Browsing Harvard Law School by Title
Now showing items 1-20 of 2408
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The 100-plus-Year Old Case For a Minimalist Criminal Law (Sketch of a General Theory of Substantive Criminal Law)
(2015)Criminal law defines the system of government of which it is the political expression; thus having a normative theory of substantive criminal law is paramount. U.S. criminal law has developed in the absence of such overarching ... -
15 Ways to Engage Youth Within Your Company and Why You Should Do It
(2022-06-15)Leaders in both the public and private sectors have increasingly acknowledged that society has an obligation to include the next generation in the decision-making processes that will shape their future. Young people (ages ... -
2007 Circumvention Landscape Report: Methods, Uses, and Tools
(Berkman Center for Internet and Society, 2009)As the Internet has exploded over the past fifteen years, recently reaching over a billion users, dozens of national governments from China to Saudi Arabia have tried to control the network by filtering out content ... -
2010 Circumvention Tool Usage Report
(2011-12-09)Circumvention tools allow users to bypass Internet filtering to access content otherwise blocked by governments, workplaces, schools, or even the blocked sites themselves. There are a number of different types of these ... -
45: Internet (A History of Intellectual Property in 50 Objects)
(Cambridge University Press, 2019-06-12)In a book chartered to demonstrate intellectual property in objects, what concrete thing can represent the Internet, a phenomenon that exists only as a well-elaborated idea? Perhaps the best physical representation of the ... -
A Note on Efficiency vs. Distributional Equity in Legal Rulemaking: Should Distributional Equity Matter Given Optimal Income Taxation?
(American Economic Association, 1981) -
A Procedural Focus on Unlimited Shareholder Liability
(Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 1992) -
Abe Chayes: A Man Without Boundaries
(2001) -
Abolishing Judicial Review
(2011)An Essay is presented on the judicial review of the proposed amendments of the U.S. Constitution and acts of the U.S. Congress. It further discusses the role of judges as experts in law which include addressing all ... -
Absolute Majority Rules
(Cambridge University Press, 2007)This article considers absolute majority rules, which require the affirmative vote of a majority of all those eligible to vote in the institution. I compare absolute majority rules to simple majority rules under which only ... -
Abstention Doctrine Today
(University of Pennsylvania, 1977) -
Abstention In Constitutional Cases: The Scope of the Pullman Abstention Doctrine
(University of Pennsylvania, 1974) -
Accidents of the Great Society
(University of Maryland, 2005)Although published in 1970, The Costs of Accidents was written in the 1960s. In its boldness, its brilliance, and its progressive aspirations, the book is emblematic of the great society movement out of which it developed. ... -
Accommodating Every Body
(University of Chicago Press, 2014)This Article contends that workplace accommodations should be predicated on need or effectiveness instead of group identity status. It proposes that, in principle, “accommodating every body” be achieved by extending Americans ... -
Accommodating Integration
(University of Pennsylvania Law Review, 2008)In Integrating Accommodation, Elizabeth Emens commendably scrutinizes what could be called the "positive externalities" of disability accommodation and sharpens the policy choices that their recognition should present. ... -
Accommodation of Religion Thirty Years On
(Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2015) -
Accomodating Pharmacogenomics: Fulfilling the Promise of Individualized Medicine
(2005)Pharmacogenomic technologies promise to usher in an era of individualized medicine, but also pose challenges to a regulatory regime without experience dealing with the sorts of data produced by these techniques. Pharmacogenomics ... -
Accuracy in the Assessment of Damages
(University of Chicago Press, 1996)Assessment of damages is a principal issue in litigation and, in light of this, we consider the social justification for, and the private benefits of, accurate measurement of harm. Greater accuracy induces injurers to ...