Browsing Harvard Law School by Title
Now showing items 941-960 of 2411
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How Should Competition Law Be Taught?
(eSapience, 2008)In a recent review of Global Competition Law and Economics, a book I co-wrote with Damien Geradin, John Kallaugher raises some interesting questions about the very premises of the book. These questions seem worth addressing ... -
How Should We Determine Who Should Regulate Lawyers--Managing Conflict and Context in Professional Regulation
(Fordham Law Review, 1996) -
How Star Wars Illuminates Constitutional Law
(2015)Human beings often see coherence and planned design when neither exists. This is so in movies, literature, history, economics, and psychoanalysis – and constitutional law. Contrary to the repeated claims of George Lucas, ... -
How the Chrysler Reorganization Differed From Prior Practice
(Oxford University Press (OUP), 2013)Chrysler, a failing auto manufacturer, was reorganized in a controversial chapter 11 in 2009. Financial creditors were paid a quarter of the amount owed them, while other creditors were paid more. The reorganization’s ... -
How the Founders Failed
(2008) -
How to Choose a Constitutional Theory
(California Law Review Inc., 1999) -
How to End the Copyright Wars
(Nature Publishing Group, 2009) -
How to Exercise the Power You Didn’t Ask For
(Harvard Business Publishing, 2018-09-19) -
How to fix bankers' pay
(MIT Press: Arts & Humanities Titles, 2010)This essay – written for a special issue of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences’ Daedalus journal on lessons from the financial crisis – discusses how bankers’ pay should be fixed. I describe two distinct sources of ... -
How to Get Our Democracy Back
(J.H. Richards, 2010) -
How to Tie Equity Compensation to Long-Term Results
(Stern Stewart & Co., 2010)Companies, investors, and regulators around the world are now seeking to tie executives' payoffs to long-term results and avoid rewarding executives for short-term gains. Focusing on equity-based compensation, the primary ... -
How We Can Regulate Stablecoins Now--Without Congressional Action
(Brookings Institute, 2022-08)This White Paper presents a proposal for federal regulation of stablecoins under existing law. Following the recommendations of the 2021 President’s Working Group’s Stablecoin Report, we propose the creation of a federal ... -
How We Mistreat the Animals We Eat
(2001)There has been an enormous transition in the United States from a nation comprised of small-scale, local family farms to one dominated by large-scale, corporate operations, appropriately termed “factory ... -
A Huge Green Win in the 2nd Circuit
(Environmental Law Institute, 2009) -
The Hughes Court and Radical Dissent: The Case of Dirk De Jonge and Angelo Herndon
(2012)Scattered Supreme Court decisions in the early twentieth century dealt with the Constitution’s protection of freedom of speech. Radical dissent over United States participation in World War I and the nation’s intervention ... -
The Hughes Court and Radical Political Dissent: The Case of Dirk De Jonge and Angelo Herndon
(ScholarWorks@Georgia State University, 2011) -
Human Behavior and the Law of Work
(University of Chicago Law School, 2014-09-17)The most fundamental issues in labor and employment law involve the choice among three alternatives: waivable employers' rights, waivable employees' rights, and nonwaivable employees' rights. By combining standard contract ... -
HUMAN CLONING AND FDA REGULATION
(1998)In the February 27, 1997 issue of the journal Nature scientists from Scotland's Roslin Institute reported their successful efforts to clone an adult sheep using differentiated somatic cells from the animal. The clone, named ...