Browsing Harvard Law School by Title
Now showing items 1437-1456 of 2411
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New Approaches to the Methamphetamine Epidemic
(2004)Methamphetamine abuse has become an epidemic in the United States. As methamphetamine becomes increasingly available, more and more people are trying – and becoming addicted to – this ... -
The New Business Entities in Evolutionary Perspective
(University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, College of Law, 2005)The many legal forms for business organizations that first appeared in the U.S. during the last thirty years - the Limited Liability Company (LLC), the Limited Liability Partnership (LLP), the Limited Liability Limited ... -
A New Deal for Civil Liberties: An Essay in Honor of Cass R. Sunstein
(2007)A central, organizing motif of Cass Sunstein's work is the effort to spell out the consequences of the New Deal for American law. I suggest that anyone who shares Sunstein's premises can and should go even farther in this ... -
A New Era for Raiders
(Harvard Business School Publishing, 2010)The article presents information on corporate methods of preventing hostile takeovers by corporate raiders, such as the poison pill strategy. It is noted that some of these techniques have become less popular and effective. ... -
A New Era in Drug Development: Legal and Ethical Implications of Pharmacogenomics
(2005)Pharmacogenomics, the study and development of compounds according to how an individual’s genes affects the body’s response to drugs, holds enormous promise for increasing the safety ... -
The New Fable of the Bees
(2011) -
The New Food Safety
(2019)A safe food supply is essential for a healthy society. Our food system is replete with different types of risk, yet food safety is understood as encompassing only foodborne illness and other risks related directly to food ... -
The New International Law Scholarship
(published by students at the University of Georgia School of Law, 2006)This essay replies to criticisms advanced at a conference on our book, The Limits of International Law. We engage the critics on several methodological issues, we attempt to correct misimpressions about some of our arguments, ... -
The New International Trade Architecture and Food Regulation
(2000)In analyzing the likely impact of the global trade regime on food safety, this study proceeds in the following way. Part I examines the Codex Alimentarius Commission's newly elevated status as the WTO designated key reference ... -
The New Legal Realism
(University of Chicago Press, 2008)The last decade has witnessed the birth of the New Legal Realism - an effort to go beyond the old realism by testing competing hypotheses about the role of law and politics in judicial decisions, with reference to large ... -
The New Policing
(2000) -
A New Progressivism
(Stanford Law School, 2006)Based on an address for a conference on Law and Transformation in South Africa, this paper explores problems with two twentieth-century approaches to government: the way of markets and the way of planning. It urges that ... -
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 ...