Now showing items 1495-1514 of 1910

    • Same Old, Same Old 

      Vermeule, Cornelius Adrian (2012)
    • Same Sex Marriage, Full Faith and Credit, and the Evasion of Obligation 

      Singer, Joseph William (2005)
      Now that same sex marriages have been occurring in Massachusetts for almost a year, the issue of interstate recognition is no longer merely a theoretical issue. Most scholars have either argued that the full faith and ...
    • Saving the Internet 

      Zittrain, Jonathan L. (Graduate School of Business Administration, Harvard University, 2007)
      The Internet goose has laid countless golden eggs, along with a growing number of rotten ones. But it's the rotten ones that now tempt commercial, governmental, and consumer interests to threaten the Internet's uniquely ...
    • The Science, Fiction, and Science Fiction of Unsex Mothering 

      Cohen, I. Glenn (2012)
      Response to Darren Rosenblum’s UnsexMothering: Toward a Culture of New Parenting
    • Score Another One for the Internet? The Role of the Networked Public Sphere in the U.S. Net Neutrality Policy Debate 

      Benkler, Yochai; Faris, Robert M; Roberts, Hal M.; Etling, Bruce; Othman, Dalia (Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University, 2015)
      In this paper we study the public debate over net neutrality in the United States from January through November 2014. We compiled, mapped, and analyzed over 16,000 stories published on net neutrality, augmented by data ...
    • Scottsboro 

      Klarman, Michael J. (Marquette University School of Law, 2009)
      This essay tells the story of Scottsboro, one of the most important legal events of the twentieth century, in which nine black teenagers were falsely accused of rape, sentenced to death, and twice successfully appealed ...
    • Searches and Seizures in a Networked World 

      Zittrain, Jonathan L. (Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2006)
      This essay responds to Orin S. Kerr, Searches and Seizures in a Digital World, 119 Harv. L. Rev. 531 (2005), http://ssrn.com/abstract=697541. Professor Kerr has published a thorough and careful article on the application ...
    • Searching for Bernard Lonergan 

      Glendon, Mary Ann Ann (America Press, 2007)
    • Second Amendment Minimalism: Heller as Griswold 

      Sunstein, Cass Robert (Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2008)
      The Court's decision in District of Columbia v. Heller might be taken in three different ways. First, it might be seen as a modern version of Marbury v. Madison, speaking neutrally for the text, structure, and original ...
    • Second Mode Inclusion Claims in the Law Schools 

      Mack, Kenneth (2018-11-09)
      This paper assesses the recent proliferation of diversity and inclusion claims in law schools across the United States, often articulated by racial and ethnic minority students. On campus, and in the larger culture, the ...
    • Second Opinions and Institutional Design 

      Vermeule, Cornelius Adrian (Virginia Law Review Association, 2011)
      In many settings, decision makers seek second opinions and are wise to do so. Sometimes decision makers do not seek second opinions when they should have or seek them when they should not have. The author's aim is to analyze ...
    • Second-Generation Shareholder Bylaws: Post-Quickturn Alternatives 

      Coates, John; Faris, Bradley C. (American Bar Association, 2001)
      Practitioners believe shareholder-initiated bylaws that specifically eliminate poison pills will turn out to be illegal in Delaware. The authors assume that consensus is correct and ask: What next? Threat or opportunity, ...
    • Second-Generation Textualism 

      Manning, John Francis (California Law Review Inc., 2010)
      In his perceptive histories of the late-twentieth-century revival of interest in statutory interpretation theory, Philip P. Frickey, always modest, predictably failed to account for his own large contribution to the debate. ...
    • Second-Order Decisions 

      Sunstein, Cass Robert; Ullmann-Margalit, Edna (1998)
    • Second-Order Perfectionism 

      Sunstein, Cass Robert (Fordham Law Review, 2007)
      In constitutional law, first-order perfectionism represents an effort to cast the Constitution's ideals in the best constructive light. Ronald Dworkin's conception of law as "integrity" can be seen as a form of first-order ...
    • The Secret History of Constitutional Dignity 

      Moyn, Samuel (Yale Law School, 2014)
      In their 1937 constitution, the Irish gave human dignity foundational placement, as a religiously-inspired root concept connected (as in the later West German case of 1949) to the subordination of the otherwise sovereign ...
    • A Secular Theory of Natural Law 

      Weinreb, Lloyd L. (Fordham Law Review, 2004)
    • Securities Litigation and the Housing Market Downturn 

      Ferrell, Frank A.; Saha, Atanu (University of Iowa College of Law, 2009)
      This paper addresses one of the key issues – the foreseeability of the housing market downturn that began in September of 2007 and intensified in the fourth quarter of 2007 – that must be addressed in assessing the extensive ...
    • Securities Litigation in the Roberts Court: An Early Assessment 

      Coates, John (The University of Arizona, 2015)
      This article provides an early assessment – both quantitative and qualitative – of the Roberts Court’s securities law decisions. Such cases represent an increased share of Supreme Court’s docket, compared to prior Courts, ...