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Now showing items 101-110 of 115
The Promise of Prediction Markets
(American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2008)
The ability of groups of people to make predictions is a potent research tool that should be freed of unnecessary government restrictions.
If People Would Be Outraged By Their Decisions, Should Judges Care?
(Stanford Law School, 2008)
At first glance, judicial anticipation of public outrage and its effects seems incompatible with judicial independence. Nonetheless, judges might be affected by the prospect of outrage for both consequentialist and epistemic ...
The Real World of Arbitrariness Review
(University of Chicago Press, 2008)
Second Amendment Minimalism: Heller as Griswold
(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 ...
Misery and Company
(New Republic, 2008)
Should Greenhouse Gas Emissions Rights Be Allocated on a Per Capita Basis?
(California Law Review Inc., 2009)
Many people believe that the problem of climate change would be best handled by an international agreement that includes a system of cap and trade. Such a system would impose a global cap on greenhouse gases emissions and ...
The Enlarged Republic - Then and Now
(N Y R e V, Inc, 2009)
The Empiricist Strikes Back
(New Republic, 2008)
Privatizing Marriage
(Hegeler Institute, 2008)
In a sense, a form of privatization is already well underway - as a matter of actual practice, constitutional doctrine, and enforcement policy, if not as a matter of large-scale transformations in state law. A less extreme ...
Illusory Losses
(University of Chicago Press, 2008)
Recent empirical work demonstrates that people's self-reported happiness is remarkably resilient to many large changes in life conditions; apparently significant adverse events often inflict little or no hedonic damage. ...