Now showing items 2369-2388 of 2411

    • Whose Children?: A Response to Professor Guggenheim 

      Bartholet, Elizabeth (2000)
      This article responds to Martin Guggenheim's book review of Bartholet's book, Nobody's Children: Abuse and Neglect, Foster Drift, and the Adoption Alternative (Beacon Press, 1999). Nobody's Children challenges the family ...
    • Why (Ever) Define Markets 

      Kaplow, Louis (Harvard Law Review Pub. Association, 2010)
      The market definition/market share paradigm, under which a relevant market is defined and pertinent market shares therein examined in order to make inferences about market power, dominates competition law. This Article ...
    • Why and How to Teach Federal Courts Today 

      Fallon, Richard Henry (Saint Louis University, 2009)
    • Why Are There So Few Black Lawyers in Corporate Law Firms An Institutional Analysis 

      Wilkins, David B.; Gulati, G. Mitu (California Law Review Inc., 1996)
    • Why Breach of Contract May Not be Immoral Given the Incompleteness of Contracts 

      Shavell, Steven (Michigan Law Review, 2009)
      There is a widely held view that breach of contract is immoral. I suggest here that breach may often be seen as moral, once one appreciates that contracts are incompletely detailed agreements and that breach may be committed ...
    • Why Copyright is All Right 

      Lessig, Lawrence (2006)
    • Why Cross Boundaries? 

      Glendon, Mary Ann (1996)
    • Why Developing Countries Won’t Negotiate? The Case of the WTO Environmental Goods Agreement 

      Wu, Mark (National Law University, 2014)
      In January 2014, the WTO broke the longstanding impasse in trade negotiations over environmental goods. It abandoned a decade-long effort to reach an agreement as part of a comprehensive Doha Round package. Instead, the ...
    • Why Does Health Care Regulation Fail? 

      Clark, Robert Charles (University of Maryland, 1981)
    • Why Does the American Constitution Lack Social and Economic Guarantees? 

      Sunstein, Cass Robert (2014-09-22)
      Why does the American Constitution lack contain social and economic guarantees, which appear in most contemporary constitutions? This essay explores four possible answers: chronological, cultural, institutional, and realist. ...
    • Why Enable Litigation? A Positive Externalities Theory of the Small Claims Class Action 

      Rubenstein, William B. (University of Missouri at Kansas City Press, 2006)
      This Article appears in a Symposium commemorating the Supreme Court's decision in Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Shutts. The legal claims that gave rise to Shutts were meritorious, yet of relatively modest value. Individuals ...
    • Why FDA Has Adopted HACCP Regulations to Ensure the Safety of Food 

      Axelrad, Seth (2006)
      HACCP (Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point) is a form of statistical quality control adopted by FDA as a regulatory tool to ensure the safety of seafood and juice products. HACCP evolved from the teachings of Walter ...
    • Why Firms Adopt Antitakeover Arrangements 

      Bebchuk, Lucian Arye (University of Pennsylvania, 2003)
      Firms going public have increasingly been incorporating antitakeover provisions in their IPO charters, while shareholders of existing companies have increasingly been voting in opposition to such charter provisions. This ...
    • Why I Worry About UARG 

      Freeman, Jody (Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2015)
    • Why Libraries [Still] Matter 

      Zittrain, Jonathan L. (2014)
    • Why Measure Inequality 

      Kaplow, Louis (Springer Verlag, 2005)
      A large body of literature is devoted to the measurement of income inequality, yet little attention is given to the question, Why measure inequality? However, the reasons for measurement bear importantly on whether and how ...
    • Why Not Privacy By Default? 

      Willis, Lauren E. (2013)
      We live in a Track-Me world, one from which opting out is often not possible. Firms collect reams of data about all of us, quietly tracking our mobile devices, our web surfing, and our email for marketing, pricing, product ...
    • Why Power Companies Build Nuclear Reactors on Fault Lines: The Case of Japan 

      Ramseyer, J. Mark (Walter de Gruyter GmbH, 2012)
      On March 11, 2011, a magnitude 9.0 earthquake and 38-meter tsunami destroyed Tokyo Electric's Fukushima nuclear power complex. The disaster was not a high-damage, low-probability event. It was a high-damage, high-probability ...
    • Why R&D Should Be Allocated To Subpart F and GILTI 

      Shay, Stephen; Avi-Yonah, Reuven S.; Driessen, Patrick; Fleming Jr., J. Clifton; Peroni, Robert J. (Tax Analysts, 2020-06-23)
      In this article, the authors critically appraise the government’s proposal not to allocate research and development deductions to subpart F inclusions and global intangible low-taxed income for foreign tax credit limitation ...
    • Why So Many Lawyers? Are They Good or Bad? 

      Clark, Robert Charles (Fordham Law Review, 1992)
      In this essay, Dean Clark examines the popular notion that the United States has too many lawyers and that this abundance burdens the nation. While acknowledging the great growth of law and lawyers in recent decades, Dean ...