Now showing items 376-395 of 1910

    • The Damned Dolls 

      Hay, Bruce L. (University of California Press, 2014)
      This article reads the Brown v. Board of Education case against the backdrop of the absurdist theater of the 1950s, a genre that flourished both in the art world and in the highly staged experiments of academic social ...
    • Dangerous Intersection 

      Neuman, Gerald L. (University of San Francisco School of Law, 2009)
    • The David R. Tillinghast Lecture - What's Source Got to Do with it - Source Rules and U.S. International Taxation 

      Shay, Stephen E.; Fleming, J. Clifton, Jr.; Peroni, Robet J. (New York University, 2002)
      Arguably, the largest problem in international income taxation is the proper treatment of income that is subject to the legitimate taxing claims of two or more countries. A source country's jurisdiction to tax foreign ...
    • Deadlines in Administrative Law 

      Gersen, Jacob E.; O'Connell, Anne Joesph (University of Pennsylvania, 2008)
      A cottage industry in administrative law studies the various mechanisms by which Congress, the President, and the courts exert control of administrative agencies. Restrictions on the appointment and removal of personnel, ...
    • The Death of Cyberspace 

      Lessig, Lawrence (2000)
    • The Debate, in Intercountry Adoption: Policies, Practices, and Outcomes 

      Bartholet, Elizabeth (Ashgate Publishing, 2012)
    • Decentralization Debunked 

      Frug, Gerald Ellison (DODS, 2007)
    • Deciding by Default 

      Sunstein, Cass Robert (University of Pennsylvania, 2013)
    • Deciding What's Best for Children 

      Coons, John; Mnookin, Robert H.; Sugarman, Stephen (1993)
    • Declaring the Death Penalty Unconstitutional 

      Goldberg, Arthur J.; Dershowitz, Alan Morton (Harvard Law School, 1970)
    • Defensive Localism: A View of the Field from the Field 

      Frug, Gerald Ellison; Barron, David J. (The University of Virginia, 2005)
    • Deference and Due Process 

      Vermeule, Cornelius Adrian (2015)
      In the textbooks, procedural due process is a strictly judicial enterprise; although substantive entitlements are created by legislative and executive action, it is for courts to decide independently what process the ...
    • Deferred Compensation Revisited 

      Halperin, Daniel I.; Yale, Ethan (Tax Analysts and Advocates, 2007)
      The tax rules governing deferred compensation, codified at section 409A, are harsh and complex. The rules are focused on the least important policy considerations and overlook the most important. Professors Halperin and ...
    • Degrees of Freedom, Dimensions of Power 

      Benkler, Yochai (Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press (MIT Press), 2016)
      The original Internet design combined technical, organizational, and cultural characteristics that decentralized power along diverse dimensions. Decentralized institutional, technical, and market power maximized freedom ...
    • Delaware and Washington as Corporate Lawmakers 

      Roe, Mark J. (Delaware Law School of Widener College, 2009)
      American corporate law scholars have long focused on state-to-state jurisdictional competition as a powerful engine in the making of American corporate law. Yet much corporate law is made in Washington, D.C. Federal ...
    • Delaware Law as Lingua Franca: Theory and Evidence 

      Broughman, Brian; Fried, Jesse M.; Ibrahim, Darian (University of Chicago Press, 2012)
      Why would a firm incorporate in Delaware rather than in its home state? Prior explanations have focused on the inherent features of Delaware corporate law, as well as the positive network externalities created by so many ...
    • Delaware's Choice 

      Subramanian, Guhan (2015)
      This Article first documents the shift to annual elections of all directors at most U.S. corporations, and argues that the alternative of "ineffective" staggered boards would have been more desirable, as a policy matter, ...
    • Delaware's Competition 

      Roe, Mark J. (Harvard Law School, 2003)
      One of corporate law's enduring issues has been the extent to which state-to-state competitive pressures on Delaware make for a race to the top or the bottom. States, or at least some of them, are said to compete with their ...
    • Delaware's Politics 

      Roe, Mark J. (Ames Foundation at the Harvard Law School, The, 2005)
      Delaware makes the corporate law governing most large American corporations. Since Washington can take away any, or all, of that lawmaking, a deep conception of American corporate law should show how, when, and where ...