Browsing Harvard Law School by Title
Now showing items 555-574 of 2411
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Does Red Lion Still Roar?
(American Bar Association, 2008) -
Does Separation of Powers Promote Stability and Moderation?
(University of Chicago Press, 2013)It is often asserted that separation of legislative powers tends to make legislation both more moderate (because concessions to all veto players are needed to secure enactment) and less frequent (because sufficient concessions ... -
Does the Evidence Favor State Competition in Corporate Law
(California Law Review Inc., 2002) -
Dollar and Senses: Pharmaceutical Product Design is Becoming Vivid
(2003)Prilosec purple, Viagra blue, and Prozac green and cream: pharmaceutical product design is on the rise, and the future is even brighter. As design features come into view, protection against copying is critical to maintaining ... -
Dollars and Death
(University of Chicago Press, 2005)Administrative regulations and tort law both impose controls on activities that cause mortality risks, but they do so in puzzlingly different ways. Under a relatively new and still-controversial procedure, administrative ... -
Don’t Force Google to ‘Forget’
(2014) -
DOPING IN SPORT: AN OVERVIEW AND ANALYSIS OF DOPING AND ITS REGULATION IN INTERNATIONAL SPORT
(2003)At an early age, every one of us learns to despise cheating. Whether it be on the playground or in the classroom, cheating is wrong. Even as we grow up and appreciate the nuances of competition in business and in social ... -
A DOSE OF YOUR OWN MEDICINE? DRUG TESTING ON CHILDREN AND LABELING DRUGS FOR PEDIATRIC USE--ESSENTIAL NEEDS
(1997)Children are not just miniature adults; a child metabolizes and absorbs drugs differently than adults, making drug testing and labeling regarding pediatric use essential. This paper first addresses these needs in more ... -
Double Bind: Indian Nations v. the Supreme Court
(Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2005)This comment responds to Professor Philip Frickey's excellent article, (Native) American Exceptionalism in Federal Public Law, - Harv. L. Rev. - (2005), in which Frickey reacts to the Supreme Court's increasing discomfort ... -
Dr. Koch: A Cancer Quack?
(2006)This paper discusses the life and medical research of Dr. William F. Koch, a physiologist who claimed to have discovered a cure for cancer in the 20th century. Dr. Koch’s early education and research is ... -
Drafting organic Food Regulations: The Case for Incorporating Congressional Intent and Interest Group Commentary
(1999)The scope of the organic food debate has embroiled more constituents than simply consumers and producers of organic food. At each step along the way various interest groups such as small organic farmers, private organic ... -
Drug Reimportation: Prescription, Placebo, or Poison?
(2002)This paper examines drug reimportation as a means of reducing prescription drug prices paid by U.S. consumers. Specifically, this paper examines the provisions of the MEDS Act of 2000, which was passed by Congress right ... -
Drug Shortages: The Problem Of Inadequate Profits
(2014-03-18)Drug shortages are a growing problem in the United States. The scope and severity of drug shortages has caught the public eye and prodded the FDA into action. Among the potential causes of drug shortages are Medicare Part ... -
DRUG THERAPY AND PREGNANCY: UNKNOWN RISKS LEAD TO HARD CHOICES [REDACTED VERSION]
(2001)This paper is a proposal to improve the quality of information available to pregnant patients in selecting treatment options. By providing drug companies with extended grants of exclusivity, the FDA has the ability to ... -
DTC Prescription Drug Advertising: The History and Impact of FDA Regulation
(2002)This paper traces the history of direct-to-consumer (DTC) advertising for prescription drugs in the United States, beginning with the enactment of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetics Act in 1938 and continuing through ... -
A DUE PROCESS FOR BIOETHICS
(2002)With the sequencing of the human genome, biomedical science has entered what is likely to be an era of remarkable progress. This progress will bring tremendous improvements to human life, but it also raises difficult ethical ... -
Due Process Traditionalism
(Michigan Law Review, 2008)In many cases, the Supreme Court has limited the scope of “substantive due process” by reference to tradition. Due process traditionalism might be defended in several distinctive ways. The most ambitious defense draws on ... -
Due Process, Choice of Law, and the Prosecution of Foreign Nationals for Providing Material Support to Terrorist Organizations in Conflicts Abroad
(2015)In November 2012, a grand jury in the Eastern District of New York indicted Ali Yasin Ahmed, Mahdi Hashi, and Mohamed Yusuf under 18 U.S.C. § 2339B for knowingly and intentionally conspiring to provide material support and ... -
Dynamic Investigative Practice at the International Criminal Court
(Duke University School of Law, 2014)