Browsing HLS Scholarly Articles by Title
Now showing items 1004-1023 of 1913
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Legitimacy and the Constitution
(Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2005) -
The Legitimacy of Federal Common Law
(1992) -
Lessons the United States Can Learn From Other Countries' Territorial Systems For Taxing Income of Multinational Corporations
(Urban Institute & Brookings Institution Tax Policy Center, 2015)The United States has a worldwide system that taxes the dividends its resident multinational corporations receive from their foreign affiliates, while most other countries have territorial systems that exempt these dividends. ... -
Let a Thousand Googles Bloom
(Stanford School of Law, Stanford University, 2005) -
Letting Shareholders Set the Rules
(Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2006)U.S. corporate law has long denied shareholders the power to make rules-of-the-game decisions - that is, decisions to change the company's charter or state of incorporation. In an article published last year, The Case for ... -
Leveraging the Social Determinants of Health: What Works?
(Public Library of Science, 2016)We summarized the recently published, peer-reviewed literature that examined the impact of investments in social services or investments in integrated models of health care and social services on health outcomes and health ... -
Lex Loci Delictus and Global Economic Welfare: Spinozzi v. ITT Sheraton Corp.
(Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2007) -
Liberal Constitutionalism, Property Rights, and the Assault on Poverty
(Juta Law, 2011) -
Libertarian Administrative Law
(University of Chicago Press, 2015)In recent years, several judges on the nation’s most important regulatory court -- the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit -- have given birth to libertarian administrative law, in the form ... -
Libertarian Panics
(Rutgers School of Law, 2005)In a standard analysis, the history of civil liberties is characterized by a series of security panics. A range of mechanisms - cognitive heuristics and biases, various forms of cascading and herding, conformity and ... -
Libertarian Paternalism
(American Economic Association, 2003) -
Libertarian Paternalism Is Not an Oxymoron
(2003)The idea of libertarian paternalism might seem to be an oxymoron, but it is both possible and legitimate for private and public institutions to affect behavior while also respecting freedom of choice. Often people’s ... -
Likelihood Ratio Tests and Legal Decision Rules
(Oxford University Press, 2014)Various legal decision-making criteria can be formulated as likelihood ratio tests, wherein liability, prohibition, or other outcomes are associated with evidence strength exceeding a posited threshold. Stating rules in ...