Browsing HLS Scholarly Articles by Title
Now showing items 1072-1091 of 1910
-
Markets as Regulators: A Survey
(University of South California Law Center, 2007)Stock exchanges around the world have recently discarded their traditional mutual membership structure in favor of a for-profit corporate format. This development increased fears of conflicts of interest, as for-profit ... -
The Marshall Hypothesis Revisited
(Howard University School of Law, 2009) -
Massachusetts v. EPA: From Politics to Expertise
(University of Chicago Press, 2007)In Massachusetts v. Environmental Protection Agency (2007), the Supreme Court held, among other things, that the EPA has statutory authority to regulate greenhouse gases under the Clean Air Act, and that the agency cannot ... -
Medical Care in Armed Conflict: International Humanitarian Law and State Responses to Terrorism
(Harvard Law School Program on International Law and Armed Conflict, 2015)The surge in armed conflicts involving terrorism has brought to the fore the general question of medical care in armed conflict and the particular legal protections afforded to those providing such care to terrorists. ... -
Member State Liability in Europe and the United States
(Oxford University Press (OUP), 2006)The European Community (EC) and the United States have contrasting approaches to the place of member state liability to private parties as a remedy for the violation of the law of the union. The EC recognizes a general ... -
Mergers, Acquisitions and Restructuring: Types, Regulation, and Patterns of Practice
(Harvard John M. Olin Center for Law, Economics, and Business, 2014)An important component of corporate governance is the regulation of significant transactions – mergers, acquisitions, and restructuring. This paper (a chapter in Oxford Handbook on Corporate Law and Governance, forthcoming) ... -
The Meritocratic Egalitarianism of Thurgood Marshall
(Howard University School of Law, 2009)This Essay, forthcoming in the Howard Law Journal, describes Thurgood Marshall's meritocratic egalitarianism. Marshall was sensitive to the wide range of talents people actually had and was skeptical about claims that ... -
The Miner's Canary
(Association of American Colleges, 2005) -
Minimalism at War
(2004)When national security conflicts with individual liberty, reviewing courts might adopt one of three general orientations: National Security Maximalism, Liberty Maximalism, and minimalism. National Security Maximalism calls ... -
Misery and Company
(New Republic, 2008) -
Misfearing: A Reply
(Harvard University, Harvard Law School, 2006)Human beings are prone to "misfearing": Sometimes they are fearful in the absence of significant danger, and sometimes they neglect serious risks. Misfearing is a product of bounded rationality, and it produces serious ... -
Modern War and Modern Law
(University of Baltimore School of Law, 2007) -
Modular Environmental Regulation
(Duke University School of Law, 2005)This Article proposes a "modular" conception of environmental regulation and natural resource management as an alternative to traditional approaches. Under traditional approaches, agencies tend to operate independently, ...