Browsing Harvard Law School by Title
Now showing items 1666-1685 of 2411
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Presentation
(2011) -
The President's Completion Power
(Yale Law School, 2006)This Essay identifies and analyzes the President's completion power: the President's authority to prescribe incidental details needed to carry into execution a legislative scheme, even in the absence of congressional ... -
The President's Completion Power
(Yale Law School, 2006)This Essay identifies and analyzes the President's completion power: the President's authority to prescribe incidental details needed to carry into execution a legislative scheme, even in the absence of congressional ... -
Presidential Combat Against Climate Change
(Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2013) -
The Presidential FDA: Politics Meet Science
(2001)This paper proceeds in four parts. Part I. maps the powers of the various branches over the FDA. Part II. describes the Clinton administration’s tobacco regulation. Part III. analyzes the repercussions ... -
Pretrial Bargaining and the Design of Fee-Shifting Rules
(RAND, 1994)Legal rules for allocating the private costs of civil litigation, or ''fee-shifting'' rules, provide powerful incentives for settlement. Within the context of a direct-revelation mechanism, the fee-shifting rule that ... -
Preventing the next Public Health Crisis: New Drug Approval after Vioxx
(2005)The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) drug approval system has sought to strike a balance between two goals: ensuring that new drugs are safe enough for human use, while getting therapeutically important medications ... -
Price Caps in Multi-Price Markets
(2015)Many consumer markets feature a multi-dimensional price. A policymaker – a legislator, a regulator or a court – concerned about the level of one price dimension may decide to cap this price. How will such a price cap affect ... -
The Price of Public Action: Constitutional Doctrine and the Judicial Manipulation of Legislative Enactment Costs
(Yale Law School, 2008)This Article argues that courts can, and often should, implement constitutional guarantees by crafting doctrines that raise the costs to government decisionmakers of enacting constitutionally problematic policies. This ... -
THE PRICE WE PAY: The Efficacy Requirement for New Drugs Under the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act
(1995)The newly sworn Republican-controlled Congress has, as one of its primary objectives, the downsizing of government. Speaker Newt Gingrich has specifically targeted the federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the ... -
Primary Goods, Capabilities, or ... Well-Being?
(Duke University Press, 2007)Theories of distributive justice and of the aggregate social good typically require a method of assessing each individual's situation. Among the common measures are primary goods, capabilities, and well-being. This article ... -
Primitive Legal Scholarship.
(Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 1986) -
Principled Immigration
(Institute on Religion and Public Life, 2006) -
Prison Food Law
(2005)This paper examines the history and current framework of prison food law. Whereas food law generally is the result of a complex maze of national, state, and local statutory and regulatory law, prison food is primarily ... -
The Prisoner's Dilemma: The History, Ethical Dimensions, and Evolving Regulatory Landscape of Clinical Trials on Inmates
(2013-08-29)The history of research on prisoners in the United States is marred with a shameful past of abuse and coercion. With the development of research ethics arising from the Nuremberg Code and the Belmont Report, a critical ... -
Privacy 2.0
(University of Chicago Law School, 2008)