University of Texas, 2015)Philip Hamburger has had a vision, a dark vision of lawless and unchecked power. He wants us to see that American administrative law is “unlawful” root-and-branch, indeed that it is tyrannous -- that we have recreated, in ... -
The (Non) Finality of Supreme Court Opinions
(Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2014)The need for formal procedures for revising previously printed and published versions became acute in the late nineteenth century once private publishers began routinely publishing both the original opinions and the final ... -
Nondelegation Canons
(1999)Reports of the death of the nondelegation doctrine have been greatly exaggerated. Rather than having been abandoned, the doctrine has merely been renamed and relocated. Its current home consists of a set of nondelegation ... -
Nonsectarian Welfare Statements
(2014-10-08)How can we measure whether national institutions in general, and regulatory institutions in particular, are dysfunctional? A central question is whether they are helping a nation’s citizens to live good lives. A full answer ... -
Norfolk & Western Railway v. Ayers, 538 U.S. 135 (2003)
(Harvard Law School, 2013) -
Normative Methods for Lawyers
(2009) -
Normative Principles for Evaluating Free and Proprietary Software
(University of Chicago Press, 2004)The production of most mass-market software can be grouped roughly according to free and proprietary development models. These models differ greatly from one another, and their associated licenses tend to insist that new ... -
The North Korean Famine and Food Shortage: The Problem, the Politics, and the Policy
(2006)MODERN THEORIES OF FAMINE LARGELY CONCUR THAT FAMINE IS NOT THE SIMPLE CONSEQUENCE OF A LACK OF FOOD. TODAY, STUDIES CONFIRM THAT GLOBAL FOOD SUPPLIES ARE ADEQUATE TO CURE HUNGER AND PRESUMABLY, TO PROVIDE SUFFICIENT RELIEF ... -
Not All Statistics Are Created Equal
(Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2010)In Statistics Is a Plural Word, a response to my article Causal Inference in Civil Rights Litigation, Dean Steven Willborn and Professor Ramona Paetzold take issue both with my critique of regression as it is currently ... -
“Not in a Month Without an ‘R’ in its Name”: An Historical Overview of 20th Century Seafood Regulation With a Glimpse of the Challenges at the Beginning of the 21st
(2002)Part I of this article introduces the American seafood and shellfish industry and provides some background data on the composition of the market as well as consumption patterns in the United States. Consideration is given ... -
Not Its Crowning Glory: Obstacles for FDA in Regulating Ingested Dietary Supplements Purporting to Prevent Hair Loss
(2005)Preventing hair loss is big business in the United States, amounting to over one billion dollars per year. While the industry is dominated by FDA-approved medications, like Propecia and Rogaine and hair transplant surgeries, ... -
The not so puzzling persistence of the futile search: Tribe on proceduralism in constitutional theory
(University of Tulsa College of Law, 2008) -
(Not) Wired: Electronic Coverage in Federal Courts
(Boston Bar Association, 2014) -
A Note on Joint and Several Liability: Insolvency, Settlement, and Incentives
(University of Chicago Press, 1994)No abstract provided.