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Now showing items 21-30 of 114
The Laws of War in Ancient Greece
(University of Illinois Press, 2008)
One of the earliest and the most famous statements of realism in international law comes from ancient Greece: the Melian dialogue in history of the Peloponnesian War. In 416 B.C.E., the Athenians invaded Melos, a small ...
Privacy 2.0
(University of Chicago Law School, 2008)
Leading from the Boardroom
(Harvard Business School Publishing, 2008)
Free Trade and the Protection of Public Morals
(Yale Law School, 2008)
The Demoiselles d'Evanston: On the Aesthetics of the Wigmore Chart
(Oxford University Press, 2008)
Wigmore's ‘The Problem of Proof’, published in 1913, was a path-breaking attempt to systematize the process of drawing inferences from trial evidence. In this paper, written for a conference on visual approaches to evidence, ...
Climate Change Justice
(Georgetown University Law Center, 2008)
Greenhouse gas reductions would cost some nations much more than others, and benefit some nations far less than others. Significant reductions would impose especially large costs on the United States, and recent projections ...
Ten Half-Truths About Tort Law
(Valparaiso University School of Law, 2008)
John Kenneth Galbraith coined the phrase "the conventional wisdom" to refer to a collection of ideas that members of a group find acceptable. Acceptability, he observed, rests on a variety of considerations other than ...
Was Bush v. Gore a Human Rights Case?
(University of Minnesota Law School, 2008)
The article discusses a court case on the Greek parliamentary election of 2004 wherein the Supreme Court of Greece decided on the contested election by ruling for a recalculation based on different rules. The ruling was ...
Neither Hayek Nor Habermas
(Springer Verlag, 2008)
The rise of the blogosphere raises important questions about the elicitation and aggregation of information, and about democracy itself. Do blogs allow people to check information and correct errors? Can we understand the ...
Due Process Traditionalism
(Michigan Law Review, 2008)
In many cases, the Supreme Court has limited the scope of “substantive due process” by reference to tradition. Due process traditionalism might be defended in several distinctive ways. The most ambitious defense draws on ...