Browsing Harvard Law School by Title
Now showing items 2098-2117 of 2408
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Sweetening the Bitter Pill: Rx to OTC Switches Via a Third Class of Drugs
(1995)The United States faces a health care crisis in the years ahead. Spiraling costs are quickly outpacing the rate of inflation. Many people do not feel the immediate pressure as the true cost of America's health care is borne ... -
A SWOT Analysis of the Updated National HIV/AIDS Strategy for the U.S., 2015–2020
(Springer Nature, 2015)In July 2015, President Barack Obama released an updated National HIV/AIDS Strategy (NHAS) for the United States to guide HIV efforts through the year 2020. A federal action plan to accompany the updated NHAS will be ... -
Symbolic Statues and Real Laws: The Pathologies of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act and the Prison Litigation Reform Act
(Duke University School of Law, 1997)Criminals are not popular. No politician in recent memory has lost an election for being too tough on crime. In 1996, the Republican Congress and the Democratic President collaborated on two major statutes affecting the ... -
Symposium - Intersections: Sexuality, Cultural Tradition, and the Law - Introduction
(1996)This Symposium inhabits two intersections: the intersection linking sexual orientation with other axes of social stratification, and the intersection linking the legal future to the legal past, legal reform to legal history. ... -
Symposium: Brown v. Board of Education and Its Legacy: A Tribute to Justice Thurgood Marshall, Public Law Litigation and the Ambiguties of Brown
(Fordham Law Review, 1992)Professor Tushnet posits that the Supreme Court's concern for gradually carrying out desegregation in the public schools ironically gave rise to "'public law litigation"---an aggressive form ofjudicial review. Specifically. ... -
Symposium: Criminal Procedure in the Spotlight: The American Death Penalty and the (In)Visibility of Race
(University of Chicago Press, 2015)Racial injustice has always cast a shadow over American criminal justice. In the context of capital punishment, racial disparities have been evident since colonial times. Black people have suffered not only disparate ... -
A System of Selective Substitute Compliance
(Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2007) -
A Systematic Response to Systemic Disadvantage: A Response to Sander
(Stanford Law School, 2005)In a recent article in the Stanford Law Review, Professor Richard Sander argues that law schools should dramatically reduce or eliminate their affirmative action policies for black applicants because these policies harm ... -
Systemic Facts: Toward Institutional Awareness in Criminal Courts
(Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2016)Criminal courts are often required, in the course of implementing existing doctrines of constitutional criminal law, to regulate other institutional actors within the criminal justice system — most notably, prosecutors and ... -
Take a Label Claim, and Pay Me in the Morning: A Challenge to FDA's Argument that its Final Rule (Jan. 2000) on Structure/Function Claims for Dietary Supplements Does Not Constitute a Compensable Regulatory Taking Under the Fifth Amendment
(2000)On January 6, 2000, the Food and Drug Administration ("FDA") published its final rule prescribing the kinds of statements which can be made about the effect of a dietary supplement on the structure or function of the body ... -
Taking Behavioralism Seriously: A Response to Market Manipulation
(2000)In two previous articles, we hypothesize that, because consumers are subject to predictable cognitive processes that depart from rational utility maximization, manufacturers have the opportunity and incentive to manipulate ... -
Taking Behavioralism Seriously: Some Evidence of Market Manipulation
(1999)An important lesson of behavioralist research is that individuals' perceptions and preferences are highly manipulable. This article presents empirical evidence of market manipulation, a previously unrecognized source of ... -
Taking Behavioralism Seriously: The Problem of Market Manipulation
(1999)For the past few decades, cognitive psychologists and behavioral researchers have been steadily uncovering evidence that human decisionmaking processes are prone to nonrational, yet systematic, tendencies. These researchers ... -
Taking into Account the Potential Effects of Counterterrorism Measures on Humanitarian and Medical Activities: Elements of an Analytical Framework for States Grounded in Respect for International Law
(Harvard Law School Program on International Law and Armed Conflict, 2021-05)For at least a decade, States, humanitarian bodies, and civil-society actors have raised concerns about how certain counterterrorism measures can prevent or impede humanitarian and medical activities in armed conflicts. ... -
Taking the Home
(University of California Press, 2013-08-01)This essay juxtaposes two Supreme Court cases, Kelo v. City of New London, and Town of Castle Rock v. Gonzales. Both reflect on the meanings of home as simultaneously the source of security against the focal point of ... -
Taking Up the Challenge of Gender and International Criminal Justice: In Honor of Judge Patricia Wald
(Brill Academic Publishers, 2011) -
A Tale of Two Blogospheres: Discursive Practices on the Left and Right
(SAGE Publications, 2012-03-21)In this article, the authors compare the practices of discursive production among top U. S. political blogs on the left and right during summer 2008. An examination of the top 155 political blogs reveals significant ...